![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhyOxTblWegbTXb1iZCBizMhdmPj12wTKzrBD5hXpQAsFG83vHL4faS4nPwJZQ9b5rrAaLo4qQxUfSmPNl06xwADr0a4G4xjQmscZ5Om_OWg6Qfp9mF28ez84znVTgPGKD96ru_ROM_iJk/s320/gasoline+demand+Oct09.gif)
However it does require a little clarification since the data that the TWIP is plotting (if one goes one layer deeper into the site) appears to be the finished gasoline supplied. However, since this tends to fairly rapidly transfer to the consumer in most cases it remains a simple guide to what may be happening.
So the curve is going up, and so I wondered where we stood relative to the conditions of the economy pre-recession. Going to the tabulated data – conveniently in a spreadsheet – I simply sorted the data by the size of the demand (thousands of barrels a day).
The data for the top weeks of production shows that we peaked (in the short term) in 2007.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGj576KqlTxP35JN4GP-0E4p3MU82NX0qH6rndsFJ-aSwZfYeIkAU3ypyz5x6L90NqGzpKZ_4-FtMG1EjeJtY5-NQFYaiTpJE5H3CbZRHXNZfmZEF3rpzpA08PeE-8dMc3zBvLoUTYAzQ/s320/gas+peak+1.png)
However, if we look at the second block of 20:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEijMveH9LsRb06ZJJse6bFUJpjvsMOFOWeQJGWpsZ1Q_GBBLTkHC2MB7DQw2jGhaiOEioy_R_8HKhyphenhyphenpTnF9W1jy1mYEs7VveP67O7ljcH67rek0a5pI_qUoKeMcwr2LMgsY7m8_AlILB7E/s320/gas+peak2.png)
You will notice that in the week of May 22 (number 27) and of August 28 (number 40) 2009 has made it back into the list. This is not the season for high demand, and so, even though the trend is up, the next 2009 entry does not come until number 85, but the fact that the numbers have headed back, and that the difference between the current peak (9,762,000 bd) and the highest this year (9,538,000 bd) is only 224,000 bd might suggest that the public awareness of the OPEC restriction on production – or the relaxation of that quota system – may come a little earlier than we might otherwise have thought. The FHA plot for the month on actual vehicle miles driven for August is not out yet, but the picture for May was showing that, barring the South East, the rest of the nation was starting to drive more than in the same period of 2008.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgtgiWox7CxzjDQAe_MARjcv0nDTQGVQFOMPDIzEMDlkh7sfWfonzYXdRyysCh4_fZzcxwOvm827pgQGsLM86azsqCJipWY_BSNB_izMTzaFeA8u4y-eiXUbYbyH923c2gUtJTe6KIci2M/s320/vehicle+miles+change.png)
It will be interesting to see how the winter turns out, though the use of different fuel sources, the economy and the type of winter we’re going to have are all still in question.
Interestingly the commentary at the start of today’s TWIP dealt with the need for more transparency in the global oil market, noting that information on inventories is the most opaque. Since this is the buffer between production and consumption and the growth of “floating storage” – an even more opaque value – means that the real trends in production can be masked and even more difficult to predict.
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