Two crude processing units at Bahrain's BAPCO Sitra refinery have been shut for safety inspection, according to industry monitor Industrial Info Resources. The shutdown follows Thursday's Iranian ballistic missile strike on the facility — the first confirmed Iranian attack on Bahraini energy infrastructure. BAPCO Sitra processes 267,000 to 380,000 barrels per day; the capacity lost depends on which units are offline, a detail neither IIR nor Bahrain has disclosed.
Bahrain's government maintains that "operations continue normally." The gap between official statements and commercial monitoring follows a pattern familiar from prior Gulf incidents — the September 2019 drone and cruise missile strikes on Saudi Aramco's Abqaiq-Khurais facilities saw Saudi officials initially minimise damage that satellite imagery later showed had knocked out 5.7 million barrels per day of processing capacity. In this case, the discrepancy matters less for Bahrain's relatively small output than for what it signals about the reliability of government damage assessments across The Gulf during active hostilities.
The BAPCO strike sits within a deliberate Iranian targeting pattern. Bahrain normalised relations with Israel in 2020 under the Abraham Accords and hosts the US Fifth Fleet headquarters — which itself sustained confirmed structural damage this week, including the destruction of two encrypted satellite communications terminals and a radar unit . Hotels, residential buildings, and now the Israeli embassy compound have also been hit. Tehran is systematically demonstrating that Bahrain's two strategic relationships — with Israel and with the United States — carry a measurable physical cost.
The refinery damage compounds an energy market under acute strain. Iraq has cut output by 1.5 million barrels per day due to export route disruption . Every major P&I club's war risk cover for Hormuz transits expired Thursday at midnight , and no new commercial transit has been documented since. Brent Crude traded above $85 per barrel on Day 7. Each facility taken offline, each insurance policy unrenewed, each day the Strait remains effectively closed pushes the market closer to $100–120 per barrel — the range projected if Hormuz remains shut beyond three weeks. Shipping consultancy Simpson Spence Young assessed Navy convoy escorts as "unlikely in the near-term" given simultaneous combat demands on US naval assets; the insurance blockade, once activated, operates on its own timeline regardless of military developments.
