⚡ US / Israel–Iran War · Crude Market Update

SPR / IEA — Largest Ever Release
IEA Member Nations Agree to Release 400 Million Barrels — Largest in IEA History
IEA member nations have agreed to a coordinated release of 400 million barrels of Strategic Petroleum Reserves — the largest emergency SPR release since the IEA was established after the 1973 Oil Crisis. Japan, the fourth largest crude importer globally, will release 80 million barrels beginning March 16, 2026.

China and India have additional protection from large volumes of Russia’s floating storage, providing further insulation from near-term supply disruption. The US holds its own commercial and SPR reserves of approximately 850 million barrels.

Event Year Release Scale vs. 2026
First Gulf War 1991 75 mln bbl
Hurricanes Katrina & Rita 2005 60 mln bbl
Libya Civil War 2011 60 mln bbl
Russia–Ukraine War 2022 180 mln bbl
US/Israel–Iran War ★ 2026 400 mln bbl

Global Buffer Reserves
Key Nations’ Supply Cushions at a Glance
IEA SPR Release
400 mln
Barrels · agreed

Japan Release
80 mln
Barrels from Mar 16

US Reserves
~850 mln
Commercial + SPR

China & India
Floating
Russia storage buffer

Strait of Hormuz — Shipping Incident
Three Vessels Struck by Projectiles on March 11, 2026
On March 11, 2026, three commercial vessels were struck by projectiles in and around the Strait of Hormuz, causing fires and damage. No environmental impact has been reported.

Mayuree Naree — Thailand-flagged bulk carrier
One Majesty — Japan-flagged container ship
Star Gwyneth — Marshall Islands-flagged bulk carrier

Pipeline Infrastructure
Saudi Arabia & UAE Bypass Pipelines to Add 6.5–7.0 MBpd Above Pre-War Levels
Saudi Arabia’s East–West Pipeline and the UAE’s Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline (ADCOP) can together compensate for an additional 6.5–7.0 MBpd above pre-war export levels, expected to come online within 2 to 5 days.

Strait of Hormuz
~Two-Thirds of 15 MBpd Hormuz Crude Flow Can Be Offset for 20–30 Days
Of approximately 15 MBpd of crude oil (excluding condensates and other liquids) transiting the Strait of Hormuz in OND’25, combined SPR release and bypass pipeline capacity can offset roughly two-thirds — or slightly more — for the next 20 to 30 days, giving the Trump administration time to assess a longer-term strategic direction.

Crude Price Outlook
Brent Expected to Trade in $85–$110/bbl Range Over the Next 1–2 Weeks
Brent Crude 1M Futures are expected to trade in a range of $85/bbl to $110/bbl over the coming 1 to 2 weeks. The coordinated SPR release and GCC bypass pipeline capacity provide a meaningful supply cushion that limits sustained upside beyond this band. Price direction will remain highly sensitive to daily conflict developments, SPR drawdown confirmation, and the pace at which GCC bypass capacity comes online.

Brent Crude 1M Futures — Projected 1–2 Week Trading Range

$85 floor
$95 base
$110 ceiling

$85–$95 · Supply buffers holding

$95–$110 · Elevated war premium

⚠ Key Price Drivers to Watch

Movement toward $110/bbl is likely if: (1) Iranian retaliation intensifies and further commercial vessels are struck in the Strait, (2) SPR drawdown confirmation is delayed or insufficient to reassure markets, or (3) GCC bypass pipeline ramp-up is slower than expected. Conversely, a de-escalation signal or ceasefire indication would likely push prices back toward the $85–$90/bbl end of the range.

Geopolitics / Strategy
US/Israel Continue Naval Strikes on Iran; Iran Retaliates Against Arab Nations
During this 20–30 day buffer window, US and Israeli forces are expected to continue targeting Iranian naval and military installations in and around the Strait of Hormuz. Iran continues to retaliate with strikes against Arab Gulf nation assets. The Trump administration is using this period to assess a clearer long-term strategic path forward. Until a definitive war or de-escalation plan emerges, crude prices will remain highly event-driven and volatile within the $85–$110/bbl band.