Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
25MAY

Fujairah hits 1.62 mbpd; ADCOP nears cap

4 min read
13:55UTC

Crude flow through Fujairah reached 1.62 million bpd by late March, a 38% rise within reach of the ADCOP pipeline's 2 million bpd design ceiling, while Khor Fakkan container handling rose 25-fold to 50,000 vessels per week.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Hormuz bypass route is approaching its ceiling as the IRGC claims the water above it.

Crude flow through Fujairah rose from 1.17 mbpd in February to 1.62 mbpd by late March 1, a 38% increase that puts the port within reach of the Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline (ADCOP) design ceiling of 2 mbpd. Khor Fakkan container handling went from 2,000 to 50,000 vessels per week, a 25-fold rise; six container ships were berthed and ten waiting on the day of the report.

Fujairah and Khor Fakkan sit on the United Arab Emirates' eastern coast, on The Gulf of Oman side of the Strait of Hormuz. ADCOP runs 370 km from Habshan, a terminal in Abu Dhabi's interior, to Fujairah, bypassing the strait entirely. When Hormuz is closed or contested, every barrel that previously sailed out of the Persian Gulf has to find another route, and the two UAE eastern ports are the alternative.

That alternative is running out of room. ADCOP's 2 mbpd design ceiling has never been tested at sustained throughput. Pipeline infrastructure operating near design capacity under conflict-zone threat generates compressor and metering stress that maintenance schedules cannot absorb on a normal cycle; real-world ceiling likely sits 200,000 to 300,000 bpd below the published figure. The 1.62 mbpd reading leaves perhaps 80,000 to 180,000 bpd of usable headroom before the pipeline starts forcing maintenance trade-offs. Khor Fakkan's congestion is sharper still: a 25-fold rise in a year cannot be absorbed by adding berths on a weeks-to-months timeline.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) foreign ministry has not commented directly on the legal pressure. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) published a map on 5 May claiming maritime control zones along the UAE's eastern coastline, the legal escalation that followed the 4 May physical drone strike on the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone . The pattern is kinetic-then-legal: strike a target, then claim sovereignty over the water above it. International maritime law gives the IRGC's coastline claim no recognised standing, yet the 4 May drone strike demonstrated kinetic reach over the same water. If insurance markets price the legal claim, the bypass route's effective capacity falls before its physical capacity does.

A signed MOU would reopen Hormuz and end the toll system, taking the kinetic-then-legal pattern off the board. If Tehran's reply collapses against the 9 May expiry, the 380,000 bpd nominal headroom at Fujairah becomes the constraint that matters: the next significant Hormuz incident exhausts the surface alternative, and crude that cannot move by pipeline or by Khor Fakkan stays unloaded.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Strait of Hormuz is blocked, so oil that used to flow through it is going around the long way, through a pipeline in the UAE called ADCOP that runs from inland Abu Dhabi to the port of Fujairah on the UAE's eastern coast. By late March, that bypass route was handling 1.62 million barrels of oil per day. The problem: the pipeline was designed for 2 million barrels per day, and it is within about 380,000 barrels of that limit. Meanwhile, Iran's military struck the Fujairah oil terminal in a drone attack on 4 May and is now claiming legal authority over the sea in front of Fujairah. At current throughput growth rates, the bypass headroom runs out in roughly seven to nine weeks.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the IRGC's 4 May drone strike on Fujairah Oil Industry Zone is followed by further kinetic action at the ADCOP terminal, the physical bypass capacity could drop below 1 million bpd within days, removing the only surface alternative to a blocked Hormuz.

  • Consequence

    Khor Fakkan's 25-fold rise to 50,000 vessels per week cannot be absorbed by berth expansion on any timeline shorter than 18 months; the congestion is a structural constraint, not a transient queue.

First Reported In

Update #91 · MOU in Tehran, missiles in the strait

AGBI· 8 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Fujairah hits 1.62 mbpd; ADCOP nears cap
The only surface route around a blocked Hormuz is approaching its design ceiling at exactly the moment the IRGC is claiming legal authority over the water above it.
Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London
Lloyd's of London
The Joint War Committee left Hormuz war-risk premiums at $10-14 million per voyage on 25 May, declining to move on Brent's 5% fall. The JWC's protocol requires a UN Security Council resolution or bilateral government certification letter before de-listing, and neither has arrived: a verbal understanding does not satisfy the formal condition the reinsurance market's treaty terms require.
Gulf Arab producers
Gulf Arab producers
Saudi Arabia and UAE depend on Hormuz for their own crude exports; Aramco CEO Nasser has warned no oil market recovery arrives until 2027 if the blockade continues past mid-June. Monday's $98.96 Brent settlement shortens nothing for Gulf producers without a signed instrument and a Pentagon mine-clearance timeline that runs up to six months post-ceasefire.
Qatar
Qatar
Qatar holds $12bn of frozen Iranian assets at the centre of the sequencing dispute but cannot release them without explicit US Treasury authorisation, given the original freeze was a US instrument. As the asset-holding state, Qatar's leverage is real but passive: it is the escrow holder, not the decision-maker, and any resolution requires US Treasury sign-off that Trump has withheld.
Pakistan
Pakistan
With both Prime Minister Sharif and army chief Munir simultaneously in Beijing on 25 May, Pakistan has for the first time consolidated its civilian and military mediation tracks under China's roof. Munir's direct Tehran-to-Beijing flight signals that the security and financial threads of the sequencing problem are now being worked in parallel rather than sequentially.
China
China
Beijing hosted Pakistan's principal mediators and Iran's China envoy Ghalibaf simultaneously on 25 May while its banking regulator capped new state-bank lending to five sanctioned refiners. China is simultaneously the most credible third-party underwriter of the $12bn sequencing and the state whose institutions face live OFAC secondary-sanctions exposure if the deadlock persists through GL V's expiry.
United States
United States
Trump posted on 24 May that the blockade holds until a deal is certified and signed, ruling out the informal MOU structure both sides had been building. The 'certified, and signed' condition is the first operational bar Trump has attached in 87 days, but it arrived without an executive instrument, maintaining the gap between posted ultimatum and signed US policy.