A leading energy outlook has nudged down its 2026 crude forecasts, now seeing US benchmark WTI averaging about $59 per barrel and Brent around $62.23, both slightly lower than October projections. The downgrade reflects expectations of persistent oversupply, swelling inventories and only moderate global demand growth despite geopolitical risks.
Fresh projections from the latest short‑term energy outlook suggest oil prices will drift lower into 2026 as global supply growth continues to outpace demand. US benchmark crude is now expected to average roughly $59 per barrel in 2026, versus an October forecast of about $60.23, while Brent is seen around $62.23 per barrel, down from $63.15 earlier.
Analysts attribute the softer path to rising non‑OPEC production, a steady ramp‑up in US output and comfortable inventory buffers, which together blunt the price impact of periodic geopolitical shocks or OPEC+ maneuvering. The outlook assumes only modest demand growth as efficiency gains, EV adoption and slower industrial activity temper consumption, even though emerging markets continue to expand. For import‑dependent economies, lower crude benchmarks offer some respite on inflation and current‑account deficits, but they also signal weaker pricing power for exporters and energy majors.
Key highlights
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2026 WTI forecast cut to about $59/bbl from roughly $60.23/bbl in the prior (October) projection.
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2026 Brent forecast eased to around $62.23/bbl from $63.15/bbl previously.
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Downward revisions driven by expectations of oversupply, larger global inventories and only moderate demand growth.
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Agency still sees significant uncertainty from Russia sanctions, Middle East tensions and trade policy shifts, which could tighten balances intermittently.
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Lower crude projections imply potential relief for fuel prices and inflation in consuming nations, but pressure on upstream profitability and petro‑state budgets.
Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration Short‑Term Energy Outlook and related press materials; Rigzone; Fuels Market News; Hydrocarbon Engineering; S&P Global and other syndicated commodity‑market analysis