Propane Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Gallon

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: -0.308 (-24.86%)
Chart

Description: Mont Belvieu, TX Propane Spot Price FOB

Unit: Singapore Dollar per Gallon



Source: Energy Information Administration

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Propane is a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) used as both a fuel and a petrochemical feedstock. In commodity markets it is commonly priced in U.S. dollars per gallon, with trading and physical delivery often referenced through regional LPG benchmarks and pipeline or terminal pricing points. Propane is stored and transported as a liquid under moderate pressure, which makes it suitable for bulk distribution by rail, truck, ship, and pipeline. Its main uses include residential and commercial heating, agricultural drying, industrial fuel, autogas, and as a feedstock for petrochemical processes such as propylene production. Because it can be substituted in some applications with natural gas, heating oil, electricity, or other LPGs, propane prices reflect both energy-market conditions and the logistics of moving a pressurized fuel from supply centers to end users.

Supply Drivers

Propane supply is structurally tied to two sources: natural gas processing and crude oil refining. In gas processing, propane is separated from raw natural gas streams along with ethane, butane, and other natural gas liquids. In refining, it is produced as a byproduct of crude distillation and conversion units. This means propane supply depends on upstream gas production, refinery runs, and the composition of hydrocarbon streams rather than on propane-specific production decisions alone. Major supply regions include North America, the Middle East, and parts of Asia, where large gas-processing systems and refining networks are established.

Seasonality is important because inventory builds often occur when heating demand is low and withdrawals rise during colder periods. Weather affects both supply and logistics: extreme cold can strain transport and storage systems, while hurricanes, freezes, and other disruptions can affect Gulf Coast processing and export infrastructure. Propane is also sensitive to infrastructure bottlenecks because it must be compressed, stored in pressurized tanks, and moved through terminals, rail, and marine routes. Production is relatively inelastic in the short run, since output is linked to broader hydrocarbon operations and cannot be expanded quickly in response to a price move.

Demand Drivers

Propane demand is shaped by residential and commercial heating, agricultural drying, industrial combustion, and petrochemical use. In colder climates and rural areas without pipeline natural gas access, propane serves as a distributed heating fuel. Agricultural demand is seasonal, especially for crop drying, which creates a recurring harvest-related consumption pattern. Industrial users value propane where a clean-burning, portable fuel is needed, including metalworking, forklifts, and backup power applications.

A key structural demand relationship is substitution. In heating and cooking, propane competes with natural gas, heating oil, electricity, and kerosene depending on infrastructure and relative prices. In petrochemicals, propane is used as a feedstock for propylene through dehydrogenation and cracking pathways, linking its demand to plastics and chemical manufacturing. Demand also varies with household income, rural electrification, and the extent of gas pipeline networks, but these factors change slowly because they depend on long-lived infrastructure. Because propane is widely stored in tanks at the point of use, end-user demand can be less immediate than for pipeline gas, yet it still rises and falls with weather, crop cycles, and industrial activity.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Propane prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because the commodity is commonly quoted in dollars and traded internationally. A stronger dollar can make dollar-priced energy less affordable for non-U.S. buyers, affecting export demand. Propane also responds to broader energy-market conditions, especially crude oil and natural gas, because its supply is linked to both refining and gas processing. Storage economics matter: when inventories are ample, carrying costs, financing costs, and seasonal demand patterns can create contango; when supply is tight relative to near-term use, backwardation can emerge. As a physical fuel with significant storage and transport costs, propane often reflects regional logistics as much as global macro conditions.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 20211.24-
Apr 20211.10-11.29%
May 20211.09-1.06%
Jun 20211.2918.42%
Jul 20211.4814.81%
Aug 20211.512.31%
Sep 20211.7415.23%
Oct 20211.9612.82%
Nov 20211.70-13.56%
Dec 20211.41-16.89%
Jan 20221.5811.90%
Feb 20221.739.41%
Mar 20221.9713.94%
Apr 20221.78-9.67%
May 20221.69-4.93%
Jun 20221.69-0.23%
Jul 20221.59-5.59%
Aug 20221.51-4.98%
Sep 20221.40-7.38%
Oct 20221.22-12.67%
Nov 20221.18-3.30%
Dec 2022.94-20.88%
Jan 20231.1219.27%
Feb 20231.10-1.34%
Mar 20231.07-3.33%
Apr 20231.081.42%
May 2023.89-17.46%
Jun 2023.77-13.30%
Jul 2023.848.47%
Aug 2023.929.37%
Sep 20231.008.61%
Oct 2023.92-7.21%
Nov 2023.86-6.69%
Dec 2023.926.39%
Jan 20241.1019.53%
Feb 20241.2211.33%
Mar 20241.08-11.85%
Apr 20241.090.88%
May 2024.94-13.12%
Jun 20241.039.20%
Jul 20241.074.19%
Aug 2024.99-7.42%
Sep 2024.85-14.38%
Oct 20241.0119.12%
Nov 20241.075.93%
Dec 20241.04-2.95%
Jan 20251.2317.81%
Feb 20251.251.55%
Mar 20251.16-6.72%
Apr 20251.12-3.60%
May 2025.97-13.83%
Jun 2025.970.53%
Jul 2025.91-6.17%
Aug 2025.86-5.44%
Sep 2025.882.62%
Oct 2025.83-6.54%
Nov 2025.79-4.51%
Dec 2025.835.77%
Jan 2026.80-4.19%
Feb 2026.78-2.65%
Mar 2026.9319.51%

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