Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Size, Trends and Insights By Product Type (Compressor Oils, Reciprocating Compressor Oils, Rotary Screw Compressor Oils, Centrifugal Compressor Oils, LNG Refrigeration Compressor Oils, Gear Oils, Open Gear Lubricants, Enclosed Gear Oils, High-Speed Gearbox Oils, Hydraulic Fluids, Mineral-Based Hydraulic Fluids, Synthetic Hydraulic Fluids, Environmentally Acceptable Hydraulic Fluids (EAH), Greases, Extreme Pressure (EP) Greases, High-Temperature Greases, Wire Rope & Open Gear Greases, Subsea Greases, Turbine Oils, Gas Turbine Oils, Steam Turbine Oils, Combined Cycle Turbine Oils, Drilling Fluids & Lubricants, Drill String Lubricants, Bit Lubricants, Casing Running Lubricants, Other Product Types), By Application (Upstream Exploration & Production, Onshore Conventional Drilling & Production, Unconventional (Shale/Tight Oil & Gas) Operations, Offshore & Deepwater Production, Midstream Transportation & Processing, Gas Processing Plants, LNG Liquefaction & Regasification, Pipeline Compression Stations, Downstream Refining & Petrochemicals, Crude Oil Refining, Petrochemical Complex Operations, Hydrogen Production), By Formulation (Mineral Oil-Based, Synthetic, Polyalphaolefin (PAO), Polyalkylene Glycol (PAG), Synthetic Esters, PFPE (Perfluoropolyether), Semi-Synthetic, Bio-Based), By End Use (Onshore Operations, Offshore Operations, Fixed Platforms, Floating Production Systems (FPSO, FLNG, Semi-Sub), Subsea Systems, Pipeline & Terminal Operations), and By Region - Global Industry Overview, Statistical Data, Competitive Analysis, Share, Outlook, and Forecast 2026 – 2035


Report Code: CMI90296

Published Date: May 4, 2026

Category: Chemicals And Materials

Author: Rushikesh Dorge

Report Snapshot

CAGR: 4.7%
3.47Bn
2025
3.64Bn
2026
5.52Bn
2035

Source: CMI

Study Period: 2026-2035
Fastest Growing Market: Asia Pacific
Largest Market: North America

Major Players

  • Shell plc
  • BP plc (Castrol)
  • TotalEnergies SE
  • Chevron Corporation
  • Others

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Reports Description

The global lubricants in the oil and gas market size is calculated at USD 3.47 billion in 2025 and is predicted to increase from USD 3.64 billion in 2026 to approximately USD 5.52 billion by 2035, expanding at a CAGR of 4.7% from 2026 to 2035.

Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Size 2025 to 2035 (USD Billion)

Market Highlight

  • North America dominated the lubricants in the oil and gas market with 31% market share in 2025 due to the largest unconventional oil and gas production base across the Permian Basin, Eagle Ford, Bakken, and Marcellus shale formations in the world.
  • The Asia Pacific region is set to grow at the highest CAGR of 5.9% from 2026 to 2035, driven by the rapid expansion of deepwater exploration and production activity in Southeast Asia, Australia and India, the expansion of LNG processing facilities and the increase in refinery and petrochemical complex modernization investments.
  • By product type, compressor oils occupied about 26% market share in 2025 due to the significance of gas compression in upstream, midstream, and downstream oil and gas operations and the high consumption of reciprocating and screw compressors operating in severe duty conditions.
  • By product type, drilling fluids and liquid lubricants are the fastest-growing segment with a CAGR of 5.8% from 2026 to 2035 due to growth in deepwater and ultra-deepwater drilling and the increasing use of long-reach horizontal well drilling technology, which demands new lubricant chemistries for high-torque, high-friction drill string operations.
  • By application, midstream transportation and processing held the largest 38% market share in 2025, positioning the application of compressor oils, gas processing plant machinery lubricants and liquefaction train oils in LNG processing as the largest cumulative oil and gas lubricant market segment.
  • By end use, onshore accounted for a majority of 58% of the market revenue in 2025, while offshore end use is growing at the fastest CAGR of 5.6%, reflecting the deepwater field development investment in Brazil, West Africa, and Southeast Asia.

Impact of Middle East War on Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market

Geopolitical developments continue to be a threat to oil and gas operations, especially in the Middle East, where hydrocarbon production is a major component of global production. But supply bottlenecks and dwindling Hormuz crude supplies have led to a cut in supplies of millions of bpd and made drilling and operating more expensive. The increasing potential for exploration and production outside the Middle East could drive up consumption of lubricants in offshore and onshore activities. However, the fluctuating trend in prices still poses challenges in procurement and inventory management for lubricant suppliers.

Significant Growth Factors

The Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Trends present significant growth opportunities due to several factors:

  • Sustained Global Oil and Gas Production Growth Driving High-Intensity Lubricant Demand Across Upstream Operations:

The primary driver of demand for lubricants in the oil and gas sector is the continuing and growing global oil and gas production activity which, despite long-term forecasts of the energy transition, is growing in volume terms as global energy demand growth (especially in emerging and developing economies) outstrips the deployment rate of alternative renewable energy sources over the forecast period. Oil production stood at 102.9 million barrels per day (mbpd) in 2024 and the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects global demand for oil to remain at 103.8 mbpd in 2025 and above 100 mbpd until at least 2030, even in scenarios of accelerated energy transition, as transport, petrochemical and industrial sectors continue to demand oil that cannot be replaced by renewable alternatives within the forecast period.

The emergence of the shale revolution and tight oil production has brought new, more challenging lubricant demands: horizontal well drilling with extended reach laterals of 3-5 kilometers and longer creates demand for drill string lubricants capable of handling high-torque loads of 25,000-50,000 foot-pounds at the drill bit, while the pump fluid ends of hydraulic fracturing equipment – the highest wear component in any surface oil and gas equipment – require high-pressure pump lubricants designed for operation at 15,000 psi and higher and fluid end temperatures in excess of 150°C.

