ANGOLA · ENERGY
Key Facts
—Revenue down: Angola earned US$24.4 billion from oil exports in 2025, a fall of 22.16% from 2024, according to government figures.
—Price, not just barrels: The average price of Angolan crude dropped 14.19% to $68.4 a barrel over the year.
—Volumes slipped: Export volumes fell 9.28%, from the 396.6 million barrels shipped in 2024.
—Recovery forecast: Oxford Economics expects production to rise to about 1.14 million barrels a day in 2026.
—Still oil-dependent: Crude remains the bulk of export earnings and government revenue, leaving the budget exposed to price swings.
—Diversification push: Luanda is courting non-oil investment and backing the Lobito Corridor rail link to widen its export base.
Angola oil exports brought in US$24.4 billion in 2025, down more than a fifth from the year before, as weaker prices and lower volumes hit Africa’s second-largest crude producer. The drop sharpens an old question for Luanda: how to live with less oil money.
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Why Angola’s oil exports fell
Angola earned $24.4 billion from oil exports in 2025, a 22.16% decline on 2024, the government reported. The slide was driven more by price than by output.
The average price of Angolan crude fell 14.19% to $68.4 a barrel. Export volumes dropped 9.28%, from the 396.6 million barrels shipped in 2024.
Why the price mattered more than the barrels
The 2025 shortfall was led by the fall in the average crude price, not a collapse in output. Volumes slipped by a smaller margin than revenue did.
That distinction shapes policy. Angola can pump more, but it cannot set the global price, which is driven by demand, OPEC+ decisions and the wider economic cycle.
A budget built on crude
Oil still provides the lion’s share of Angola’s export earnings and a large part of state revenue. That makes the national budget acutely sensitive to the price of a single commodity.
When crude weakens, so do the kwanza, public finances and the room to spend. The 2025 numbers are a reminder of how exposed the economy remains.
Out of OPEC, on its own terms
Angola left OPEC at the start of 2024 after a dispute over production quotas, choosing to set its own output levels. That freedom counts for little when the price itself is falling.
The state oil company Sonangol remains the gatekeeper of the sector. Reviving mature offshore fields is central to any rebound in production.
A modest recovery in sight
Oxford Economics forecasts Angolan output recovering to about 1.14 million barrels a day in 2026, helped by new projects and investment. More barrels would cushion revenue if prices hold.
Yet a volume rebound does little if global prices stay soft. The lesson of 2025 is that production gains can be wiped out by a falling market.
The diversification race
Luanda has spent years promising to broaden the economy beyond oil, courting agriculture, mining and logistics. Progress has been slow, and the 2025 revenue drop adds urgency.
A centrepiece is the Lobito Corridor, the US- and EU-backed railway carrying copper and cobalt from the interior to Angola’s Atlantic coast. It positions the country as a trade route in the global contest for critical minerals.
What the Lobito Corridor changes
The corridor reframes Angola as more than an oil exporter. The railway links the copper and cobalt belts of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia to the Angolan port of Lobito.
For Washington and Brussels, it is a way to move critical minerals without leaning on routes China controls. For Angola, it is a chance to earn from transit and logistics, not just crude.
A South Atlantic echo
Angola’s predicament will look familiar in Brazil, another major South Atlantic oil exporter weighing crude windfalls against the need to diversify. Both economies ride the same price cycles.
For investors, Angola is a test of whether an oil-dependent African state can convert resource wealth into a broader base. The answer matters well beyond its borders.
The strain behind cheaper oil
Lower oil revenue is not an abstraction in Luanda. It tightens the budget that funds salaries, subsidies and the imports on which the country depends.
Angola also carries heavy external debt, much of it tied to oil. When crude earnings fall, more of each barrel is needed simply to service what the state already owes.
Economists have long urged Luanda to build buffers for exactly these downturns. The 2025 figures show how quickly a softer market erodes whatever cushion exists.
What to watch in 2026
The variables to watch this year are the oil price and the pace of the production recovery. If crude stays near current levels, more barrels will only partly offset weaker prices.
Progress on non-oil revenue and the Lobito project will be the other test. Both will show whether Angola can loosen a dependence that has defined its economy for decades.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much did Angola earn from oil exports in 2025?
Angola earned US$24.4 billion from oil exports in 2025, a fall of 22.16% from 2024, according to government figures.
Why did Angola’s oil revenue fall?
The decline was driven mainly by price: Angolan crude averaged $68.4 a barrel, down 14.19%, while export volumes fell 9.28%.
What is Angola’s oil production forecast for 2026?
Oxford Economics forecasts Angolan output rising to about 1.14 million barrels a day in 2026.
How is Angola trying to reduce its reliance on oil?
Luanda is courting non-oil investment and backing the Lobito Corridor railway, which carries copper and cobalt from the interior to the Atlantic coast for export.
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