The world’s energy markets have suffered their worst annual performance since the pandemic struck, with oil prices plummeting approximately 20% throughout 2025. This represents a historic milestone as the first occurrence of three consecutive years of losses in modern market history, creating mounting financial pressure across the producing industry.
Market conditions reveal a dramatic oversupply situation as the primary cause of persistent weakness. Oil producers continue extracting crude at volumes substantially higher than what worldwide consumption requires, creating what industry experts describe as cartoonishly oversupplied conditions. This fundamental imbalance has overwhelmed traditional dynamics despite geopolitical instability.
Political developments pushed crude below $60 per barrel last month, the lowest level in nearly five years, as diplomatic efforts advanced toward resolving the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Market participants worry that sanctions relief for Russian energy exports would introduce substantial additional volumes into an already glutted system, potentially accelerating price declines.
Brent crude finished the year at $60.85 per barrel, down significantly from nearly $74 at year-end 2024. U.S. oil prices experienced parallel declines of 20%, settling at $57.42. The OPEC cartel traditionally attempts to balance member production for price stability, but recently acknowledged severe market conditions by postponing any planned output increases beyond the first quarter of the year.
Weak economic performance across major markets and U.S.-China trade war impacts have significantly reduced demand from the world’s primary energy consumer. The International Energy Agency forecasts supplies will exceed consumption by about 3.8 million barrels daily during the current year. Leading investment banks project continued price weakness, with some analysts predicting spring prices near $55 per barrel or potential drops into the $50s during 2026. While consumers might benefit from lower fuel costs and reduced inflation, retailers face criticism for not passing savings along quickly enough, and household energy bills are rising slightly despite falling crude prices.