RT.com
21 Mar 2026, 12:52 GMT+10
As tensions in the worlds key oil chokepoint persist, OPEC+ morphs into a crisis manager and Asian importers are forced to rethink risks
Missile and drone attacks on energy hubs across the Gulf have drawn the wider US-Israeli war with Iran directly into the core of global energy routes. Within three weeks, the region has shifted from a zone of latent risk to the epicenter of heightened security concerns around energy infrastructure and commercial shipping.
TheStrait of Hormuz, which carries about 21% of global petroleum liquids, has transformed from background anxiety to an overt risk corridor. Asinsurers reassess exposureand tanker activity slows, the chokepoint itself has become the flashpoint for geopolitical contagion into energy markets.
A week into the conflict, the United Statespledgednaval escorts and broader supplyside measures, however it failed to secure backing from European allies to get involved militarily.OnMarch 19a host of European countries, as well as Japan and Canada, had expressed their readiness to "contribute to efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait."
However, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz told reporters on the same day in Brussels that Berlin would only involve itself in the region after military action comes to a halt, stating, "We can and will only be able to get involved once the guns fall silent."
While various data and media report suggest that some tankers are effectively able to traverse the Straight, for which some countries, including Pakistan, China, Iraq, and Malaysia are having talks with Iran, safe navigation has still not been fully restored, and markets remain unconvinced that diplomatic signaling alone can quickly normalize flows.
Oil marketsreacted swiftly, as Brent rose above $119 per barrel on March 19 before easing to about $109.85 on March 20, still leaving it nearly 7% higher for the week. More strikingly, the benchmark Middle East Dubai crude hit a record of around$166.80 per barrel, underlining how physical market tightness is now outpacing headline futures benchmarks. Analysts continue to warn that any sustained Hormuz disruption could push crude far higher.
Even absent a full blockade, costlier freight, insurance, and rerouting are embedding a durable war premium, redefiningOPEC+'s role, and especially the SaudiRussia axis, as guardians not just of oil prices but of the credibility of Gulf sea lane security itself.
Although severaloil facilitiesand tankers have been struck during the conflict, the real market shock has come not from the widespread destruction of production capacity but from disruption to the Gulf's entire operating ecosystem, shipping routes, insurance markets and tanker logistics. Airspace, ports,shipping insuranceand tanker routing have all been drawn directly into the conflict zone.
At least21 civil ships, including oil tankers, have reportedly been attacked or hit by projectiles in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz since the start of the conflict.
Ship tracking datashows dozens of tankers waiting inside or near the Gulf as operators avoid entering potentially dangerous waters. Since late February, queues at the Strait of Hormuz have grown as ships delay voyages or wait for clearer guidance on escorts and insurance, turning a security shock into a logistics disruption.It is reported thateven if safe passage is eventually negotiated, fully reviving logistics will take far longer than many initially assumed.
Before this escalation, Brent had already climbed into the lowtomid $70s amid tightening balances and rising geopolitical tensions. What has changed since then is that the physical market has tightened even faster than the paper market. According to oilshipment tracker PetroLogistics, flows of crude and condensate have dropped by about 12 million bpd, roughly 12% of daily global demand, as output cuts and export halts by Gulf producers ripple through the market. That sharpens the disconnect between global supply spreadsheets and realworld deliverability.
On paper, theIEA's projected 2026 surplus still suggests a comfortable balance. But in practice, the question is no longer just whether oil exists somewhere in the system; it is whether it can move safely, affordably and on time through a militarized corridor.
The headline numbers suggest the world has plenty of oil. The IEA and other forecasters expect nonOPEC+ producers such as theUnited States,Canada,Brazil and Guyanato keep adding barrels, contributing to the middecade surplus. Yet roughly one fifth of global petroleum liquids and LNG still move through Hormuz. Even after emergency measures, the physical market is behaving as if accessibility, not just aggregate supply, is the real constraint. For instance, cargoes ofEuropean and African crudehave climbed to around $120 per barrel, with previously discounted Russian barrels now trading back above $100, northwest European jet fuel has hit roughly $220 a barrel, while European diesel has moved beyond $200.
On paper, closing a strait that carries around 20-21 million bpd, while Saudi and Emirati pipelines can divert only about6-8 million bpd, would still leave well over 10 million bpd effectively stranded or shut in. Once spare capacity outside the chokepoint and a realistic draw on IEA emergency stocks are considered, most scenario exercises suggest an effective net loss of around 8-10 million bpd in a prolonged crisis, rather than the full volume normally transiting the Strait of Hormuz. That is still enough to wipe out the projected 2026 surplus and to justify a substantial, structural war premium in crude benchmarks.