The growth in Middle East production – with Saudi Arabia’s ARAMCO, UAE’s ADNOC, and Qatar Energy all embarking on multi-billion dollar expansion programs to increase production by several million barrels per day by 2030 – is creating demand for high-temperature compressor oils, gear oils for gas-lift compression systems, and turbine oils for power generation equipment at remote desert production facilities operating under some of the world’s most thermally challenging conditions.

  • LNG Infrastructure Expansion Creating Specialized High-Value Lubricant Market Segments:

The remarkable growth in global liquefied natural gas (LNG) infrastructure – including new LNG liquefaction trains, floating LNG (FLNG) production facilities, regasification facilities, and LNG bunkering facilities – is creating one of the most technically challenging and high-value specialty lubricant market segments within the oil and gas industry, driven by the cryogenic operating conditions, high-power refrigeration compressor requirements, and rotating equipment protection needs associated with LNG processing systems.

In 2024, the global LNG trade is approximately 404 million tonnes, with growth to more than 600 million tonnes per year by 2035, due to European diversification of natural gas demand away from Russian supply, Asian power generation decarbonization from coal to gas, and establishment of new LNG demand markets in South and Southeast Asia. LNG liquefaction requires immense refrigeration compressor trains – typically axial or centrifugal compressor trains with gas-turbine-driven compressors of 50-100 MW shaft power – that are among the capital-intensive and reliability-critical rotating equipment assets in the energy sector, with the capital cost of a single LNG train being USD 1-3 billion and the cost of any unexpected downtime being USD 1-5 million per day in production losses alone.

LNG refrigeration compressor lubricants must meet a challenging set of performance criteria: compatibility with the propane, ethylene, and methane refrigerants circulating through the compressor and maintaining cryogenic temperatures down to -160°C; thermal stability at simultaneous discharge temperatures of 150°C+ in high-stage compression; super purity to avoid contaminating the refrigerant; and outstanding oxidation stability to support long drain intervals that reduce scheduled maintenance shutdowns on continuous-operation LNG assets. LNG compressors are overwhelmingly lubricated with synthetic polyalkylene glycol (PAG) and polyol ester base stocks that have superior miscibility with the LNG refrigerants, low pour points to support operation at cryogenic temperatures, and excellent thermal-oxidative stability – and are sold for USD 25-60 per liter, the highest per-liter lubricant prices in the industrial lubricant market, reflecting both the complexity of these formulations and the value of equipment protection in high-capital, high-consequence LNG assets where a lubricant failure can be a commercial disaster.

Major new LNG capacity developments currently in the construction or final investment decision phase, including QatarEnergy’s North Field expansion, equivalent to 48 million tonnes per year of incremental capacity, the U.S. Gulf Coast LNG projects (Plaquemines LNG and Golden Pass LNG) and several FLNG developments in Australia

What are the Major Advances Changing the Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Today?

  • Advanced Synthetic Lubricant Formulations Delivering Extended Asset Life and Reduced Maintenance in Critical Rotating Equipment:

The migration from traditional mineral oil-based lubricants to fully synthetic and synthetic blend formulations for critical oil and gas rotating equipment – including gas compressors, centrifugal pumps, turbines, gearboxes and electric submersible pumps – is the most commercially important formulation development in oil and gas lubricants, reflecting the strong total cost of ownership economics of synthetic lubricants in high-capital, high-consequence oil and gas equipment applications where the risks of maintenance costs, unplanned shutdowns and equipment replacement are significantly greater than the cost of synthetic lubricants. Fully synthetic compressor oils with polyalphaolefin (PAO) and ester base stocks exhibit oxidation stability in accelerated oxidation tests at 135°C equal to 3-5 times the oxidation life of mineral oil-based compressor oils, allowing longer drain intervals that translate into reduced maintenance shutdowns of gas compressors in continuous midstream and LNG applications where every shutdown involves planned production loss.

PAO-based gear oils for high-speed helical and spiral bevel gearboxes in natural gas compressor drives – operating at pitch line velocities above 80 meters per second and oil film temperatures above 100°C – achieve superior film thickness at operating temperatures due to the high viscosity index (VI) of 140-150 for PAO base stocks versus 90-100 for mineral oils, ensuring adequate elastohydrodynamic film thickness at operating temperatures that mineral oils cannot provide, which translates into longer gear surface fatigue life and reduced pitting wear that enables longer gearbox inspection intervals of 36,000+ operating hours versus 18,000 hours for mineral oils.

Turbine oils for gas turbine-driven compression equipment demand superior thermal stability at continuous oil system temperatures of 120-150°C with excursions above 200°C in bearing areas near the turbine hot sections, with fully synthetic diester and PAO-based gas turbine oils delivering the oil thermal stability of 200°C+ in standardized accelerated oxidation tests (ASTM D2272 RPVOT and ASTM D943 TOST) that is 2-4 times higher than that of mineral oils and justifies the 3-5 times premium over mineral turbine oils in terms of the value of protecting highly capitalized gas turbines valued at USD 20-100 million per unit.

