Sunflower oil Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2006 - Apr 2013: 20,105.430 (110.71%)
Chart

Description: Sunflower Oil, US export price from Gulf of Mexico, Russian Ruble per Metric Ton

Unit: Russian Ruble per Metric Ton



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Sunflower oil is a vegetable oil pressed or extracted from sunflower seeds and traded internationally as a refined or crude edible oil. On commodity markets it is commonly quoted in US dollars per metric ton, with the benchmark often referenced as Sunflower oil, 65/35 EU/Black Sea, reflecting a blend of European Union and Black Sea export pricing. It is used primarily in food applications, including cooking oil, frying, margarine, salad dressings, and processed foods. Because it is a liquid oil with relatively neutral flavor and a favorable fatty-acid profile, it competes with other edible oils in both household and industrial uses. Sunflower oil also has smaller non-food uses, including some industrial and personal-care applications, but food demand dominates global trade. Its market behavior is closely linked to the broader vegetable-oil complex, where substitution among sunflower, soybean, rapeseed, palm, and corn oil helps transmit supply shocks across related markets.

Supply Drivers

Sunflower oil supply depends on sunflower seed production, which is concentrated in temperate and semi-arid regions with suitable growing seasons and relatively low humidity. The Black Sea region, parts of the European Union, Argentina, Turkey, and the United States are long-standing producing areas because sunflower is well adapted to rotation systems and can tolerate conditions that are less favorable for some competing oilseeds. Output is shaped by annual planting decisions, weather during flowering and seed fill, and the availability of crushing capacity near producing regions. Drought, excessive heat, and late-season rainfall can reduce seed yield and oil content, while disease pressure and pests can affect both field productivity and oil quality.

Unlike some perennial crops, sunflower is an annual crop, so supply can adjust within a single growing cycle, but acreage shifts are constrained by crop rotation, input costs, and relative returns versus grains and other oilseeds. Transport infrastructure matters because sunflower seed is bulky and often crushed close to origin to reduce freight costs. The oil market also depends on the by-product meal market, since crushing economics reflect the combined value of oil and meal. Storage losses are generally lower than for many fresh agricultural products, but the crop remains exposed to harvest timing, logistics, and regional weather concentration.

Demand Drivers

Demand for sunflower oil is driven mainly by food consumption, especially household cooking, frying, bakery products, snacks, and prepared foods. It is valued for its light taste and versatility, which makes it a common ingredient in both retail and food-service channels. Demand is also influenced by consumer preferences for edible oils with specific fatty-acid characteristics, including high-oleic varieties used in frying and processed foods where oxidative stability matters. In many markets, sunflower oil competes directly with soybean oil, rapeseed oil, palm oil, and, in some applications, corn oil. Because these oils are substitutable in many formulations, relative prices and availability often shift demand among them rather than eliminating demand altogether.

Consumption patterns can be seasonal where frying and processed-food demand rises during holiday periods or warm-weather food service cycles, but the broader demand base is relatively steady because edible oil is a staple input. Population growth, urbanization, and rising consumption of packaged foods support long-run demand, while dietary shifts can alter the mix of oils used. Industrial demand is smaller than food demand, though some sunflower oil enters cosmetics, soaps, and technical applications. The associated sunflower meal market also matters indirectly, because crushing demand is supported by livestock feed demand for protein meal, which helps determine how much seed is processed into oil.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Sunflower oil prices are influenced by the US dollar because the commodity is widely traded in dollars while production and consumption occur in multiple currencies. A stronger dollar can pressure dollar-denominated commodity prices by raising local-currency costs for importers. Interest rates matter through financing and storage costs: holding inventories ties up capital, so higher carrying costs can widen spreads between nearby and deferred contracts. Like other storable agricultural commodities, sunflower oil can exhibit contango when supply is ample and storage is rewarded, or backwardation when nearby physical supply is tight.

Broader inflation and risk sentiment can affect edible oils through portfolio flows and through the cost of energy, freight, and agricultural inputs. Sunflower oil also tends to move within the vegetable-oil complex, so price changes in palm, soybean, and rapeseed oils can influence substitution and arbitrage across markets. Because it is a physical commodity with global trade links, its price reflects both agricultural fundamentals and the economics of transport, processing, and inventory management.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 200618,160.54-
May 200618,363.201.12%
Jun 200617,971.92-2.13%
Jul 200617,414.40-3.10%
Aug 200617,820.832.33%
Sep 200617,893.840.41%
Oct 200617,890.95-0.02%
Nov 200619,205.837.35%
Dec 200619,187.27-0.10%
Jan 200719,075.20-0.58%
Feb 200718,662.46-2.16%
Mar 200718,615.14-0.25%
Apr 200719,479.404.64%
May 200721,456.9710.15%
Jun 200723,739.7610.64%
Jul 200725,515.397.48%
Aug 200728,548.7311.89%
Sep 200732,276.5613.06%
Oct 200733,795.844.71%
Nov 200734,258.571.37%
Dec 200736,100.655.38%
Jan 200841,863.1815.96%
Feb 200845,066.787.65%
Mar 200844,219.05-1.88%
Apr 200843,228.80-2.24%
May 200846,552.617.69%
Jun 200848,337.463.83%
Jul 200839,505.51-18.27%
Aug 200831,904.40-19.24%
Sep 200829,722.89-6.84%
Oct 200825,109.86-15.52%
Nov 200822,846.37-9.01%
Dec 200821,391.59-6.37%
Jan 200926,821.7625.38%
Feb 200928,830.597.49%
Mar 200926,183.21-9.18%
Apr 200928,285.638.03%
May 200930,058.626.27%
Jun 200928,168.76-6.29%
Jul 200925,336.57-10.05%
Aug 200925,979.532.54%
Sep 200924,895.73-4.17%
Oct 200924,905.590.04%
Nov 200926,627.726.91%
Dec 200929,618.3211.23%
Jan 201028,861.54-2.56%
Feb 201028,599.86-0.91%
Mar 201028,049.11-1.93%
Apr 201026,965.86-3.86%
May 201027,760.552.95%
Jun 201027,735.80-0.09%
Jul 201028,722.093.56%
Aug 201032,649.9513.68%
Sep 201034,318.075.11%
Oct 201038,953.8713.51%
Nov 201044,579.6214.44%
Dec 201044,858.950.63%
Jan 201144,722.92-0.30%
Feb 201149,915.5411.61%
Mar 201146,545.62-6.75%
Apr 201145,857.07-1.48%
May 201145,918.860.13%
Jun 201147,550.393.55%
Jul 201146,692.29-1.80%
Aug 201148,057.182.92%
Sep 201148,991.921.95%
Oct 201146,380.66-5.33%
Nov 201146,304.13-0.17%
Dec 201145,364.34-2.03%
Jan 201245,292.18-0.16%
Feb 201244,283.45-2.23%
Mar 201244,025.08-0.58%
Apr 201245,776.853.98%
May 201246,855.872.36%
Jun 201247,050.910.42%
Jul 201247,885.691.77%
Aug 201248,763.421.83%
Sep 201249,392.381.29%
Oct 201240,503.25-18.00%
Nov 201240,392.98-0.27%
Dec 201239,120.73-3.15%
Jan 201339,262.410.36%
Feb 201338,795.33-1.19%
Mar 201338,502.59-0.75%
Apr 201338,265.96-0.61%

Top Companies

Kernel
Website: http://www.kernel.ua/en/
Location: Ukraine
Estimated Production: 1500000 tons per year

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