Strategic Petroleum Reserves Under Pressure as Hormuz Closure Drags On

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Strategic petroleum reserves around the world are coming under increasing pressure as the Strait of Hormuz crisis extends into its second month with no military or diplomatic resolution in sight and President Trump’s coalition-building efforts remaining without concrete commitments. Nations that hold strategic reserves as a buffer against supply disruptions — including the United States, Japan, South Korea, and EU members — are watching their ability to compensate for the sustained loss of Hormuz access diminish as the crisis drags on. The reserves that were designed for short-term supply emergencies were not built to sustain prolonged closures of the world’s most important oil route.
Iran’s blockade of the strait began in late February as retaliation for US-Israeli airstrikes, generating the worst oil supply disruption in history. One-fifth of global oil exports ordinarily flow through the passage. Tehran has attacked sixteen tankers and declared vessels bound for American or allied ports to be legitimate military targets. The threat of mines in the waterway extends the risk horizon indefinitely. As the crisis continues, the strategic reserves that were designed to provide temporary relief are being drawn down, raising questions about how long nations can absorb the disruption before the reserve cushion runs out.
Trump called on the UK, France, China, Japan, South Korea, and all oil-importing nations to send warships to defend the passage, but each has responded with caution or refusal. France ruled out sending ships while fighting continued. The UK explored lower-risk drone options. Japan described a very high deployment threshold. South Korea pledged careful deliberation. Germany questioned the EU’s Aspides mission’s effectiveness. No government committed forces. The continued absence of a naval protection framework leaves nations with no choice but to continue drawing on reserves while diplomatic efforts move slowly.
The International Energy Agency and national energy authorities are monitoring the draw-down of strategic reserves with growing concern. The reserves of most major oil-importing nations were designed to provide buffer capacity for disruptions measured in weeks or months — not indefinite closures of a route that normally carries one-fifth of global oil supply. If the crisis extends significantly further without resolution, some nations may begin to face difficult choices about reserve allocation priorities and the management of increasingly constrained domestic energy supplies.
China’s diplomatic engagement with Tehran is the most active effort to find any path to relief. Beijing is reportedly in discussions with Iran about allowing tankers to pass, a process that could begin to ease the pressure on strategic reserves across the oil-importing world. The Chinese embassy confirmed China’s commitment to constructive regional engagement. US Energy Secretary Chris Wright expressed hope that China would prove a constructive partner. The race between diplomatic progress and reserve depletion gives the entire crisis a ticking clock quality that becomes more audible with every week of continued closure.

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