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GeriOil Market Navigates Strait of Hormuz Blockade Amidst Uncertainty
Oil Market Navigates Strait of Hormuz Blockade Amidst Uncertainty
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Wired14.06.2026Energy3 dk okuma

Oil Market Navigates Strait of Hormuz Blockade Amidst Uncertainty

Hızlı Bakış

  • Despite a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the oil market has shown resilience due to significant storage buffers and reduced demand.
  • However, analysts warn these reserves will deplete, potentially leading to price increases if the strait remains closed.

Yapay zekâ özeti

Neden Önemli?

A blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has led to significant disruptions in global oil supply, yet prices have remained stable due to existing storage and demand adjustments.

Yazı boyutu

Last week, President Donald Trump claimed a secret US mission had moved 100 million barrels of oil through the Strait of Hormuz while it was blockaded. The claim landed in an industry already consumed by the question of how much oil is actually getting out—and nobody, it turns out, can answer that with confidence.

“No one’s experienced this kind of disruption,” said Matt Stanley, head of market engagement at Kpler, the commodity intelligence and ship-tracking firm. The reason the numbers are so hard to pin down is what the industry calls the dark trade—vessels running without their AIS transponders on, moving at night, closer to the Omani border, sometimes with naval escort.

There are ways to detect portions of outgoing oil anyway. Different grades of crude can only originate from specific fields. The UAE’s Murban crude can be exported via Fujairah, outside the strait. Another type of crude, Upper Zakum, cannot. One oil market analyst noted that their team has seen Upper Zakum crude oil appear in other markets. Those sightings are happening, yet the scale remains unknown.

Stanley says it’s possible that 100 million barrels made it through the Strait of Hormuz since the first of May. “When you put into context, pre-conflict, it was about 20 million barrels a day that was going through, so five days worth of oil, in a normal traffic environment, and it’s taken over a month. 100 million barrels, it’s a good number, but it’s a relative drop in the ocean, literally, compared to previous traffic.”

Why Prices Haven’t Exploded Yet

The world’s most important oil chokepoint has been effectively shut for more than 100 days. World Trade Organization data shows a 95 percent reduction in crude oil shipments from Arabian Gulf ports and a 99 percent reduction in liquified natural gas carriers. The International Energy Agency has called it “the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.” Yet Brent crude sits at $87.55 per barrel—the lowest since before the conflict began.

This is because of buffers. China has approximately 1.3 billion barrels in storage, drawing it down at around a million barrels a day, Stanley says. “We see their demand, about 7 million barrels a day from May, June, and July. They were buying 12.5 million barrels a day in December.” The US, Brazil, and Canada have also stepped in to fill part of the void.

The three analysts interviewed agree that the oil market’s response has been robust. “The oil market responded to this outage significantly well in terms of cutting parts of demand,” says Iman Nasseri, managing director, Middle East of FGE NexantECA, an energy and chemical advisory company. “There is also a significant amount of stock that has come to market, but we doubt that they will continue to do that. We expect that by July [if the strait remains closed], things will change.”

The buffers will run out. One analyst said stocks are approaching what the industry calls operationally critical levels—where oil in storage and additional supply needs to be replenished. They added that the US, currently acting as a swing producer, faces its own deadline as the end of the year approaches, and the US will have to prioritize its own domestic production to accommodate people needing to heat their homes.

“People looking at October, you really think that it would be sorted out by the middle of August,” Stanley says. “That’s what I think the market is hoping for.”

Back Online

Global oil supply fell 10.1 million barrels per day in March, with OPEC+ production dropping by 9.4 million barrels per day month-on-month. The harder question is how much comes back, and when.

Bundan Sonra Ne Olabilir?

Yapay zekâ öngörüsü — kesinlik taşımaz

  • Oil prices will rise significantly if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed past July.

    Muhtemel · Aylar içinde

  • The US will need to prioritize domestic oil production by year-end.

    Muhtemel · Aylar içinde

Açık Sorular

  • What is the true scale of the 'dark trade' oil movements?
  • When will global storage buffers be depleted?
  • How will OPEC+ respond if prices rise significantly?

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