  • Subsea and Deepwater Equipment Lubrication Innovations Addressing Extreme Pressure and Temperature Challenges:
  • The move to deeper water offshore oil and gas production – from the shallow water fields (less than 300 meters) that provided the bulk of offshore production through the 1990s to deepwater (300-1,500 meters) and ultra-deepwater (greater than 1,500 meters) fields that now represent the frontier of offshore development – presents extreme new lubricant application challenges for subsea equipment operating under hydrostatic pressures of 300-1,500 bar, ambient seawater operating temperatures of 2-4°C, and with maintenance access limited to remotely operated vehicle (ROV) intervention intervals of years rather than months. Subsea production equipment – including wellhead trees, manifolds, flowline connectors, and subsea boosting and compression systems – contains multiple critical lubrication points such as subsea electric motor bearings in ESP (electric submersible pump) boosting systems, actuator hydraulic systems that operate subsea valve operators, and gear systems in subsea multiphase pumps that require long-term lubrication integrity in the absence of maintenance. Environmentally acceptable lubricant (EAL) formulations – required for subsea and near-offshore applications under the U.S. EPA Vessel General Permit (VGP) and other similar European regulations that mandate the use of fast-biodegradable, low-toxicity lubricants in equipment with potential contact with water discharges – is a niche segment of the offshore lubricants market, with PAG, synthetic ester and vegetable ester-based EAL products required for use in hydraulic systems, wire ropes and open gear systems on offshore vessels and platforms. The oil and gas EAL market is growing at a projected CAGR of 7.2% between 2026 and 2035, compared to the overall oil and gas lubricants market, as regulatory scope expands to require EAL compliance for new equipment types and locations and as operators voluntarily use EALs in non-regulated applications as part of their corporate environmental sustainability initiatives.
  • Digitalization and Condition Monitoring Transforming Lubricant Management in Remote Oil and Gas Operations: Adoption of digital oil condition monitoring tools, including in-line sensors measuring oil quality, vibration monitoring coupled with oil condition data, and cloud-based oil management systems, is revolutionizing maintenance in oil and gas facilities, facilitating predictive lubricant management strategies that extend lubricant drain intervals, avoid equipment failures due to degraded lubricants and minimize the cost of lubricant supply to remote oil and gas production sites where lubricant delivery costs can be 5-10 times the cost of the lubricant itself. Remote production sites in oil and gas operations – such as unmanned offshore platforms, desert-based onshore production sites and Arctic exploration drilling rigs – present unique challenges in lubricant supply and management: the cost of delivering lubricants by helicopter or vessel to offshore platforms is USD 5,000-20,000 per delivery depending on distance and type of platform, providing an economic incentive to use condition-based drain scheduling rather than fixed-interval replacement to extend the service life of lubricants. Lubricant condition sensors measuring viscosity, dielectric constant, water, particle count and ferrous debris concentration are being installed in key rotating machinery such as gas turbines, large reciprocating compressors and gearboxes in large LNG and offshore production facilities with real-time data streams transmitted to cloud-based analytics platforms that detect trending degradation in lubricant condition and generate predictions of optimum drain intervals 2-4 weeks before the need for lubricant replacement, allowing maintenance schedules to be planned rather than performed in response to failures, and fully exploiting the service life of expensive synthetic lubricants.

Category Wise Insights

By Product Type

Why Do Compressor Oils Lead the Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market?

Compressor oils are by far the largest product type segment in 2025, at 26% of the market value. This is due to the widespread and critical role of gas compression in all segments of the oil and gas value chain – from upstream natural gas field gas compression collecting and injecting field gas from wellheads into gas supply pipelines, to midstream gas processing plant recompression and LNG refrigeration compression, and downstream refinery hydrogen or process gas compression – with compressors being the most widely used rotating equipment across the oil and gas industry, and hence the equipment category with the highest aggregate lubricant consumption volume.

Natural gas compression is a particularly high-lubricant-consumption process: large reciprocating compressors with cylinder bore diameters of 200-500 millimeters and stroke lengths of 300-600 millimeters, operating at cylinder pressures of 100-350 bar, use compressor cylinder oils with superior film strength, thermal stability, and gas compatibility, with precisely metered rates applied to the cylinder walls and piston rings, and frame crankcase oils lubricating the crosshead, connecting rod bearings and crankshaft under high dynamic loads and at elevated oil temperatures.

An individual large-bore reciprocating compressor in a gas processing plant consumes 2,000-5,000 liters of compressor cylinder oil annually, with multiple compression trains at major processing plants consuming tens of thousands of liters annually – resulting in significant annual lubricant revenue streams per customer location. Rotary screw compressors, increasingly employed in upstream and midstream gas compression due to their lower maintenance requirements compared with reciprocating compressors, are flood-lubricated with compressor oils injected into the compression element for cooling, sealing and bearing lubrication, with oil carry-over into the gas stream necessitating oil/gas separation

By Application

Why Does Midstream Transportation and Processing Lead Oil and Gas Lubricant Applications?

The largest market segment by volume and revenue is midstream transportation and processing, accounting for 38% of the market revenue in 2025. This is due to the massive concentration of high-cost rotating equipment (including gas compressor trains, centrifugal pumps, turbine driver systems and gearboxes) in natural gas processing plants, LNG liquefaction plants and pipeline compression stations that require the largest volumes of the most technologically advanced, high-value lubricant formulations of any segment of the oil and gas value chain.

Individual gas processing plants processing 500 million standard cubic feet per day (MSCFD) of natural gas may each contain 20-40 large reciprocating or centrifugal compressors, 50-100 centrifugal pumps, 8-15 gas turbine driver systems, and scores of large gearboxes, all requiring special lubricants at total facility consumption volumes that would make individual plants significant lubricant customers in their own right.

Pipeline compression stations are located every 80-160 kilometers along major natural gas transmission pipelines for maintaining gas pressure against pressure losses – each house 2-6 large centrifugal or reciprocating gas compressors, with each compression station driven by a gas turbine or electric motor, with major gas pipeline systems, including the Trans-Siberian gas pipelines, the United States interstate natural gas pipeline system, and Qatar gas export pipelines incorporating hundreds of compression stations resulting in massive aggregate lubricant consumption.

By Formulation

Why Do Synthetic Lubricants Lead Value Growth in the Oil and Gas Market?

Despite mineral oil-based lubricants dominating volume consumption at 52% of total market volume in 2025, driven by their low cost and satisfactory performance in less severe applications, synthetic formulations represent 43% of total revenue and only 31% of total volume – reflecting the disproportionate revenue contribution of high value synthetic lubricants which command per-liter prices of 2-5 times mineral oil equivalents in key oil and gas applications.

Synthetic formulations are the fastest-growing formulation type at a CAGR of 6.4% from 2026 to 2035, reflecting the growth in the application of synthetic lubricants into LNG refrigeration, high-speed turbo-compressors, deepwater subsea and gas turbine applications where the synthetic performance benefits over mineral oils are most pronounced and the capital value of the equipment justifies the superior synthetic lubricant cost.

