IEA Warns Record Oil Drain From Hormuz Crisis May Trigger Price Spikes

The IEA has issued a stark warning about a "record" drain on global oil inventories due to the prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The crisis has caused global oil supply to potentially fall by 3.9 million barrels per day through 2026. Nations have aggressively tapped into commercial and strategic reserves, with stocks plummeting by 117 million barrels in April alone. The IEA warns that the bottleneck risks future price spikes and volatility across global energy and financial markets.

Key Points: IEA Warns of Record Oil Drain, Hormuz Crisis Price Spikes

  • IEA warns of "record" oil stockpile drain
  • Hormuz crisis chokes global supply for 10+ weeks
  • Global stocks fell 117M barrels in April
  • IEA releases 400M barrels from emergency reserves
2 min read

IEA warns of "record" oil drain, "future price spikes" as Hormuz crisis chokes global supply

IEA warns of "record" oil stockpile drain as Strait of Hormuz crisis chokes global supply, warning of future price spikes and market volatility.

"rapidly shrinking buffers amid continued disruptions may herald future price spikes ahead - IEA"

Paris, May 13

The global energy landscape is facing a seismic shift as "rapidly shrinking buffers amid continued disruptions may herald future price spikes ahead," the International Energy Agency cautioned on Wednesday.

With the strategic Strait of Hormuz effectively choked for over 10 weeks, the Paris-based watchdog warned that world oil inventories are being exhausted at an "unprecedented" and "record" pace.

The crisis stems from the prolonged closure of the world's most vital maritime artery, which has crippled the movement of Gulf crude and gas. According to the IEA, the persistent instability could cause global oil supply to "fall by 3.9 million barrels per day (bpd) through 2026."

Although a "deteriorating economic environment" is expected to dampen consumption, the agency noted that the drop in demand will not be enough to bridge the massive supply gap.

To combat the supply shock triggered by escalating military tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran, nations have aggressively tapped into "commercial stockpiles and strategic petroleum reserves."

The report revealed a staggering "record" depletion, with global stocks plummeting by 117 million barrels in April alone, following a 129-million-barrel drain in March.

In a coordinated effort to stabilise the volatile market, the IEA has moved forward with "plans to release 400 million barrels from emergency reserves held by member states."

While approximately 164 million barrels have already reached the market, the agency admits the situation remains fragile as "higher prices, a deteriorating economic environment and demand-saving measures will further weigh on global oil consumption."

The "effective closure" of the Hormuz route has now pushed the global energy sector to a breaking point, just as the peak summer travel season begins.

With airlines already sounding the alarm over potential "jet fuel shortages within weeks," the IEA warned that the longer the bottleneck persists, the higher the likelihood of "volatility spreading across global energy and financial markets."

- ANI

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Priya S
The IEA releasing 400 million barrels is a good step, but it feels like a band-aid on a bullet wound. 😬 India's strategic petroleum reserves are only enough for 9.5 days of consumption. We need to seriously build up those reserves and invest in electric vehicles. This is a wake-up call for energy independence.
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Vikram M
Honestly, blaming Iran and the US doesn't help us. The real issue is our over-dependence on a volatile region. Why can't India push harder for electric mobility and solar? We have abundant sunlight! Let's not waste this crisis—use it as a catalyst for change. Governments worldwide are just firefighting, not fixing the root cause.
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Ananya R
Airlines already warning of jet fuel shortages? That'll hit our summer travel plans hard! 🛫 My parents were planning to visit from the US, but ticket prices have doubled. The common man is always the one who bears the brunt of these geopolitical games. I wish our leaders would focus on diplomatic solutions rather than just watching tensions escalate.
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Rohit P
The IEA's report is scary—117 million barrels drained in April alone! That's like a month's worth of global demand. But let's be real: India should have seen this coming. We've been warning about Middle East instability for years. Now we're paying the price for not investing enough in domestic production and strategic reserves. Need to learn from China who built months of reserves.
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Kavya N
I feel like this is a man-made crisis to jack up prices. 🤔 Oil companies always find

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