Crude Oil (petroleum); Dubai Fateh Monthly Price - Colombian Peso per Barrel

Data as of March 2026

Range
May 2016 - Feb 2022: 235,514.300 (179.37%)
Chart

Description: Crude oil, Dubai Fateh 32° API for years 1985-present; 1960-84 refer to Saudi Arabian Light, 34° API.

Unit: Colombian Peso per Barrel



Source: Bloomberg; Energy Intelligence Group (EIG); Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC); 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 liquid hydrocarbon mixture refined into transportation fuels, heating fuels, petrochemical feedstocks, and many industrial products. On commodity markets, it is typically priced per barrel, with one barrel equal to 42 U.S. gallons. Dubai Fateh is a widely used benchmark for medium-sour crude in Asia and the Middle East, and it is commonly referenced in spot pricing and term contracts. As a benchmark, it helps price physical cargoes that are delivered into refining systems designed to process heavier, higher-sulfur grades.

Crude oil is not a uniform product: density, sulfur content, and distillation yield determine its value to refiners. Medium-sour grades such as Dubai Fateh often trade relative to sweeter, lighter crudes because they require different refining configurations and produce different output slates. The benchmark is especially relevant for pricing exports from the Persian Gulf and for comparing regional crude streams in Asia, where refinery demand is closely linked to shipping access and refinery complexity.

Supply Drivers

Crude oil supply is shaped by geology, reservoir decline, and the economics of extraction. Production is concentrated in regions with large sedimentary basins, including the Middle East, North America, Russia, and parts of Latin America and Africa. Fields differ in depth, pressure, sulfur content, and recovery characteristics, which affects lifting costs and the type of refining system they serve. Many reservoirs exhibit natural decline after peak output, so maintaining supply requires ongoing drilling, enhanced recovery, or new field development.

Supply is also sensitive to infrastructure and transport constraints. Pipelines, export terminals, tanker availability, and port capacity influence whether crude reaches benchmark markets efficiently. For Dubai-linked pricing, Persian Gulf production and export logistics matter because the benchmark reflects cargoes moving through a major seaborne trading hub. Weather can disrupt offshore production and shipping, while maintenance outages and unplanned field interruptions can tighten prompt availability.

Unlike agricultural commodities, crude oil supply does not follow a harvest cycle, but it does respond with long lags to investment decisions. Exploration, appraisal, field development, and refinery-compatible output adjustments take time, so supply tends to be relatively inelastic in the short run. Geological constraints, water cut, reservoir pressure decline, and the need for specialized equipment all make output changes gradual rather than immediate.

Demand Drivers

Crude oil demand is driven primarily by transportation, petrochemicals, industrial heat, and power generation in some regions. Gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, marine fuel, and naphtha are the main downstream products, so refinery demand depends on the structure of the transportation fleet, freight activity, aviation, and chemical manufacturing. Because many end uses have few near-term substitutes, demand can be relatively stable in the short run, though efficiency gains and fuel switching affect longer-term consumption patterns.

Seasonality matters through refinery runs and product demand. Heating needs, summer driving, and aviation activity can alter crude intake indirectly through product inventories and refinery margins. In Asia and the Middle East, refinery configurations often favor medium-sour crude because complex refineries can process heavier, higher-sulfur barrels into a broad product slate. This creates a structural link between Dubai Fateh and the economics of complex refining systems.

Substitution is important. Refiners can switch among crude grades within technical limits, and crude competes indirectly with natural gas, coal, biofuels, and electricity in some end uses. Petrochemical demand links crude to naphtha and other feedstocks, while transportation demand links it to vehicle efficiency standards and fleet composition. Population growth, urbanization, and industrialization support long-run demand, but the pace of change depends on technology, infrastructure, and fuel economics.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Crude oil is priced globally in U.S. dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect local-currency costs and cross-border purchasing power. A stronger dollar tends to make oil more expensive for non-dollar buyers, while a weaker dollar has the opposite effect. Interest rates matter because crude and refined products are storable; higher financing costs raise the cost of holding inventories and can influence forward curves.

Storage economics help determine whether the market is in contango or backwardation. When prompt supply is abundant relative to near-term demand, storage can become attractive and deferred prices may exceed nearby prices. When prompt barrels are scarce, nearby prices can trade at a premium. Crude also has a partial inflation link because it is a key input into transport and manufacturing, but it is more directly driven by physical balances than by financial flows alone.

MonthPriceChange
May 2016131,300.10-
Jun 2016137,281.804.56%
Jul 2016126,255.00-8.03%
Aug 2016129,700.002.73%
Sep 2016127,781.40-1.48%
Oct 2016141,442.9010.69%
Nov 2016135,576.70-4.15%
Dec 2016155,832.9014.94%
Jan 2017157,094.000.81%
Feb 2017155,993.30-0.70%
Mar 2017150,754.20-3.36%
Apr 2017150,714.80-0.03%
May 2017147,160.80-2.36%
Jun 2017137,191.10-6.77%
Jul 2017144,825.305.56%
Aug 2017150,074.003.62%
Sep 2017157,142.604.71%
Oct 2017164,057.204.40%
Nov 2017182,706.1011.37%
Dec 2017183,728.200.56%
Jan 2018189,490.903.14%
Feb 2018179,601.70-5.22%
Mar 2018180,481.600.49%
Apr 2018189,274.604.87%
May 2018210,496.4011.21%
Jun 2018211,750.300.60%
Jul 2018209,742.90-0.95%
Aug 2018213,473.801.78%
Sep 2018234,067.209.65%
Oct 2018243,440.804.00%
Nov 2018208,202.20-14.48%
Dec 2018181,170.60-12.98%
Jan 2019186,673.403.04%
Feb 2019200,277.607.29%
Mar 2019208,772.404.24%
Apr 2019223,045.406.84%
May 2019228,444.902.42%
Jun 2019199,766.50-12.55%
Jul 2019201,461.700.85%
Aug 2019201,200.10-0.13%
Sep 2019206,748.802.76%
Oct 2019201,120.00-2.72%
Nov 2019208,469.103.65%
Dec 2019218,481.904.80%
Jan 2020211,504.70-3.19%
Feb 2020185,869.10-12.12%
Mar 2020130,612.80-29.73%
Apr 202092,767.27-28.98%
May 2020121,927.1031.43%
Jun 2020148,446.7021.75%
Jul 2020156,120.205.17%
Aug 2020165,577.806.06%
Sep 2020154,414.80-6.74%
Oct 2020152,172.50-1.45%
Nov 2020157,228.103.32%
Dec 2020170,723.808.58%
Jan 2021189,347.3010.91%
Feb 2021214,577.3013.32%
Mar 2021231,307.107.80%
Apr 2021227,766.10-1.53%
May 2021247,014.708.45%
Jun 2021262,055.306.09%
Jul 2021279,700.206.73%
Aug 2021267,864.30-4.23%
Sep 2021276,459.203.21%
Oct 2021306,331.5010.81%
Nov 2021310,648.901.41%
Dec 2021287,657.80-7.40%
Jan 2022332,537.8015.60%
Feb 2022366,814.4010.31%

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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