Crude Oil (petroleum) Monthly Price - Pula per Barrel

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2016 - Mar 2026: 824.598 (187.38%)
Chart

Description: Crude oil, average spot price of Brent, Dubai and West Texas Intermediate, equally weighed

Unit: Pula per Barrel



Source: World Bank.

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Crude oil is a naturally occurring liquid hydrocarbon mixture refined into transportation fuels, heating fuels, petrochemical feedstocks, and other petroleum products. On commodity markets, it is typically priced per barrel, with benchmark grades used to represent regional quality and delivery conditions. A widely followed reference is the average of three spot benchmarks: Dated Brent, West Texas Intermediate, and Dubai Fateh. This type of composite benchmark helps summarize pricing across Atlantic Basin, North American, and Middle Eastern crude streams. The APSP, or All-World Crude Oil Price, is a simple average of these three benchmarks and is used as a broad indicator of global crude pricing.

Crude oil prices reflect both physical characteristics and market structure. Differences in sulfur content, density, transport access, and refinery compatibility create persistent price differentials among grades. Because crude oil is the principal feedstock for gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, heating oil, lubricants, asphalt, and many petrochemicals, it sits at the center of the modern energy and materials system. Its market is global, but local logistics, refinery configurations, and export infrastructure strongly influence the price of each benchmark.

Supply Drivers

Crude oil supply is shaped by geology, extraction technology, transport infrastructure, and the natural decline profile of reservoirs. Production is concentrated in regions with large sedimentary basins and favorable reservoir characteristics, including the Middle East, North America, Russia, and parts of Africa and Latin America. Conventional fields often require extensive capital investment but can produce for many years, while shale and other tight-oil formations depend on continuous drilling because individual wells decline rapidly. This creates a structural difference between long-cycle and short-cycle supply.

Weather and climate affect supply through hurricane disruption, freeze-offs, flooding, and seasonal maintenance patterns. Offshore production and export terminals are especially exposed to storm risk, while inland production depends on pipeline and rail access. Political and regulatory regimes also matter because access to acreage, fiscal terms, sanctions, and export constraints influence investment incentives and the ability to move crude to market. In many producing regions, infrastructure bottlenecks such as pipeline capacity, port loading limits, and refinery take-away constraints shape realized supply as much as geology does.

Production also responds slowly to price signals in many conventional projects because exploration, field development, and large-scale offshore construction involve long lead times. By contrast, shale output can respond more quickly, but still depends on drilling activity, service costs, and well productivity. Natural decline in existing fields means that sustaining output requires ongoing capital spending, making supply sensitive to investment cycles even when reserves remain abundant.

Demand Drivers

Crude oil demand is driven primarily by transportation, petrochemicals, industrial heat, and some power generation. Gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel consumption link crude demand to road freight, passenger travel, aviation, and broader goods movement. Petrochemical demand is especially important because naphtha, liquefied petroleum gases, and other refinery outputs are used to make plastics, synthetic fibers, solvents, and industrial chemicals. This gives crude oil a dual role as both an energy source and a materials input.

Demand is partly seasonal. In many consuming regions, gasoline demand rises with driving activity, while heating oil demand increases in colder periods. Refinery runs also follow maintenance cycles and product demand patterns, which feed back into crude purchasing. Economic activity matters because freight, manufacturing, and travel are all tied to industrial output and household income. In general, crude oil demand is less elastic in the short run than in the long run because vehicles, aircraft, shipping fleets, and industrial equipment cannot be switched quickly to alternative fuels.

Substitution occurs through natural gas, coal, biofuels, electricity, and efficiency improvements, but substitution is uneven across sectors. Road transport and aviation are harder to displace than stationary power or some industrial uses. Fuel economy standards, engine efficiency, electrification, and changes in refinery product slates all influence long-run demand, but the basic dependence on liquid fuels remains central where energy density and mobility are important. Population growth, urbanization, and freight intensity also support structural demand in many economies.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Crude oil is usually priced in U.S. dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect purchasing power for non-dollar consumers and can influence demand and hedging behavior. Because oil is a storable commodity, inventory levels, financing costs, and storage capacity shape the forward curve. When storage is abundant and financing is cheap, markets can move into contango; when prompt supply is tight, backwardation can appear. These structures affect refinery procurement, inventory management, and speculative positioning.

