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Data InsightsOil spills from tankers have fallen to less than one-thirtieth of the levels seen in the 1970s

Oil spills from tankers have fallen to less than one-thirtieth of the levels seen in the 1970s

A bar graph illustrating the decline in oil spills from tankers over several decades. The vertical axis represents the amount of oil spilled, measured in tonnes, ranging from 0 to 700,000 tonnes. The horizontal axis indicates the years from 1970 to 2024. A significant drop in spills is visible, with peaks in the 1970s and 1980s, where more than 300,000 tonnes were spilled each year. Notably, a bar is labeled indicating that 10,000 tonnes were spilled in 2024. An annotation points out the Sanchi incident off the coast of China in 2018. The data source for the graph is indicated as ITOPF, with a date of 2025. The overall message emphasizes a dramatic decrease in oil spills from tankers over recent decades.

We’ve all seen the dramatic images of vast parts of the ocean caked in oil; birds and other wildlife stuck in the thick, dark liquid. These spills are both environmentally damaging and expensive to clean up.

As the chart shows, in the 1970s, over 300,000 tonnes of oil were spilled from oil tankers in most years. By the 1980s and 1990s, this had dropped, but the annual average was still over 100,000 tonnes.

These losses have fallen dramatically since the millennium. Last year, 10,000 tonnes were spilled, less than one-thirtieth of the amount lost in a typical year in the 1970s.

This decline has occurred despite global oil production and trade increasing dramatically.

We’ve just updated our charts on oil spills; explore the latest data

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