WASHINGTON, March 6 ― US Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette said yesterday he does not expect the coronavirus outbreak ― which has sharply curbed world oil demand ― to affect China's agreement in the recent trade deal to buy more than US$50 billion (RM208 billion) in US oil, gas and coal over two years.

The virus' impact on demand for fuel in China and around the globe has contributed to a near 25 per cent decline in oil prices this year and led producer group Opec to agree to cut production.

“It's hard to tell,” Brouillette told reporters in Washington. “I don't have any expectations at the moment that it will (affect the agreement). I think the Chinese have every intention of honoring their agreements.”

He added that he believed the impact of the coronavirus on US energy markets had been marginal so far and that it was too early to tell whether the outbreak would have any significant effect on the US drilling industry.

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He made the comments at a news conference alongside the head of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol, who said: “Coronavirus is affecting oil markets disproportionately more seriously than the global economy.

“The reason is basically mobility. For example, the aviation sector is about 1 per cent of global GDP but is almost 8 per cent of global oil demand. Oil demand is affected very seriously,” Birol said.

The IEA projected last month that oil demand was set to fall by 435,000 barrels per day this quarter because of the coronavirus outbreak, its first decrease since the financial crisis in 2009. ― Reuters

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