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OPEC Stuck between Market Share Push, Demand Uncertainty

In the past, oil price wars were short, sharp and, to those who profited from them, sweet. Now, an oil price war is a more cautious affair—assuming what OPEC is doing with its supply return is a price war, of course. And because most assume just that, all eyes are on the group’s chances of success. These are uncertain, to say the least, with most demand forecasts predicting a disaster for prices.

How the U.S. is Handing Over Venezuela’s Oil Sector to China

After coming into office, the administration of President Donald Trump has eliminated licenses for oil companies to operate in Venezuela, despite initial hints that it would continue them, with presidential envoy Richard Grenell’s visits to Caracas. This means that sanctions on state-owned PDVSA are fully back on. Chevron, the main U.S. corporation on the ground, is back to having only a secret license for minimum maintenance and security, as it still a shareholder in four joint ventures.

Iran’s Oil and Gas Assets Rocked in Latest Round of Israeli Attacks

Israel launched a series of airstrikes on Tehran’s critical energy infrastructure early Sunday, setting ablaze the city’s main gas depot and a major oil refinery, as the conflict with Iran intensified into its most destructive phase yet. The attacks, part of a broader Israeli offensive targeting Iran’s energy sector, have heightened fears of a wider regional war and sent ripples through global oil markets.

ASCO lands $200 million logistics contract with North Sea operator

The major five-year contract, worth approximately $203 million (£150 million) is effective from 1st July 2025. The scope encompasses ASCO’s full suite of integrated logistics services, including quayside operations, warehousing, materials management, marine gas oil, environmental services, aviation, customs, freight forwarding and ships agency.

OPEC+ Bets on Summer Demand as Q4 Glut Looms

The OPEC+ group was likely betting on robust demand during the peak summer driving season when it decided to start accelerating the oil production hikes in May. The market proves it has been right.
At the end of the second quarter and the start of the third quarter, demand growth will not lag supply growth materially, according to analysts.