Malaysia Trade Intelligence
Malaysia Fuel Trade Statistics Dashboard
Explore Malaysia’s fuel trade statistics, including exports, imports, trade balance, and monthly trade activity for mineral fuels, lubricants, and related materials using official Malaysia open data.
Latest Malaysia Fuel Trade Overview: March 2026
The figures below show Malaysia’s latest available monthly trade values for SITC Section 3, Mineral Fuels, Lubricants and Related Materials.
Malaysia Fuel Trade Trend
The cards below show the latest available monthly fuel exports, imports, and trade balance without requiring horizontal scrolling.
Mar 2026
Feb 2026
Jan 2026
Dec 2025
Nov 2025
Oct 2025
Sep 2025
Aug 2025
Jul 2025
Jun 2025
May 2025
Apr 2025
Understanding Malaysia Fuel Trade Statistics
Malaysia’s fuel trade is an important part of the country’s import and export activity. Mineral fuels, lubricants, and related materials include energy-related commodities such as petroleum products, fuels, gas, lubricants, and other related trade items classified under Standard International Trade Classification Section 3.
This dashboard provides a current overview of Malaysia’s fuel exports, fuel imports, total fuel trade, and fuel trade balance using official Malaysia open data. It is useful for exporters, importers, logistics providers, fuel-related businesses, manufacturers, analysts, researchers, and companies that monitor energy-related trade movement.
SITC stands for Standard International Trade Classification. It is a system developed by the United Nations to classify traded goods into broad categories so that countries can compare trade statistics consistently.
Why Fuel Trade Data Matters
Fuel trade statistics help businesses understand energy-related trade movement, import demand, export performance, industrial activity, transport costs, and broader economic trends. Changes in fuel imports may reflect domestic consumption, refining activity, energy demand, or market conditions. Changes in fuel exports may indicate international demand and the performance of Malaysia’s energy-related trade sector.
For logistics companies and international traders, fuel trade data is also relevant because energy commodities influence transport cost, shipping activity, freight movement, and supply chain planning.
Fuel Trade and Supply Chain Planning
Fuel and energy-related commodities affect many industries, including manufacturing, transportation, warehousing, shipping, agriculture, construction, and international trade. Monitoring fuel trade statistics can help businesses understand wider market conditions and prepare for changes in operating costs, sourcing, and distribution.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does fuel trade include?
Fuel trade generally includes mineral fuels, lubricants, petroleum-related products, gas-related products, and related materials classified under SITC Section 3.
How often is the data updated?
The official trade data is generally updated monthly. Recent figures may be provisional and subject to revision.
Why is fuel trade important?
Fuel trade reflects energy demand, industrial activity, transport needs, import requirements, export performance, and broader economic conditions.
