Like a bat out of hell part two: The outlook for oil
The second in a five-part series from the BRG energy and climate practice looks at the impact of Covid-19 on the global oil market and the trajectory of its recovery.
Oil prices in the US and across the world have collapsed as a result of combined supply and demand shocks. Global oil production increased substantially after Russia’s refusal to cut production during the Opec+ meeting on 6 March, which provoked retaliatory production increases from Saudi Arabia and the UAE. As part of a one-two punch, this supply shock was followed swiftly by a massive reduction in demand. Oil consumption plunged by c.29pc in April following the declaration by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March that Covid-19 had become a pandemic. The knock-on effect on benchmark spot oil prices was immediate and dramatic (see Figure 1). The economic impacts of the coronavirus
Also in this section
9 January 2026
A shift in perspective is needed on the carbon challenge, the success of which will determine the speed and extent of emissions cuts and how industries adapt to the new environment
2 January 2026
This year may be a defining one for carbon capture, utilisation and storage in the US, despite the institutional uncertainty
23 December 2025
Legislative reform in Germany sets the stage for commercial carbon capture and transport at a national level, while the UK has already seen financial close on major CCS clusters
15 December 2025
Net zero is not the problem for the UK’s power system. The real issue is with an outdated market design in desperate need of modernisation