PAO-based synthetics are dominant in gas turbine and high-speed gearbox applications, PAG synthetics are dominant in LNG and refrigeration compressor applications, and synthetic ester formulations are used in both environmentally acceptable hydraulic fluid and compressor applications needing biodegradable base stocks. The bio-based formulation segment, currently equating to only about 4% of market revenue, is the fastest growing formulation segment at 8.1% CAGR from 2026 to 2035 due to EAL regulatory requirements for offshore applications and voluntary use of bio-based lubricants by those companies with strong environmental stewardship policies.

By End Use

Why Do Onshore Operations Lead the End Use Segment?

Onshore operations represent an estimated 58% of market revenue in 2025, due to the greater absolute volumes of onshore oil and gas production, processing, and pipeline infrastructure compared to offshore and more geographically widespread consumption of lubricants in a larger population of onshore facilities. Unconventional onshore operations in North America are the most lubricant-intensive of the onshore sub-segments, lubricating hydraulic fracturing (fracking) system pump systems, high-rate artificial lift (pump) systems and gathering compression systems at rates commensurate with the high-cycle, high-pressure nature of US and Canadian shale production operations.

Middle Eastern onshore operations with Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq and Kuwait operating large conventional onshore production installations (wellheads, gas-oil separators, water injection pumps, gas compression) create significant lubricant demand from installed equipment populations across some of the world’s most productive conventional oil and gas fields. Offshore operations at 31% of market revenue register the highest CAGR of 5.6% from deepwater production growth in Brazil’s pre-salt reservoirs, West African deep water (Angola Block 15, Nigeria deep water), and Southeast Asian offshore development (Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam) that require offshore lubricants to comply with marine environmental regulations and the logistics of lubricant delivery and lubricant management on offshore floating structures.

Report Scope

Feature of the Report Details
Market Size in 2026 USD 3.64 billion
Projected Market Size in 2035 USD 5.52 billion
Market Size in 2025 USD 3.47 billion
CAGR Growth Rate 4.7% CAGR
Base Year 2025
Forecast Period 2026-2035
Key Segment By Product Type, Application, Formulation, End Use and Region
Report Coverage Revenue Estimation and Forecast, Company Profile, Competitive Landscape, Growth Factors and Recent Trends
Regional Scope North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa, and South & Central America
Buying Options Request tailored purchasing options to fulfil your requirements for research.

Regional Analysis

How Big is the North America Market Size?

The North America lubricants in the oil and gas market size is estimated at USD 1.07 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach approximately USD 1.63 billion by 2035, growing at a CAGR of 4.3% from 2026 to 2035.

North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Size 2025 to 2035 (USD Billion)

Why did North America Dominate the Market in 2025?

North America represents the largest market in terms of revenue (approximately 31% in 2025), driven by the U.S. position as the world’s largest oil and gas producer, the highest volume drilling market (with between 580-620 active rigs in 2024-2025), and home of the world’s largest unconventional shale production base that generates intense and unique lubricant demand from high-rate artificial lift, high-pressure fracturing, and gathering compression.

The U.S. Permian Basin alone, which produces more than 6.3 mbpd of crude oil from around 250,000 wells, creates a massive ongoing demand for lubricants from beam pump units, progressive cavity pumps, and ESP submersible pump systems, wellhead equipment, and gathering compression systems that constitute the world’s largest artificial lift lubricant consumption cluster in a geographic basin.

Canada is another large source of lubricant demand from oil sands operations in Alberta – which includes lubrication of large dragline and shovel equipment, slurry pipeline lubrication, upgrader refinery equipment lubrication, and the rotating equipment of steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) thermal production facilities – and from conventional and unconventional production in western Canadian sedimentary basins.

The Gulf of Mexico deepwater production cluster – including major operated assets of Shell, BP, Chevron, and ExxonMobil such as Thunder Horse, Mars, Atlantis, and Jack/St. Malo – demands deepwater and subsea lubricants for FPSO and semi-submersible production equipment operating at depths of 1,000-3,000 meters, with EAL-compliant formulations mandated under the U.S. EPA VGP framework for all vessel and floating production system applications.

Why is the Middle East and Africa the Second-Largest Revenue Region?

The Middle East and Africa region accounts for 24% of global market revenue in 2025, with a value of approximately USD 833 million, due to the world’s largest conventional oil and gas reserves and production operations in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Iraq, Kuwait and Kuwait, as well as significant production in Africa (Nigeria, Angola, Libya, and Algeria).

Saudi Arabia’s ARAMCO, which operates the world’s largest integrated oil and gas production, processing, and export infrastructure at the Ghawar, Safaniya and Khurais field complexes, is one of the world’s largest single company users of oil and gas lubricants given the sheer amount of gas compression equipment, crude oil processing units, export terminal pumping systems and desulfurization plant equipment it operates, and the associated consumption of compressor oils, gear oils, turbine oils, and hydraulic fluids. Qatar’s LNG facilities – accounting for about 30% of the world’s LNG production capacity within QatarEnergy’s North Field LNG trains – create a massive demand for the most highly specialised.

Why is Europe a Technically Advanced and Environmentally Regulated Market?

Europe accounts for approximately 19% of global market revenue in 2025 (approximately USD 659 million), with demand heavily concentrated in North Sea offshore production in Norway, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands – a technically advanced and environmentally regulated production area that sets the global standard for offshore lubricant environmental performance specification. Norwegian offshore production – with regulatory control by the Norwegian Environment Agency’s rigorous implementation of the OSPAR Convention including HOCNF (Harmonized Offshore Chemical Notification Format) environmental assessment of all chemicals discharged at offshore installations – is the world’s most stringent regulatory regime for offshore lubricant environmental performance, effectively requiring EAL formulations in all offshore lubricant applications, thereby driving almost all Norwegian offshore lubricant demand to readily biodegradable, low toxicity synthetic esters and PAGs. The United Kingdom’s offshore Continental Shelf production – increasingly focused on mature fields in the Central and Northern North Sea with some new deepwater production West of Shetland.

Why is Asia Pacific the Fastest-Growing Regional Market?

