Global oil and gasoline prices - statistics & facts
Oil and its derivatives have a wide array of uses as transportation fuels, synthetic materials like plastics, and as a source of energy generation. On a macro level, crude oil prices thus shape manufacturing and production costs; while on a micro level, consumers may see its impact through retail price fluctuations of motor fuels like gasoline.
Highs and lows of oil prices in the past decade
In the past decade, oil prices have been particularly volatile. Following the Great Recession, production caps by the largest oil producing body, OPEC, saw prices climb to historic highs. The OPEC reference basket reached an annual average of 109.45 U.S. dollars per barrel in 2012, while Brent crude climbed to 111.63 U.S. dollars. This surge in prices incentivized North American oil and gas producers to reinforce hitherto unprofitable extraction methods for shale oil and oil sands, which contributed to the oil glut of 2016. That year, benchmarks fell below an annual average of 45 U.S. dollars per barrel. The following three years saw prices initially recover. However, the 2020 coronavirus pandemic and resulting mobility restrictions had dire effects on the industry. April 2020 recorded some of the lowest ever closing prices for crude oils, with WTI even trading at negative prices for some time.How geopolitical events in the 2020s shaped prices
Two years into the coronavirus pandemic, an increase in economic activity and the Russia-Ukraine war led to benchmarks surging to highs not seen since 2008. In the months since the outbreak of the war, weekly crude oil prices rose to over 120 U.S. per barrel, as traders expected severe bottlenecks following sanctions on Russian exports.Throughout the latter half of 2024 and early 2025, oil prices largely fluctuated between 65 and 80 U.S. dollars, as demand outlooks for China fell due to slowing economic activity and greater adoption of electric vehicles.
Gasoline prices around the world
Crude oil prices are the greatest determinant for motor fuel prices. As such, fluctuations in raw material prices are immediately noticeable to drivers around the world. Gasoline prices vary greatly between countries, shaped by domestic oil production and government subsidies.For example, the United States tends to have lower gasoline prices than European countries, due to large oil production at home. The same circumstances explain why Libya has the lowest gasoline prices in Africa, while the Central African Republic has some of the highest. In Russia, gasoline prices increased throughout the latter half of 2024 and early 2025, as drone attacks impacted local refineries. Meanwhile, Japan’s gasoline prices reached 15-year highs as the government began a phase-out of oil subsidies.