Deliveries are expected to begin reaching the market by the end of next week and will continue over approximately 120 days. The first batch of 86 million barrels has already been opened for bidding. Japan, the fourth largest crude importer globally, will release 80 million barrels beginning March 16, 2026.
| 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 |
The coordinated release provides meaningful supply-side relief, with US deliveries flowing into the market over a 120-day window. Combined with GCC bypass pipeline capacity, the SPR mechanism limits sustained price upside. The loan structure (with repayment premium) signals a temporary buffer — markets will watch replenishment dynamics once the conflict stabilises.
Movement toward $110/bbl is likely if: (1) Iranian retaliation intensifies and further 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.
