Image by FarzadFrames/ iStock
The world has lost over $50 billion worth of crude oil that has not been produced since the Iran war began nearly 50 days ago and the aftershock of the crisis will be felt for months and even years to come, according to analysts and Reuters calculations.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Friday (April 17) the Strait of Hormuz was open following a ceasefire accord agreed in Lebanon, while US President Donald Trump said he believed a deal to end the Iran war would come “soon", though the timing remains unclear.
Since the crisis began at the end of
February, more than 500 million barrels of crude and condensate have been knocked out of
the global market,
according to Kpler data - the largest energy supply disruption in modern
history.
Put differently, 500 million barrels of oil
lost to the market is equivalent to:
- Curtailing aviation demand globally for 10
weeks; no road travel by any vehicle globally for 11 days; or no oil for the
global economy for five days, said Iain Mowat, principal analyst at Wood
Mackenzie.
- Nearly a month of oil demand in the US, or
more than a month of oil for all of Europe, according to Reuters estimates.
- Roughly six years of fuel consumption for
the US military, based on annual usage of about 80 million barrels from fiscal
year 2021.
- Enough fuel to run the world's
international shipping industry for around four months.
Key facts:
- Gulf Arab countries lost about 8 million
barrels per day of crude production in March, nearly equivalent to the combined
production of Exxon Mobil and Chevron two of the biggest oil companies in the world.
- Jet fuel exports from Saudi Arabia, Qatar,
the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman fell from about 19.6 million
barrels in February, to just 4.1 million barrels for March and April so far
combined, according to Kpler data. The loss in exports would have been enough
for around 20,000 round-trip flights between New York's JFK airport and London
Heathrow, according to Reuters estimates.
- With crude prices averaging around $100 a
barrel since the conflict began, those missing volumes represent roughly $50
billion in lost
revenues, said Johannes Rauball, a senior crude analyst at Kpler. That equates
to a 1 per cent cut in Germany's annual gross domestic product, or roughly the entire
GDP of smaller countries such as Latvia or Estonia.
FULL RESTORATION COULD TAKE YEARS
Even as Iranian Foreign Minister Araqchi
said the Strait of Hormuz was open, recovery of output and flows is expected to be slow.
Global onshore crude inventories have
fallen by about 45 million barrels so far in April, according to Kpler. Since
late March, production outages have reached roughly 12 million bpd.
Heavier crude fields in Kuwait and Iraq
could take four to five months to return to normal operating levels, extending stock draws through the
summer, Rauball said. Damage to refining capacity and Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG
complex means full restoration of regional energy infrastructure could take
years.