Asia Pacific represents 18% of global market revenues in 2025 and the region grows at the highest CAGR of 5.9% from 2026 to 2035 due to rapidly accelerating deepwater and offshore oil and gas production development in Southeast Asia, Australia, and India; the rapidly growing LNG production and regasification facilities; and the massive existing and expanding refinery and petrochemical complex bases in China, India, South Korea and Japan which create strong lubricant demand. Australia’s LNG industry – including the Northwest Shelf, Gorgon, Ichthys, Wheatstone, Prelude FLNG, and Queensland Curtis LNG projects that produce approximately 80 million tonnes per year of LNG – is the second-largest worldwide LNG producing cluster and creates tremendous demand for LNG refrigeration compressor lubricants, gas turbine oils, and other process equipment lubricants from LNG production facilities located at remote northwest Australian coastal sites.

India’s oil and gas lubricants market is expanding at approximately 7.1% CAGR – among the highest individual country growth rates in the world – due to ONGC’s deepwater Krishna Godavari basin development, increasing domestic gas processing capacity and the massive refinery modernization program to increase Indian refining capacity from about 250 million tonnes per year to 300+ million tonnes per year by 2030, each new refinery unit resulting in significant rotating equipment lubricant demand. China’s oil and gas lubricants market is driven by CNOOC’s South China Sea deepwater development, PetroChina’s extensive onshore and midstream operations including the world’s most extensive domestic natural gas pipeline network, and Sinopec’s large domestic refinery complex – collectively making China the largest individual national oil and gas lubricants market within Asia Pacific at approximately USD 312 million in 2025.

Why is Latin America an Emerging High-Growth Market?

The Latin America market accounts for about 8% of global market revenue in 2025 but is estimated to grow 5.4% CAGR from 2026-2035, driven primarily by Brazil’s remarkable deepwater pre-salt development. Petrobras’s pre-salt production fields in the Santos Basin producing from reservoirs under 2,000-3,000 meters of water and beneath thick salt layers that pose special drilling challenges are among the world’s biggest and most prolific oil developments, with Petrobras targeting 3.2 mbpd production by 2030 from pre-salt operations that demand significant FPSO lubricant supply, equipment lubrication, and drilling fluid programs for some of the world’s most challenging well construction. Each of the 14+ FPSOs operating in the pre-salt is a major lubricant consumer – requiring turbine oils, compressor oils, hydraulic fluids and greases for the substantial topside processing equipment – and Petrobras’s growing FPSO fleet will consume additional lubricant as new units come online incrementally through 2030.

Top Players in the Market and Their Offerings

  • ExxonMobil Corporation
  • Shell plc
  • BP plc (Castrol)
  • TotalEnergies SE
  • Chevron Corporation
  • Fuchs Petrolub SE
  • Kluber Lubrication (Freudenberg)
  • Petro-Canada Lubricants (HF Sinclair)
  • Quaker Houghton Corporation
  • Nynas AB
  • Others

Key Developments

The market has undergone significant developments as industry participants seek to expand capabilities and enhance product portfolios.

  • In March 2025: ExxonMobil Corporation launched its Mobil SHC Cibus LNG series, a new generation of fully synthetic LNG refrigeration compressor oils for polyalkylene glycol (PAG) base oils that were specifically developed for the new generation of high pressure mixed refrigerant compressor trains being installed in QatarEnergy’s North Field expansion and U.S. Gulf Coast LNG developments for enhanced refrigerant miscibility at operating temperatures down to -160°C, improved thermal-oxidative stability at compressor discharge temperatures above 150°C, and extended drain capability based on the target of 24,000 hours of compressor inspection interval vs. the industry standard of 12,000-18,000 hours, directly responding to LNG operator demand for longer drain intervals, which reduces the frequency of production curtailment in continuous-operation LNG assets.
  • In February 2025: Shell plc announced the extension of its Naturelle environmentally acceptable lubricant product portfolio by three new synthetic ester-based offshore hydraulic fluids that meet the highest OSPAR HOCNF environmental assessment criteria for offshore chemical use in Norway’s Continental Shelf, achieving readily biodegradable (OECD 301B) and lowest-toxicity classification (marine invertebrate ecotoxicity) performance ratings – enabling compliance with the Norwegian Environment Agency’s progressively stringent environmental performance standards for offshore chemicals in Norwegian waters, applicable to hydraulic system applications on fixed and floating production platforms.

These strategic initiatives have enabled companies to build market share, diversify product portfolios targeting technical and environmental challenges associated with frontier oil and gas operations, build next-generation products for LNG and deepwater applications at premium prices, and leverage growth opportunities arising from global LNG capacity build-out, deepwater production development, and the regulatory and voluntary shift toward environmentally acceptable lubricant formulations in offshore oil and gas applications globally.

The Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market is segmented as follows:

By Product Type

  • Compressor Oils
    • Reciprocating Compressor Oils
    • Rotary Screw Compressor Oils
    • Centrifugal Compressor Oils
    • LNG Refrigeration Compressor Oils
  • Gear Oils
    • Open Gear Lubricants
    • Enclosed Gear Oils
    • High-Speed Gearbox Oils
  • Hydraulic Fluids
    • Mineral-Based Hydraulic Fluids
    • Synthetic Hydraulic Fluids
    • Environmentally Acceptable Hydraulic Fluids (EAH)
  • Greases
    • Extreme Pressure (EP) Greases
    • High-Temperature Greases
    • Wire Rope & Open Gear Greases
    • Subsea Greases
  • Turbine Oils
    • Gas Turbine Oils
    • Steam Turbine Oils
    • Combined Cycle Turbine Oils
  • Drilling Fluids & Lubricants
    • Drill String Lubricants
    • Bit Lubricants
    • Casing Running Lubricants
  • Other Product Types

By Application

  • Upstream Exploration & Production
    • Onshore Conventional Drilling & Production
    • Unconventional (Shale/Tight Oil & Gas) Operations
    • Offshore & Deepwater Production
  • Midstream Transportation & Processing
    • Gas Processing Plants
    • LNG Liquefaction & Regasification
    • Pipeline Compression Stations
  • Downstream Refining & Petrochemicals
    • Crude Oil Refining
    • Petrochemical Complex Operations
    • Hydrogen Production

