KEY POINTS
  • The International Energy Agency predicted that peak oil demand would be reached by 2030 and hailed the decline of crude as a "welcome sight."
  • OPEC leaders reacted harshly, accusing the agency of fear-mongering and risking the destabilization of the world economy.
  • Oil producers have been accused of dialing back their climate pledges in recent months following record annual profits.
An off-shore oil platform off the coast in Huntington Beach, California on April 5, 2020.

It's been a war of words and numbers between two major players in the energy industry – the International Energy Agency and OPEC – as they spar over the future of something crucial to crude producers' survival: peak oil demand.

Peak oil demand refers to the point in time when the highest level of global crude demand is reached, which will be immediately followed by a permanent decline. This would theoretically decrease the need for investments in crude oil projects and make them less economical as other energy sources take over.