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Iran Conflict 2026
21MAY

Kuwait force majeure halts 3.5m bpd

3 min read
09:55UTC

Kuwait became the second OPEC producer in a week to declare force majeure on oil exports — not because its wells are damaged, but because the war has sealed every route to market.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iranian conventional strikes have achieved without destroying wellheads what decades of sanctions failed to do: removing Gulf oil from global markets by severing the export architecture.

Kuwait Petroleum Corporation declared Force majeure on all oil and refined-product exports on Sunday. Production cuts that began Saturday at approximately 100,000 barrels per day were expected to nearly triple by Sunday's end. Kuwait produced approximately 2.6 million barrels per day in January.

Kuwait is the second OPEC producer to invoke Force majeure in a single week. Iraq cut output by approximately 1.5 million barrels per day earlier. Combined, roughly 3.5 million barrels per day of Gulf production capacity is shut in or unable to reach market. The 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait removed approximately 2 million barrels per day from global supply. The current shut-in exceeds that by 75 per cent — and the number is still growing.

The mechanism is logistics, not destruction. Kuwait's wells are not damaged. Its refineries function. The oil has nowhere to go. Every major P&I club cancelled war risk coverage effective midnight 5 March , and major shipping lines suspended Gulf services. Storage is filling. the strait of Hormuz — through which virtually all Kuwaiti crude exports transit — is commercially sealed. Force majeure signals that KPC does not expect shipping to resume soon.

Brent crude reached $92.69 on Friday . US crude futures posted their largest weekly gain — 35.63% — since the contract began trading in 1983 . Qatar's energy minister warned of $150 per barrel if the Strait remains closed . VLCC freight rates hit an all-time record of $423,736 per day, adding approximately $3–4 per barrel before crude reaches a refinery . The oil shock compounds through two separate timelines: the military campaign, which continues to expand targets across The Gulf, and the insurance collapse, which persists independently of any ceasefire. Even if hostilities ended tomorrow, commercial shipping would not resume until insurers complete reassessments — a process that typically takes weeks. The war's economic damage has already outrun the war itself.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Kuwait and Iraq normally export roughly 4 million barrels of oil per day. That oil has not stopped being pumped, but there is nowhere to send it — the shipping route through the Strait of Hormuz has collapsed because insurers will not cover ships transiting a war zone, and major shipping lines have stopped going. Kuwait has now formally declared 'force majeure,' a legal term meaning it cannot fulfil its delivery contracts due to circumstances beyond its control. This is the second such declaration in a week. The oil is accumulating in onshore storage with nowhere to go.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

Two OPEC producers invoking force majeure in one week establishes a precedent that Iranian conventional warfare can achieve structural oil market disruption without damaging wellheads — a strategic capability Iran did not previously demonstrate at scale and one not addressed by traditional counter-proliferation frameworks focused on weapons programmes.

Root Causes

Gulf oil export infrastructure was engineered on the assumption of a stable Hormuz corridor; no alternative deepwater export route exists for landlocked Iraqi crude, and Kuwait's terminals are oriented entirely toward the Gulf. No designed redundancy for a Hormuz closure scenario was ever built into Gulf producer logistics.

Escalation

Force majeure is a legal instrument for sustained, not temporary, disruption — Kuwait's declaration signals its own assessment that the war will not resolve quickly. The trajectory points toward further production curtailment as onshore storage fills, not recovery, unless an alternative export route or escort mechanism is established.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    IEA coordinated SPR release becomes probable if disruption persists beyond 72 hours at current scale, but will not address the structural absence of export routes even if released volumes are available.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Onshore storage saturation in Kuwait and southern Iraq could force wellhead shut-ins within days, converting a logistics disruption into a production disruption that takes weeks to reverse even after hostilities end.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Asian refinery operators will conduct emergency procurement of West African, US, and North Sea crudes, driving up alternative benchmark prices and widening the cost disadvantage for refiners outside the IEA framework.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Iran has demonstrated that strikes on logistics and insurance infrastructure — not wellheads — are sufficient to achieve strategic oil market disruption, which will inform future conflict doctrine for state and non-state actors alike.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #29 · New leader kept secret; Bahrain water hit

France 24· 8 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Kuwait force majeure halts 3.5m bpd
The force majeure declaration removes approximately 3.5 million barrels per day of Gulf oil from global markets when combined with Iraq's cuts — a supply disruption exceeding the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait by 75 per cent, driven entirely by the destruction of export logistics rather than production capacity.
Different Perspectives
Turkey (Shakarab consideration)
Turkey (Shakarab consideration)
Ankara serves as one of two Western-adjacent Iran back-channels while Turkish national Gholamreza Khani Shakarab faces imminent execution on espionage charges in Iran. President Erdogan cannot deflect the domestic political crisis that a Turkish execution would trigger, which would force suspension of the mediating role.
Germany (Bundestag gap)
Germany (Bundestag gap)
Belgium, Germany, Australia, and France committed Hormuz coalition hardware on 18 May. Germany's Bundestag authorisation for the coalition deployment remains pending, creating a constitutional gap between the commitment announced and the parliamentary mandate required to operationalise it.
IEA and oil market analysts
IEA and oil market analysts
The IEA's $106 May Brent projection met the market in one session on 20 May as Brent fell 5.16% on diplomatic optimism. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley's two-layer premium framework holds: the kinetic component compressed; the structural insurance component tied to Lloyd's ROE remains unresolved.
Hengaw
Hengaw
Documented the dual Kurdish execution at Naqadeh on 21 May, the two Iraqi-national espionage executions on 20 May, and Gholamreza Khani Shakarab's imminent execution risk. The 24-hour cluster covers two executions at one facility, the first foreign-national espionage executions, and a Turkish national whose death would suspend Ankara's mediation.
Lloyd's of London
Lloyd's of London
Hull rates stand at 110-125% of vessel value on the secondary market; the Joint War Committee has conditioned cover reopening on written ROE from the coalition or PGSA. The Majlis rial bill makes any compliant ROE structurally impossible to draft while the PGSA's yuan portal remains its operational mechanism.
United Kingdom and France (Northwood coalition)
United Kingdom and France (Northwood coalition)
The 26-nation coalition paper requires Lloyd's to see written rules of engagement before Hormuz war-risk cover reopens. The Majlis rial bill adds a second governance incompatibility on top of the unpublished PGSA fee schedule; coalition ROE cannot mention rial without conceding Iranian sovereignty over the strait.