Interest rates matter because they change the cost of carrying inventories and the discount rate applied to future cash flows in the energy sector. Inflation expectations can also support crude oil as a partial inflation hedge, since petroleum products are embedded in transport and manufacturing costs. Crude oil often correlates with broader cyclical assets because demand rises and falls with industrial activity, freight volumes, and global trade. At the same time, supply disruptions can create price moves that are partly independent of general macro conditions.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2016440.07-
May 2016507.9715.43%
Jun 2016522.692.90%
Jul 2016475.59-9.01%
Aug 2016470.39-1.09%
Sep 2016477.871.59%
Oct 2016524.739.81%
Nov 2016482.91-7.97%
Dec 2016564.3916.87%
Jan 2017567.300.52%
Feb 2017567.740.08%
Mar 2017526.09-7.34%
Apr 2017548.264.21%
May 2017518.14-5.49%
Jun 2017471.54-8.99%
Jul 2017488.403.57%
Aug 2017510.464.52%
Sep 2017537.535.30%
Oct 2017569.615.97%
Nov 2017629.9710.60%
Dec 2017622.09-1.25%
Jan 2018645.273.73%
Feb 2018606.54-6.00%
Mar 2018613.351.12%
Apr 2018665.028.42%
May 2018729.089.63%
Jun 2018736.200.98%
Jul 2018747.911.59%
Aug 2018751.850.53%
Sep 2018812.958.13%
Oct 2018824.481.42%
Nov 2018663.13-19.57%
Dec 2018576.07-13.13%
Jan 2019594.493.20%
Feb 2019642.118.01%
Mar 2019682.506.29%
Apr 2019728.466.73%
May 2019718.46-1.37%
Jun 2019644.89-10.24%
Jul 2019652.711.21%
Aug 2019635.46-2.64%
Sep 2019656.393.29%
Oct 2019627.77-4.36%
Nov 2019658.114.83%
Dec 2019682.483.70%
Jan 2020662.46-2.93%
Feb 2020587.28-11.35%
Mar 2020371.11-36.81%
Apr 2020256.19-30.97%
May 2020366.9343.23%
Jun 2020461.9725.90%
Jul 2020485.965.19%
Aug 2020505.874.10%
Sep 2020467.78-7.53%
Oct 2020456.92-2.32%
Nov 2020472.903.50%
Dec 2020532.8012.67%
Jan 2021588.4010.43%
Feb 2021659.2412.04%
Mar 2021705.577.03%
Apr 2021684.61-2.97%
May 2021713.304.19%
Jun 2021770.217.98%
Jul 2021807.864.89%
Aug 2021767.39-5.01%
Sep 2021808.245.32%
Oct 2021923.4214.25%
Nov 2021921.14-0.25%
Dec 2021854.56-7.23%
Jan 2022973.6813.94%
Feb 20221,079.5810.88%
Mar 20221,301.5920.56%
Apr 20221,210.03-7.03%
May 20221,338.1310.59%
Jun 20221,418.416.00%
Jul 20221,328.23-6.36%
Aug 20221,213.07-8.67%
Sep 20221,154.42-4.83%
Oct 20221,206.254.49%
Nov 20221,145.49-5.04%
Dec 20221,007.30-12.06%
Jan 20231,026.141.87%
Feb 20231,048.712.20%
Mar 20231,012.69-3.43%
Apr 20231,084.357.08%
May 2023998.35-7.93%
Jun 2023986.33-1.20%
Jul 20231,043.855.83%
Aug 20231,142.259.43%
Sep 20231,259.5810.27%
Oct 20231,223.93-2.83%
Nov 20231,098.89-10.22%
Dec 20231,024.61-6.76%
Jan 20241,056.333.10%
Feb 20241,104.514.56%
Mar 20241,142.133.41%
Apr 20241,209.785.92%
May 20241,106.61-8.53%
Jun 20241,107.560.09%
Jul 20241,130.372.06%
Aug 20241,048.54-7.24%
Sep 2024959.59-8.48%
Oct 2024985.332.68%
Nov 2024979.09-0.63%
Dec 2024986.110.72%
Jan 20251,089.9810.53%
Feb 20251,022.47-6.19%
Mar 2025967.45-5.38%
Apr 2025911.74-5.76%
May 2025848.78-6.90%
Jun 2025925.108.99%
Jul 2025924.05-0.11%
Aug 2025892.75-3.39%
Sep 2025883.30-1.06%
Oct 2025837.30-5.21%
Nov 2025831.03-0.75%
Dec 2025802.08-3.48%
Jan 2026829.323.40%
Feb 2026874.005.39%
Mar 20261,264.6744.70%

Top Companies

Saudi Aramco
Website: http://www.saudiaramco.com/
Location: Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Estimated Production: 8.5 million barrels per day

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