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List of countries by oil exports

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Crude oil export revenue by country (annually)
A world map of countries by oil exportation, 2020.
Trends in the top five crude oil-exporting countries, 1980–2012
OPEC oil exports and production

This is a list of oil-producing countries by oil exports based on The World Factbook[1] and other Sources.[2] Many countries also import oil, and some import more oil than they export.

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  • Oil Production by Countries per day
  • Oil Production by Country in Last 120 Years (1900-2020)

Transcription

Countries by rank

In 2022, 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.

Country Oil exports (bbl/day) Date of information
World Total 44,936,873
 Saudi Arabia (OPEC) 7,364,000 2022 est.
 Russia 4,780,000 2022 est.
 Iraq (OPEC) 3,712,000 2022 est.
 United States 3,604,000 2022
 Canada 3,350,000 2022
 United Arab Emirates (OPEC) 2,717,000 2022
 Kuwait (OPEC) 1,879,000 2022
 Norway 1,558,000 2022
 Nigeria (OPEC) 1,388,000 2022
 Brazil 1,346,417 2022 est.
 Kazakhstan 1,315,000 2022 est.
 Mexico 1,198,511 2020
 Angola (OPEC) 1,085,000 2022
 Libya (OPEC) 920,000 2022 est.
 Iran (OPEC) 901,000 2022
 Oman 859,883 2020 est.
 Azerbaijan 813,000 2018 est.
 United Kingdom 724,334 2020 est.
 Colombia 540,959 2020 est.
 Qatar 502,801 2020
 Algeria (OPEC) 477,000 2022
 Venezuela (OPEC) 438,000 2022 est.
 Ecuador 361,820 2020 est.
 Australia 92,909 2020 est.
 Equatorial Guinea (OPEC) 81,000 2022 est.
 Indonesia 253,157 2020 est.
 South Sudan 291,800 2010 est.
 Congo (OPEC) 243,000 2022 est.
 Malaysia 280,000 2021 est.
 Gabon (OPEC) 185,000 2022 est.
 Vietnam 113,497 2020 est.
 Denmark 78,070 2016 est.
 Yemen 8,875 2016 est.
 Bahrain 154,691 2016 est.
 Syria 6,580 2019 est.
 Brunei 82,333 2020 est.
 Chad 97,079 2016 est.
 Sudan 135,431 2020 est.
 Argentina 90,920 2010 est.
 Timor-Leste 87,000 2010 est.
 Egypt 102,750 2020 est.
 Cuba 83,000 2012 est.
 Tunisia 77,980 2010 est.
 Trinidad and Tobago 75,340 2010 est.
 Turkmenistan 67,000 2012 est.
 Cameroon 55,680 2010 est.
 New Zealand 42,390 2010 est.
 Netherlands 35,500 2013 est.
 China 33,000 2013 est.
 Thailand 32,200 2011 est.
 Côte d'Ivoire 32,190 2010 est.
 Papua New Guinea 28,400 2010 est.
 Albania 23,320 2013 est.
 Greece 21,551 2021 est.
 Philippines 20,090 2010 est.
 Peru 15,610 2012 est.
 Germany 14,260 2010 est.
 Guatemala 10,960 2010 est.
 Estonia 7,624 2010 est.
 Suriname 7,621 2010 est.
 Mauritania 7,337 2010 est.
 Italy 6,300 2010 est.
 Mongolia 5,680 2010 est.
 Belize 4,345 2010 est.
 Poland 3,615 2011 est.
 Lithuania 2,181 2010 est.
 Ireland 1,858 2010 est.
 Barbados 765 2010 est.
 Georgia 531 2012 est.
 Czechia 404 2010 est.
 Slovakia 263 2010 est.
 Bolivia 61 2013 est.
 DR Congo 0 2010 est.

Oil export revenues

Academic contributions have written about differences in petroleum revenue management in various countries. Many scholars see the natural resource wealth in some countries as a natural resource blessing, while in others it has been referred to 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, thus also granting a status quo to the exploitation of natural resources.[7] The PRIX index forecasts the effect of political developments on exports from major petroleum-producing countries.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ranking – The World Factbook
  2. ^ "Data download".
  3. ^ Sachs J. D.; Warner A.M. (2001). "The curse of natural resources" (PDF). European Economic Review. Vol. 4, no. 45. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-05-17. Retrieved 2016-07-13.
  4. ^ Humphreys, M., Sachs, J. and Stiglitz, J. E. (2007). "Escaping the resource curse". European economic review. Cambridge University Press.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Tietenberg, T. H.; Lewis, L. (2000). "Environmental and natural resource economics".
  6. ^ Ross, M. L. (2003). "The natural resource curse: How wealth can make you poor". European Economic Review.
  7. ^ Wilson, E.; Stammler, F. (2015). "Beyond extractivism and alternative cosmologies: Arctic communities and extractive industries in uncertain times". European Economic Review. Vol. 3, no. 1. pp. 1–8. doi:10.1016/j.exis.2015.12.001.
  8. ^ "Nuclear Negotiations, Restructuring at Chevron and a New Political Risk Index for Oil Markets". Alberta Oil Magazine. 2015-06-29. Archived from the original on 2015-12-20. Retrieved 2015-09-26.
This page was last edited on 1 March 2024, at 12:15
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