Categories: World

Top 10 Oil Producers in the World in 2022, the U.S. Tops the List

Recently BP released its Statistical Review of World Energy 2022. The Review gives a comprehensive picture of the supply and demand for significant energy sources on a country-level basis.

Oil Demand Bounces Back

For 2020, the Review reported the biggest decline in oil1 consumption on record. Following nine consecutive years of increment, the Covid-19 pandemic made global consumption of crude oil decline by over 9% in 2020. Last year oil consumption bounced back by climbing 6% — the quickest ascend beginning around 1976. In any case, consumption stays 3.7% below the record level of 2019.

The United States stays the world’s top oil buyer, averaging 18.7 million BPD in 2021. This obvious an increment of 8.7% from 2020 (reflected by “Change” in the table below). This was the sharpest increment for any country in the Top 10, however, it is as yet 9% below the all-time high U.S. oil consumption level of 2005 (20.5 million BPD).

China was the second-highest customer at 15.4 million BPD. Over the past decade, U.S. oil consumption has expanded by an average every year rate of 0.4%, while China’s average every year increment was in excess of 10 times higher at 4.8%.

Germany was notably the main country in the Top 10 that saw a demand decrease in 2021.

The U.S. Remains Oil Production Champion

Despite the continuous effect the pandemic has had on U.S. oil creation, the U.S. stayed the world’s top oil producer in 2021 at 11.2 million BPD.2 Russia and Saudi Arabia held their positions at #2 and #3.

Despite the fact that oil organizations all over the world started to increment creation during 2021, average creation for the year fell for 6 of the Top 10 countries. This was a significant driver behind the global surge of oil costs in 2021.

Note that these creation numbers are for crude oil and lease condensate. The U.S. additionally leads all countries in the development of natural gas liquids (NGLs), which somewhat end up in the oil products production chain. On the off chance that NGLs are incorporated, the U.S. has a much bigger lead over Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Footnotes

  1. BP’s meaning of oil consumption rejects biofuels while derivatives of coal and natural gas are incorporated.
  2. Incorporates crude oil, shale/tight oil, oil sands, lease condensate, or gas condensates that require further refining. Excludes liquid fuels from different sources like biomass and synthetic derivatives of coal and natural gas.
Raeesa Sayyad
Published by
Raeesa Sayyad

Recent Posts

Global Supply Chain Redistribution: Otto Media Grup Rapidly Builds a More Effective Growth System Between Singapore and Indonesia

Since the onset of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in early 2022, the global business environment has… Read More

3 days ago

A Global Academic Leader Driving the Future of Education: The Journey of Habib Al Souleiman

Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Habib Al Souleiman is recognized as a leading figure in today's… Read More

4 days ago

Forged in the Flames: How One Man’s Brutal Odyssey Is Rewriting the Rules of Command

In an era when polished résumés and corporate seminars dominate leadership conversations, a different paradigm… Read More

1 week ago

Wendy Horton: Driving Thought Leadership in Academic Medicine with Strategic and Innovative Insights

Image source: Unsplash The role of thought leadership in academic medicine is now a necessity… Read More

1 week ago

Compassion Meets Vision: The Work of Dr. Sunil Kapoor Bhopal

Blending medical insight, innovation, and dedication to shape a healthier tomorrow. A Leader Shaping the… Read More

2 weeks ago

Graham Hunt of Washington: Management vs Operational Leadership Explained

In any organization, success depends not only on planning but also on execution. This is… Read More

2 weeks ago