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Rip Up the Glut Forecasts – Mideast Oil Shock Signals Supply Crunch: Bousso


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(Reuters) – The sudden and acute disruption to Middle East oil supplies caused by the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran is forcing buyers to tap every available barrel, rapidly dismantling forecasts of an oil glut this year. In February, the International Energy Agency forecast that global oil supply would exceed demand by around 3.7 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2026, with the surplus extending into the following year. A month later, that projection appears redundant. Nearly 15 million bpd of crude production, plus another 4.5 million bpd of refined fuels, remain effectively stranded in the Gulf after the near-complete closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The chokepoint was shut shortly after the launch of the joint U.S.–Israel aerial bombing campaign against Iran on February 28, which Tehran answered by targeting Gulf states and regional energy infrastructure. The loss of such a vast volume of supply – equivalent to almost a fifth of global daily consumption – has sent shockwaves through oil markets and the wider economy. Global benchmark Brent crude surged above $90 a barrel on Friday, gaining nearly 30% over the past week since the conflict started. Asia, which sources around 60% of its crude imports from the Middle East, is bearing the brunt. Refineries and petrochemical plants across the region have cut production or shut altogether to conserve feedstock, while other energy-intensive industries, from ceramics to car manufacturing, are facing acute shortages. How long the conflict – and the Hormuz shutdown – will last is impossible to predict. But with each passing day, pressure on the oil supply chain is compounding, not easing.

RUNNING OUT OF TIME AND SPACE

Inside the Gulf, producers are running out of options. With exports blocked, crude is being pushed into onshore storage tanks and offshore tankers. Iraq, which has limited storage options, has already shut off at least a quarter of its 4.3 million bpd of production. Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest exporter, have some remaining storage capacity available – but it’s measured in days, not weeks. Saudi Arabia and the UAE can divert some crude through alternative export routes, but these only partially offset the loss of Hormuz. As storage fills, more producers will be forced to cut output and idle refineries.


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Shutting oil fields safely is a complex process. Restarting them can take days or even weeks before production returns to full capacity, extending the market impact well beyond any eventual reopening of the Strait. Meanwhile, refiners – particularly in Asia – are scrambling for barrels.

TAPPING AVAILABLE STOCKS

The good news is that inventories had been building in recent months, thanks to rising output from producers including OPEC. Global observed oil inventories rose by 1.3 million bpd, or 477 million barrels, in 2025, reaching their highest level since March 2021, according to the IEA.

Around 80 million barrels of oil are currently stored on tankers at sea, data from analytics firm Kpler show, with nearly two-thirds in Asia.

About three-quarters of that “floating storage” originated from Iran, Venezuela and Russia, all subject to Western sanctions, meaning much of it is inaccessible to most buyers. Iranian crude alone accounts for roughly 50 million barrels. Some of that oil is starting to move, however. The U.S. on Thursday granted India a waiver to buy Russian crude to help refiners with the supply squeeze. New Delhi had sharply cut imports last month as part of a trade deal with Washington.

Russian crude in floating storage has already fallen from 7.7 million barrels just before the strikes on Iran to 4.5 million barrels by March 6.

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Independent Chinese refiners, which have absorbed the bulk of Iran’s crude exports in recent years, are likely to pick up the lion’s share of Iranian barrels that are either located outside the Gulf or able to get through the Strait.

At the same time, Middle East producers are almost certainly drawing on their overseas storage to meet contractual obligations with buyers.

If the disruption persists, pressure will grow on governments to tap their own reserves. OECD members hold strategic petroleum reserves created in the 1970s specifically to deal with supply shocks. Under IEA rules, net oil-importing countries must hold stocks equivalent to at least 90 days of imports. The U.S., the world’s largest oil producer and consumer, currently holds more than 400 million barrels in its SPR. That’s well below its capacity of roughly 700 million barrels, but given it is no longer a net importer of energy, the risk of cutting into its reserves is limited. The most critical unknown is China. Beijing has quietly accumulated vast oil reserves in recent years, adding an average of around 300,000 bpd last year alone, according to the IEA. So far, it has not signalled any intention to release stocks, though it has instructed refiners to curb fuel exports.

UNPRECEDENTED CRISIS

Global reserves, though ample at the outset of this crisis, are finite. This shock is unprecedented: the Strait of Hormuz has never before been fully blocked. And even if it were reopened tomorrow, it would still take weeks for markets to rebalance and for finely calibrated supply chains to return to normal.

Assuming some of the Gulf oil production is diverted, offsetting a supply disruption of 15 million bpd would require more than 100 million barrels of oil from storage in a week. At that pace, an extended outage would rapidly erode global inventories.

“It is very difficult for stocks to compensate for flows, particularly when the reduction in flows is so large,” said Paul Horsnell, an independent oil analyst. If stocks are depleted, governments and traders would obviously need to rebuild them, implying higher demand for crude, as well as higher prices, in the coming year. The Middle East supply shock is already flipping expectations of a glut into a far more plausible scenario of undersupply.

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters

Ron Bousso; Editing by Marguerita Choy

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