By Formulation

  • Mineral Oil-Based
  • Synthetic
    • Polyalphaolefin (PAO)
    • Polyalkylene Glycol (PAG)
    • Synthetic Esters
    • PFPE (Perfluoropolyether)
  • Semi-Synthetic
  • Bio-Based

By End Use

  • Onshore Operations
  • Offshore Operations
    • Fixed Platforms
    • Floating Production Systems (FPSO, FLNG, Semi-Sub)
    • Subsea Systems
  • Pipeline & Terminal Operations

Regional Coverage:

North America

  • U.S.
  • Canada
  • Mexico
  • Rest of North America

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • U.K.
  • Russia
  • Italy
  • Spain
  • Netherlands
  • Rest of Europe

Asia Pacific

  • China
  • Japan
  • India
  • New Zealand
  • Australia
  • South Korea
  • Taiwan
  • Rest of Asia Pacific

The Middle East & Africa

  • Saudi Arabia
  • UAE
  • Egypt
  • Kuwait
  • South Africa
  • Rest of the Middle East & Africa

Latin America

  • Brazil
  • Argentina
  • Rest of Latin America

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1. Report Introduction
    • 1.1. Report Description
      • 1.1.1. Purpose of the Report
      • 1.1.2. USP & Key Offerings
    • 1.2. Key Benefits For Stakeholders
    • 1.3. Target Audience
    • 1.4. Report Scope
  • Chapter 2. Market Overview
    • 2.1. Report Scope (Segments And Key Players)
      • 2.1.1. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas by Segments
      • 2.1.2. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas by Region
    • 2.2. Executive Summary
      • 2.2.1. Market Size & Forecast
      • 2.2.2. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Attractiveness Analysis, By Product Type
      • 2.2.3. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Attractiveness Analysis, By Application
      • 2.2.4. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Attractiveness Analysis, By Formulation
      • 2.2.5. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Attractiveness Analysis, By End Use
  • Chapter 3. Market Dynamics (DRO)
    • 3.1. Market Drivers
      • 3.1.1. Sustained Global Oil and Gas Production Growth Driving High-Intensity Lubricant Demand Across Upstream Operations
      • 3.1.2. LNG Infrastructure Expansion Creating Specialized High-Value Lubricant Market Segments
    • 3.2. Market Restraints
    • 3.3. Market Opportunities
    • 3.5. Pestle Analysis
    • 3.6. Porter Forces Analysis
    • 3.7. Technology Roadmap
    • 3.8. Value Chain Analysis
    • 3.9. Government Policy Impact Analysis
    • 3.10. Pricing Analysis
  • Chapter 4. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market – By Product Type
    • 4.1. Product Type Market Overview, By Product Type Segment
      • 4.1.1. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue Share, By Product Type, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.2. Compressor Oils
        • 4.1.2.1. Reciprocating Compressor Oils
        • 4.1.2.2. Rotary Screw Compressor Oils
        • 4.1.2.3. Centrifugal Compressor Oils
        • 4.1.2.4. LNG Refrigeration Compressor Oils
      • 4.1.3. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.4. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.5. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 4.1.6. Gear Oils
        • 4.1.6.1. Open Gear Lubricants
        • 4.1.6.2. Enclosed Gear Oils
        • 4.1.6.3. High-Speed Gearbox Oils
      • 4.1.7. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.8. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.9. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 4.1.10. Hydraulic Fluids
        • 4.1.10.1. Mineral-Based Hydraulic Fluids
        • 4.1.10.2. Synthetic Hydraulic Fluids
        • 4.1.10.3. Environmentally Acceptable Hydraulic Fluids (EAH)
      • 4.1.11. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.12. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.13. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 4.1.14. Greases
        • 4.1.14.1. Extreme Pressure (EP) Greases
        • 4.1.14.2. High-Temperature Greases
        • 4.1.14.3. Wire Rope & Open Gear Greases
        • 4.1.14.4. Subsea Greases
      • 4.1.15. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.16. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.17. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 4.1.18. Turbine Oils
        • 4.1.18.1. Gas Turbine Oils
        • 4.1.18.2. Steam Turbine Oils
        • 4.1.18.3. Combined Cycle Turbine Oils
      • 4.1.19. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.20. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.21. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 4.1.22. Drilling Fluids & Lubricants
        • 4.1.22.1. Drill String Lubricants
        • 4.1.22.2. Bit Lubricants
        • 4.1.22.3. Casing Running Lubricants
      • 4.1.23. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.24. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.25. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 4.1.26. Other Product Types
      • 4.1.27. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 4.1.28. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 4.1.29. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
  • Chapter 5. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market – By Application
    • 5.1. Application Market Overview, By Application Segment
      • 5.1.1. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue Share, By Application, 2025 & 2035
      • 5.1.2. Upstream Exploration & Production
        • 5.1.2.1. Onshore Conventional Drilling & Production
        • 5.1.2.2. Unconventional (Shale/Tight Oil & Gas) Operations
        • 5.1.2.3. Offshore & Deepwater Production
      • 5.1.3. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 5.1.4. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 5.1.5. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 5.1.6. Midstream Transportation & Processing
        • 5.1.6.1. Gas Processing Plants
        • 5.1.6.2. LNG Liquefaction & Regasification
        • 5.1.6.3. Pipeline Compression Stations
      • 5.1.7. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 5.1.8. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 5.1.9. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 5.1.10. Downstream Refining & Petrochemicals
        • 5.1.10.1. Crude Oil Refining
        • 5.1.10.2. Petrochemical Complex Operations
        • 5.1.10.3. Hydrogen Production
      • 5.1.11. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 5.1.12. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 5.1.13. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
  • Chapter 6. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market – By Formulation
    • 6.1. Formulation Market Overview, By Formulation Segment
      • 6.1.1. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue Share, By Formulation, 2025 & 2035
      • 6.1.2. Mineral Oil-Based
      • 6.1.3. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 6.1.4. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 6.1.5. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 6.1.6. Synthetic
        • 6.1.6.1. Polyalphaolefin (PAO)
        • 6.1.6.2. Polyalkylene Glycol (PAG)
        • 6.1.6.3. Synthetic Esters
        • 6.1.6.4. PFPE (Perfluoropolyether)
      • 6.1.7. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 6.1.8. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 6.1.9. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 6.1.10. Semi-Synthetic
      • 6.1.11. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 6.1.12. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 6.1.13. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 6.1.14. Bio-Based
      • 6.1.15. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 6.1.16. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 6.1.17. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
  • Chapter 7. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market – By End Use
    • 7.1. End Use Market Overview, By End Use Segment
      • 7.1.1. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue Share, By End Use, 2025 & 2035
      • 7.1.2. Onshore Operations
      • 7.1.3. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 7.1.4. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 7.1.5. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 7.1.6. Offshore Operations
        • 7.1.6.1. Fixed Platforms
        • 7.1.6.2. Floating Production Systems (FPSO, FLNG, Semi-Sub)
        • 7.1.6.3. Subsea Systems
      • 7.1.7. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 7.1.8. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 7.1.9. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
      • 7.1.10. Pipeline & Terminal Operations
