The IEA which is the energy agency of the OECD has updated its demand estimates for oil based on the updated estimates of growth in the US and Europe of the IMF and the OECD. The IEA reports have been behind the curve like the IMF estimates and more after the fact revisions. Their current forecast of world demand growth drops their January estimate of demand by 35% to 1.3 million barrels a day from 2 million barrels a day in 2008 vs 2007. This reflects the one percentage point drop in growth in the USA from 1.5% to 0.5% in the recently revised IMF estimate. This should lead to drop in oil prices from the high of $110 currently. But the IEA is leery of predicting this because of what it sees as robust growth in India and China. Partly IEA is caught between different views of world economic growth, one view holds that Europe will see some impact from the US slowdown but Asia will see less of an impact, another view sees this as a global economic slowdown. More likely considering the extent of the bubbles and the excesses in different countries its likely that whats happening in the US will see effects worldwide and lead to a global slowdown. So look for a further downward revision of numbers for oil demand growth as well as estimates that suggest lower oil prices once the effects are felt on the ground in factories, plants and industry worldwide....