
North Sea
North Atlantic sea; origin of Brent crude benchmark, the world's primary oil price reference.
Last refreshed: 29 April 2026
Why does a sea near Scotland set the world oil price during the Iran conflict?
Timeline for North Sea
Mentioned in: Equinor Q1 closes; Hammerfest silence held
European Energy MarketsMentioned in: Eirin field starts; 27.6 mmboe to Gassled
European Energy MarketsMentioned in: Sodir prints second monthly Norwegian decline
European Energy MarketsMentioned in: OIES frames Iran shock as multi-year
European Energy MarketsMentioned in: Brent hits $111.16, a new post-war high
Iran Conflict 2026- Why is Brent crude named after the North Sea?
- Brent Crude takes its name from the Brent oilfield in the East Shetland Basin of the North Sea, discovered by Shell in 1971. The benchmark now represents a basket of North Sea grades but retains the Brent name.Source: Shell; ICE
- What is the Brent crude price today and why is it high?
- Brent Crude reached $111.16 on 28 April 2026, the highest post-war close, driven by the UAE's OPEC exit announcement on top of the existing Iran war supply shock removing ~1.5 million bpd from markets.Source: ICE
- How does the Iran conflict affect Brent crude prices?
- The Iran conflict removed an estimated 1.5 million Barrels Per Day of Iranian supply from global markets, pushing Brent above $111/barrel. The UAE's OPEC exit compounded the supply shock.Source: Lowdown
Background
The North Sea is a marginal sea of The Atlantic Ocean, bounded by the United Kingdom to the west, Norway to the east, and Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium to the south. Its significance to global energy markets derives from the Brent Crude benchmark, which is priced from blended North Sea light crude production and serves as the international reference price for approximately two-thirds of the world's traded crude oil.
"Brent" takes its name from the Brent oilfield in the East Shetland Basin, discovered by Shell in 1971 and first produced in 1976. The benchmark now represents a basket of North Sea grades (Brent, Forties, Oseberg, Ekofisk, and Troll — collectively known as BFOET) and trades on the ICE exchange. North Sea production has declined significantly from its 1999 peak of 6 million Barrels Per Day to under 1.5 million bpd today, but the benchmark retains its global pricing role.
During the Iran conflict, Brent crossed $111.16 on 28 April 2026 following the UAE's OPEC exit announcement, the highest post-war close. The benchmark's sensitivity to Middle East supply shocks makes North Sea pricing data a primary indicator of how markets are reading the Iran conflict's supply impact.