      • 7.1.11. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Share Forecast, By Region (USD Billion)
      • 7.1.12. Comparative Revenue Analysis, By Country, 2025 & 2035
      • 7.1.13. Key Market Trends, Growth Factors, & Opportunities
  • Chapter 8. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market – Regional Analysis
    • 8.1. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Overview, By Region Segment
      • 8.1.1. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue Share, By Region, 2025 & 2035
      • 8.1.2. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Region, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.1.3. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Product Type, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.1.4. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Application, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.1.5. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Formulation, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.1.6. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By End Use, 2026 – 2035
    • 8.2. North America
      • 8.2.1. North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Country, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.2.2. North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Product Type, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.2.3. North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Application, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.2.4. North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Formulation, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.2.5. North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By End Use, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.2.6. U.S. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.2.7. Canada Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.2.8. Mexico Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.2.9. Rest of North America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
    • 8.3. Europe
      • 8.3.1. Europe Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Country, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.2. Europe Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Product Type, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.3.3. Europe Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Application, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.3.4. Europe Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Formulation, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.3.5. Europe Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By End Use, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.3.6. Germany Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.7. France Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.8. U.K. Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.9. Russia Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.10. Italy Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.11. Spain Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.12. Netherlands Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.3.13. Rest of Europe Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
    • 8.4. Asia Pacific
      • 8.4.1. Asia Pacific Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Country, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.2. Asia Pacific Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Product Type, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.4.3. Asia Pacific Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Application, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.4.4. Asia Pacific Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Formulation, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.4.5. Asia Pacific Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By End Use, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.4.6. China Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.7. Japan Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.8. India Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.9. New Zealand Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.10. Australia Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.11. South Korea Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.12. Taiwan Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.4.13. Rest of Asia Pacific Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
    • 8.5. The Middle-East and Africa
      • 8.5.1. The Middle-East and Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Country, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.5.2. The Middle-East and Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Product Type, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.5.3. The Middle-East and Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Application, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.5.4. The Middle-East and Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Formulation, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.5.5. The Middle-East and Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By End Use, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.5.6. Saudi Arabia Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.5.7. UAE Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.5.8. Egypt Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.5.9. Kuwait Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.5.10. South Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.5.11. Rest of the Middle East & Africa Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
    • 8.6. Latin America
      • 8.6.1. Latin America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Country, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.6.2. Latin America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Product Type, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.6.3. Latin America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Application, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.6.4. Latin America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By Formulation, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.6.5. Latin America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, By End Use, 2026 – 2035
      • 8.6.6. Brazil Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.6.7. Argentina Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
      • 8.6.8. Rest of Latin America Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Revenue, 2026 – 2035 (USD Billion)
  • Chapter 9. Competitive Landscape
    • 9.1. Company Market Share Analysis – 2025
      • 9.1.1. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market: Company Market Share, 2025
    • 9.2. Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market Company Market Share, 2024
  • Chapter 10. Company Profiles
    • 10.1. ExxonMobil Corporation
      • 10.1.1. Company Overview
      • 10.1.2. Key Executives
      • 10.1.3. Product Portfolio
      • 10.1.4. Financial Overview
      • 10.1.5. Operating Business Segments
      • 10.1.6. Business Performance
      • 10.1.7. Recent Developments
    • 10.2. Shell plc
    • 10.3. BP plc (Castrol)
    • 10.4. TotalEnergies SE
    • 10.5. Chevron Corporation
    • 10.6. Fuchs Petrolub SE
    • 10.7. Kluber Lubrication (Freudenberg)
    • 10.8. Petro-Canada Lubricants (HF Sinclair)
    • 10.9. Quaker Houghton Corporation
    • 10.10. Nynas AB
    • 10.11. Others.
  • Chapter 11. Research Methodology
    • 11.1. Research Methodology
    • 11.2. Secondary Research
    • 11.3. Primary Research
      • 11.3.1. Analyst Tools and Models
    • 11.4. Research Limitations
    • 11.5. Assumptions
    • 11.6. Insights From Primary Respondents
    • 11.7. Why Healthcare Foresights
  • Chapter 12. Standard Report Commercials & Add-Ons
    • 12.1. Customization Options
    • 12.2. Subscription Module For Market Research Reports
    • 12.3. Client Testimonials
  • Chapter 13. List Of Figures
    • 13.1. Figures No 1 to 71
  • Chapter 14. List Of Tables
    • 14.1. Tables No 1 to 51

Prominent Player

  • ExxonMobil Corporation
  • Shell plc
  • BP plc (Castrol)
  • TotalEnergies SE
  • Chevron Corporation
  • Fuchs Petrolub SE
  • Kluber Lubrication (Freudenberg)
  • Petro-Canada Lubricants (HF Sinclair)
  • Quaker Houghton Corporation
  • Nynas AB
  • Others

FAQs

The key players in the market are ExxonMobil Corporation, Shell plc, BP plc (Castrol), TotalEnergies SE, Chevron Corporation, Fuchs Petrolub SE, Kluber Lubrication (Freudenberg), Petro-Canada Lubricants (HF Sinclair), Quaker Houghton Corporation, Nynas AB, Others.

