List of countries by oil exports

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of countries by oil exports based on data for 2024 by CEIC. Oil in this list refers to base crude oil only, not refined petroleum products such as gasoline, diesel and airplane fuel.

Crude oil export revenue by country (annually)
A world map of countries by oil exportation, 2022

In 2024, Saudi Arabia was the largest exporter of petroleum, followed by Russia and Iraq. Other major exporters of petroleum in that year included the United States, Canada and United Arab Emirates. In 2024, Saudi Arabia also had the largest oil export value in US dollar terms by far.

Many of these countries also import oil, and some import more oil than they export. This is known as an oil export deficit. By contrast, when a country exports more oil than it imports, it is known as an oil export surplus. The second table in this page shows which countries have the largest oil export surplus in US dollar terms. Russia was the world leader in 2024 for this category.

List

More information Country, Export value 2024 (thousands US$) ...
Country Export value
2024 (thousands US$)[1]
Oil exports
2024 (bbl/day)[2]
 Saudi Arabia (OPEC)191,068,1676,049,140
 Russia (OPEC+)122,487,8724,524,354
 United States118,499,3614,109,000
 United Arab Emirates (OPEC)114,863,8282,717,000
 Canada107,499,7383,568,933
 Iraq (OPEC)98,371,4663,363,570
 Norway49,735,6681,690,710
 Brazil (OPEC+)44,964,2851,706,667
 Kazakhstan (OPEC+)42,878,7611,425,750
 Nigeria (OPEC)38,404,9231,522,297
 Kuwait (OPEC)35,530,0101,175,833
 Angola31,257,3041,042,071
 Libya (OPEC)27,290,6451,001,882
 Oman (OPEC+)25,768,830887,083
 Mexico (OPEC+)21,707,462847,812
Guyana 18,174,888
Netherlands 17,039,661
 United Kingdom16,014,249475,043
 Qatar14,965,909540,842
 Azerbaijan (OPEC+)14,437,356393,917
 Algeria (OPEC)13,976,238459,492
 Colombia12,062,243473,250
 Venezuela (OPEC)9,845,186655,743
 Ecuador8,646,543356,000
 Australia7,105,138238,558
 Malaysia (OPEC+)6,249,794218,167
 Congo (OPEC)5,432,045236,488
 Gabon (OPEC)5,226,724204,360
Argentina 4,930,467
Ghana 3,735,368
Chad 3,206,621
Cameroon 2,697,654
 Equatorial Guinea (OPEC)2,269,46656,436
 Indonesia2,228,45867,167
 Brunei (OPEC+)2,100,52875,289
Spain 1,884,604
 Trinidad and Tobago1,616,07251,250
 Vietnam1,480,37550,333
 Egypt1,408,88237,667
 China1,181,82841,668
Belgium 957,088
Ivory Coast 799,801
Croatia 773,594
Senegal 763,878
Niger 748,937
Papua New Guinea 736,202
 Sudan (OPEC+)697,07784,660
Italy 632,755
DR Congo 601,325
Thailand 583,036
New Zealand 423,291
Denmark 396,231
South Sudan 388,115
Tunisia 380,559
Mongolia 322,111
Peru 317,738
Turkmenistan 240,117
Philippines 168,275
Poland 101,267
Mozambique 95,515
Pakistan 67,637
Guatemala 66,671
Timor-Leste 66,095
Hungary 63,144
Liberia 52,092
South Africa 51,468
Greece 42,743
France 16,100
British Virgin Islands 15,097
Barbados 13,633
Chile 10,113
Romania 7,529
Sao Tome and Principe 6,313
Bosnia and Herzegovina 4,664
Tanzania 2,352
Singapore 2,160
Bolivia 1,419
Germany 1,172
Latvia 710
Slovakia 694
Moldova 628
Sweden 191
Ireland 74
Fiji 70
Namibia 22
 Iran (OPEC)211,566,220
Czech Republic 12
Kenya 5
Sri Lanka 3
Dominican Republic 3
Jamaica 2
 Switzerland 2
Gambia 1
Botswana 1
Uganda 1
 Bahrain (OPEC+)137,750
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Oil export revenues

Academic contributors have written about differences in petroleum revenue management in various countries. Many scholars see the natural resource wealth in some countries as a blessing, while others have referred to it as a natural resource curse.[3] A vast body of resource curse literature has studied the role of governance regimes, legal frameworks and political risk in building an economy based on natural resource exploitation.[4][5][6] However, whether it is seen as a blessing or a curse, the recent political decisions regarding the future of petroleum production in many countries were given an extractivist direction[clarification needed], thus also granting a status quo[clarification needed] to the exploitation of natural resources.[7] The PRIX index forecasts the effect of political developments on exports from major petroleum-producing countries.[8]

By oil export surplus

A country's oil export surplus can be calculated by subtracting the value of its oil imports from the value of its oil exports. Countries with oil export surpluses tend to be more energy independent than those with oil export deficits (importing more oil than they export).

More information Country, Continent ...
Country Continent Oil export surplus
2022 (US$ billions)[1]
 Russia Europe/Asia + 346.7
 Saudi Arabia (OPEC) Asia + 265.1
 Norway Europe + 203.1
 United Arab Emirates (OPEC) Asia + 167.8
 Canada North America + 135.0
 Australia Oceania + 113.2
 Qatar Asia + 94.9
 Iraq (OPEC) Asia + 87.3
 Kuwait (OPEC) Asia + 69.6
 Algeria (OPEC) Africa + 57.7
 United States North America + 55.9
 Oman Asia + 52.8
 Angola Africa + 43.4
 Kazakhstan Asia/Europe + 42.8
 Azerbaijan Asia/Europe + 34.0
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See also

References

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