This crisis has erupted just asOPEC+edges away from behaving as a simple price band cartel toward a more complex role by smoothing volatility in a corridorconstrained market.
At their latestministerial meeting, producers signaled a modest, deliberately reversible April output rise of about206,000 bpd, underlining that the move is aimed more at managing sentiment than materially shifting fundamentals.
For Riyadh and Moscow, this was less a volume adjustment than a governance signal. OPEC+ will not remain entirely passive while a war premium built on shipping risk runs away from them.
With an estimated5-6 million bpdof spare capacity, concentrated in Saudi Arabia and theUnited Arab Emirates, these producers sit at the center of any plausible crisisstabilization story. Spare capacity, once primarily a revenue instrument, is being repurposed as geopolitical capital.
Yet the limits are stark. OPEC+ cannot insure tankers or neutralize naval threats; it can only adjust theoretical availability. As mentioned above, even as allied governments moved closer to supporting Hormuz security, oil prices still rose because traders judged that the underlying market remained tight and the production damage and logistics dislocation would not be reversed quickly.
Russia's export routes are less directly exposed to Hormuz than those of Gulf producers, which means its barrels can still play a stabilizing role in wider supply balances. In that sense, Russian flows remain part of the broader flexibility available to major Asian importers, including India. How Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Russia coordinate from here will determine whether OPEC+ acts primarily as a stabilizing buffer or allows elevated prices to persist.
The Gulf crisis crystallizes a wider structural shift in global energy politics. The key variable is no longer marginal supply alone; it is the stability of shipping routes and the credibility of deterrence around them. The Strait of Hormuz remains the world's most important oil transit chokepoint, with flows that cannot be fully rerouted even if alternative pipelines are maximized. As long as tensions there stay elevated, a war premium can persist even without significant upstream damage. This premium is now being reinforced by physical dislocation, stranded cargoes, shipping paralysis and higher replacement costs across global crude and fuel markets.
In this environment, spare capacity becomes geopolitical capital as much as a market tool. OPEC+ is evolving from a priceband manager into a quasigovernance institution that uses flexible production, signaling and spare capacity to buffer a structurally riskier corridor, while major Asian importers are being pushed to think of energy security less as securing barrels and more as ensuring safe passage, diversified routes and robust buffers.
The current Gulf crisis is therefore not an exception, but an early test of a new energy order where control over shipping routes, insurance and maritime security matters as much as control over oil fields. For producers, importers and maritime powers alike, the challenge is no longer only to produce enough oil, but to preserve the credibility of the corridors through which that oil must move.
What is emerging is not a shortage of oil, but a shortage of assured access, where the stability of movement, rather than the availability of supply, is becoming the defining variable in global energy security.
(RT.com)
Get a daily dose of Milwaukee Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Milwaukee Sun.
More InformationWELLINGTON, New Zealand: New Zealand's government is planning to tighten deportation, asylum, and immigration enforcement rules with...
In a move that has sparked global outrage, the Islamic Republic of Iran has executed 19-year-old champion wrestler Saleh Mohammadi...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: A week after U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth questioned the appointment of Kari Lake to lead the...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Two days after President Donald Trump called a federal judge who ruled against the administration wacky, nasty, crooked,...
KHIRBET HUMSA, West Bank - Dozens of masked Israeli settlers stormed into Qusai Abu al-Kebash's small village last weekend in the middle...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: A man who spent nearly twenty years in prison for a roughly US$550 robbery that he did not commit was exonerated...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Two days after President Donald Trump called a federal judge who ruled against the administration wacky, nasty, crooked,...
CHICAGO, Illinois: Severe weather has swept across much of the U.S., dumping heavy snow and making roads impossible to travel on in...
CHICAGO, Illinois: U.S. airlines are increasingly relying on revenue from co-branded credit cards, reshaping how loyalty programs reward...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Smaller portions are emerging as one of the biggest trends in the restaurant industry as diners look to spend less...
(Photo credit: Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images) Earlier this week, Joel Embiid was said to be close to a return from a right oblique...
(Photo credit: David Banks-Imagn Images) The Cleveland Cavaliers can complete a perfect three-game road trip as their trek for higher...