Regulations comprise a powerful, unique market driver in the oil and gas lubricants sector through a variety of distinct regulatory levers, acting simultaneously across aspects of production, environment and equipment safety. Environmental regulations relating to offshore discharge and spill prevention – such as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Vessel General Permit requiring the use of EAL where shipboard equipment discharges oil into the sea, Norway’s OSPAR Convention implementation requiring HOCNF environmental assessment for all offshore chemicals, and the UK’s Offshore Pollution Equipment integrity regulations – such as the U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) integrity management rules for natural gas transmission pipelines, the Norwegian Petroleum Safety Authority’s (PSA) facility integrity requirements, and comparable national regulations – require maintenance practices including lubricant condition monitoring programs that shape lubricant selection, drain interval regimes, and used oil analysis programs across regulated gas transmission and production operators. OEM approval requirements – in which compressor, turbine and gearbox manufacturers such as Solar Turbines, MAN Energy Solutions, Siemens Energy and Burckhardt Compression publish approved lubricant lists and void equipment warranties for use of non-approved lubricants – effectively represent de facto regulatory requirements that limit lubricant supplier qualification criteria to those with the technical and financial resources to achieve and retain OEM approval status, creating significant market barriers that favor established premium lubricant suppliers in high-value oil and gas equipment applications.

The pricing range for lubricants in the oil and gas market is the broadest among the industrial lubricant application segments due to the staggering variety of performance requirements from pump-lubricating grade mineral oils to LNG cryogenic compressor lubricants at premium synthetic prices. Mineral oil compressor oils for basic natural gas reciprocating compressors trade at USD 3-6 per liter, while PAO-based synthetic compressor oils for high-speed centrifugal compressors trade at USD 15-28 per liter, and PAG or synthetic ester based LNG refrigeration compressor lubricants trade at USD 30-65 per liter: a 20-fold price range across one product segment reflecting the performance and equipment protection provided by the various formulations. Extended-reach drilling fluids for horizontal well applications cost USD 5-15 per liter for the lubricant component of the drilling fluid, with high-performance drill string lubricants for ultra-deepwater and high-temperature high-pressure (HTHP) wells costing USD 20-40 per liter. EAL-certified synthetic ester-based offshore hydraulic fluids command 40-80% premiums over equivalent mineral oil hydraulic fluids and range at USD 8-18 per liter, with the premium easily justified by offshore operators whose total operating costs for the facility are orders of magnitude greater than the lubricant cost and whose environmental cleanup costs from non-EAL spills dwarf the cumulative premium on the lubricant over the lifetime of the equipment. The commercial practice for major LNG and offshore operator lubricant procurement is for long-term supply contracts of 2-5 years’ duration with price escalation mechanisms linked to base oil feedstock costs, delivering revenue certainty for lubricant suppliers who invest in base oil and additive technology development and dedicated technical service teams for major customer assets.

According to present market analysis, the market is expected to grow to around USD 5.52 billion by 2035, driven by continued global oil and gas production sustaining equipment population and lubricant consumption volumes, global LNG trade growth to 600+ million tonnes per annum driving the highest-value lubricant application segment growth in the industry, and deepwater production expansion in Brazil, West Africa, and Southeast Asia driving offshore lubricant demand growth. Progressive synthetic lubricant adoption is increasing the average per-liter revenue across critical rotating equipment applications, EAL regulatory expansion mandating premium bio-based and synthetic ester adoption in offshore and sensitive onshore applications, and digital lubricant management service revenues supporting product margins for suppliers who invest in condition monitoring and predictive maintenance technologies, at a CAGR of 4.7% between 2026 and 2035.

The United States will remain the highest-revenue market throughout the forecast period, contributing 29% to global market revenues by 2035 backed by the largest drilling market, the largest unconventional production operations, and the largest advanced synthetic lubricant technology adoption in critical rotating equipment applications. But the Middle East and Africa region is expected to remain the second-largest revenue generator through 2035, as Gulf state LNG infrastructure expansion and maintenance of high-production status for the world’s largest conventional oil and gas reservoirs continue, with QatarEnergy’s North Field development project offering the largest single event for lubricant demand growth during the forecast period.

The fastest CAGR from 2026-2035 is expected in the Asia Pacific region at 5.9%, driven by Australia’s approximately 80 million tonnes per year (MTpy) LNG production base that creates continuous high-value LNG compressor lubricant demand, India’s oil and gas lubricants market growth of 7.1% CAGR from deepwater development and refinery expansion, China’s South China Sea deepwater program and extensive gas pipeline network lubricant demand, and offshore development in Southeast Asia (Malaysia, Indonesia, and Vietnam) that adds incremental offshore lubricant demand. It has growth across all three oil and gas market segments and downstream refinery capacity addition—creating a broad and durable multi-application demand growth trajectory unmatched in any other regional market.

The Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market is predicted to experience sustained growth driven by The Global Lubricants in the Oil and Gas Market is expected to register steady growth due to world oil production sustained above 100 mbpd during the forecast period according to IEA projections creating continuous upstream equipment lubricant demand; global LNG trade is expected to grow from 404 million tonnes in 2024 to 600+ million tonnes by 2035 generating high-value LNG refrigeration compressor oil demand from incremental liquefaction train commissioning. U.S. Permian Basin production surpassing 6.3 mbpd, generating the highest density of upstream lubricant consumption globally from unconventional shale operations; QatarEnergy’s North Field expansion adding 48 million tonnes per year of new LNG capacity, representing multi-year LNG compressor lubricant demand; synthetic lubricant penetration to increase from 31% to 42% of oil and gas lubricant volume by 2035 driving above-market growth in revenue due to formulation value migration. EAL regulatory expansion in offshore jurisdictions driving bio-based and synthetic ester lubricant uptake at 8.1% CAGR; Petrobras plans to produce 3.2 mbpd of pre-salt production by 2030 requiring extensive FPSO and subsea equipment lubrication and digital oil condition monitoring, enabling extended drain intervals that reduce lubricant volume while increasing per-event service revenue for digitally enabled lubricant suppliers.

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