Charted: Tracking the Decline in Oil Spills from Tankers (1970-2024)

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See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Chart: Tracking the Fall of Oil Spills from Tankers

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  • Oil‑spills from tankers have fallen by more than 90% since the 1970s.
  • Improved ship design, stricter regulation and better spill‑response infrastructure are major contributors to the decline.

The dataset comes from the International Tanker Owners Pollution Federation (ITOPF) and was visualized by Our World in Data. It tracks the quantity of oil spilled from tanker incidents over time.

Year Quantity of oil spilled from tankers (global, tonnes) Major Incidents
1970  383000
1971 144000
1972 313000 Sea Star (Gulf of Oman)
1973 159000
1974 174000
1975 352000
1976 365000
1977 276000
1978 393000 Amoco Cadiz (Brittany, France)
1979 636000 Atlantic Empress (Near Trinidad and Tobago)
1980 206000
1981 48000
1982 12000
1983 384000 Castillo de Bellver (Near Cape Town, South Africa)
1984 29000
1985 85000
1986 19000
1987 38000
1988 190000
1989 164000 Exxon Valdez (Prince William Sound, Alaska)
1990 61000
1991 431000 ABT Summer (Offshore Angola)
1992 167000
1993 140000
1994 130000
1995 12000
1996 80000
1997 72000
1998 13000
1999 28000
2000 14000
2001 9000
2002 66000
2003 43000
2004 17000
2005 15000
2006 12000
2007 15000
2008 2000
2009 3000
2010 12000
2011 2000
2012 1000
2013 7000
2014 5000
2015 7000
2016 6000
2017 7000
2018 116000 Sanchi (East China Sea)
2019 1000
2020 1000
2021 10000
2022 15000
2023 2000
2024 10000

The table above reveals a dramatic drop in the volume of oil lost from tanker incidents: peaks in the early decades (1970s) have been replaced by far lower levels of spilled oil today. The outliers from earlier decades (with huge single‑events) stand in stark contrast to the much smaller numbers now.

Why Oil Spills from Tankers are Much Rarer

Several factors have driven and clarified the decline. First, international regulation such as double‑hull requirements for oil tankers, improvements in navigation systems and tougher port state controls have raised the baseline safety of tanker operations.

Second, the increasing professionalism of the industry around spill prevention and response means incidents that might have once gone large are caught earlier or mitigated more effectively. Third, better data and transparency now make the remaining risks easier to measure, showing how rare major spills truly are

Are We Out of the Woods Yet?

While the long‑term trend is strongly downward, recent data suggest a degree of stabilization rather than continued steep decline. In 2024, ITOPF recorded 10 tanker spills of more than seven tonnes, which matches 2023’s total.

The message is that the “easy wins” may already be behind us and the next phase is about sustaining performance and preventing the rare but potentially catastrophic events.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

Check out our related chart: Visualizing Global Oil Trade Flows in 2024 to explore how oil moves through the global system and how spill incidents fit within that larger trade dynamic.

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