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Brent futures were up 97 cents, or 1.4%, to $68.60 a barrel

Oil gains, lower US crude stockpiles provide floor

Wed, Sep. 24, 2025
oil prices
oil prices

Oil prices rose over 1% on Wednesday as an industry report showed U.S. crude inventories declined last week, adding to a sense in the market of tightening supplies amid export issues in Kurdistan and Venezuela and disruptions to Russian supplies.

Brent futures were up 97 cents, or 1.4%, to $68.60 a barrel at 1321 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 99 cents, or 1.6%, to $64.40.

Prices extended gains after Ukraine's military said it struck two oil pumping stations overnight in Russia's Volgograd region. A state of emergency had been declared in the Russian city of Novorossiisk, which is Russia's major seaport on the Black Sea and contains major oil and grain export terminals.

"The market is expecting supply excess and stock builds globally in the last quarter of the year, but the focus recently has shifted back to Eastern Europe and the possible introduction of fresh sanctions on Russia," said PVM Oil Associates analyst Tamas Varga.

The stalled resumption of Kurdish oil exports along with Chevron's curbed oil exports from Venezuela due to U.S. permit issues added to short-term bullishness in the market, he added.

Both benchmarks climbed by more than $1 a barrel on Tuesday as a deal to resume exports from Iraq's Kurdistan stalled, halting pipeline shipments of what would have been 230,000 barrels per day of oil from the region to Turkey, as two key producers asked for debt repayment guarantees. Pipeline flows have been stopped since March 2023.