List of countries by oil exports

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

A world map of countries by oil exportation, 2006.
Trends in the top five crude oil-exporting countries, 1980–2012
OPEC oil exports and production

Countries by Rank

RankCountry/RegionOil - exports (bbl/day)Date of
information
1 Saudi Arabia10,600,0002018 est.
2 Russia5,225,0002018 est.
3 Iraq3,800,0002018 est.
4 United States3,770,0002018
5 Canada3,596,6902018
6 United Arab Emirates2,296,4732018
7 Kuwait2,050,0302018
8 Nigeria1,979,4512018
9 Qatar1,477,2132018
10 Angola1,420,5882018
11 Kazakhstan1,292,0002016 est
12 Mexico1,285,5232018
13 Venezuela1,245,0002018
14 Norway1,254,9202018
15 Oman1,000,1002018 est.
16 Azerbaijan813,0002018 est.
17 Algeria798,9002014 est.
18 Iran785,0002014 est.
19 Colombia681,0002015 est.
20 United Kingdom636,0002016 est.
21 Brazil518,8002014 est.
22 Ecuador400,7002014 est.
23 Libya385,5002014 est.
24 Indonesia338,1002010 est.
25 Equatorial Guinea319,1002010 est.
26 Australia314,1002010 est.
27 South Sudan291,8002010 est.
28 Republic of the Congo290,0002011 est.
29 Malaysia269,0002012 est.
30 Gabon225,3002010 est.
31 Vietnam188,0002012 est.
32 Yemen175,2002010 est.
33 Denmark155,2002010 est.
34 Bahrain152,6002012 est.
35 Syria152,4002010 est.
36 Brunei147,9002010 est.
37 Chad125,7002010 est.
38 Sudan97,2702010 est.
39 Argentina90,9202010 est.
40 Timor-Leste87,0002010 est.
41 Egypt85,0002010 est.
42 Cuba83,0002012 est.
43 Tunisia77,9802010 est.
44 Trinidad and Tobago75,3402010 est.
45 Turkmenistan67,0002012 est.
46 Cameroon55,6802010 est.
47 New Zealand47,2902010 est.
48 Netherlands35,5002013 est.
49 China33,0002013 est.
50 Thailand32,2002011 est.
51 Côte d'Ivoire32,1902010 est.
52 Papua New Guinea28,4002010 est.
53 Albania23,3202013 est.
54 Democratic Republic of the Congo22,2402010 est.
55 Philippines20,0902010 est.
56 Greece17,0202010 est.
57 Peru15,6102012 est.
58 Germany14,2602010 est.
59 Guatemala10,9602010 est.
60 Estonia7,6242010 est.
61 Suriname7,6212010 est.
62 Mauritania7,3372010 est.
63 Italy6,3002010 est.
64 Mongolia5,6802010 est.
65 Belize4,3452010 est.
66 Poland3,6152011 est.
67 Lithuania2,1812010 est.
68 Ireland1,8582010 est.
69 Barbados7652010 est.
70 Georgia5312012 est.
71 Czech Republic4042010 est.
72 Slovakia2632010 est.
73 Bolivia612013 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.[2] 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.[3][4][5] 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.[6] The PRIX index forecasts the effect of political developments on exports from major petroleum-producing countries.[7]

See also

References

  1. "International - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)".
  2. Sachs J. D.; Warner A.M. (2001). "The curse of natural resources" (PDF). European Economic Review. 4 (45). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-05-17. Retrieved 2016-07-13.
  3. Humphreys, M., Sachs, J. and Stiglitz, J. E. (2007). "Escaping the resource curse". European economic review. Cambridge University Press.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Tietenberg, T. H.; Lewis, L. (2000). "Environmental and natural resource economics".
  5. Ross, M. L. (2003). "The natural resource curse: How wealth can make you poor". European Economic Review.
  6. Wilson, E.; Stammler, F. (2015). "Beyond extractivism and alternative cosmologies: Arctic communities and extractive industries in uncertain times". European Economic Review. 3 (1). doi:10.1016/j.exis.2015.12.001.
  7. "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.
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