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Iran Conflict 2026
15MAY

IEA: a billion barrels lost, Brent retreats 13%

4 min read
13:51UTC

The IEA's May report records 14.4 million barrels per day shut in, cumulative supply losses past one billion barrels, and a 246 million barrel inventory draw in eight weeks; Brent has fallen 13% from its April peak while the strait remains closed.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Inventories drew at five times the 2022 reserve release rate; Brent at $105 prices a deal, not closure.

The International Energy Agency (IEA, the Paris-based intergovernmental energy body) published its May 2026 Oil Market Report on Thursday 1. The report records 14.4 million barrels per day of Gulf output currently shut in, cumulative supply losses since the Hormuz closure exceeding 1 billion barrels, and a global inventory draw of 246 million barrels across March and April. North Sea Dated crude averaged $120.36 per barrel in April. The IEA projects the market to remain in deficit through the fourth quarter of 2026 even if Hormuz flows resume in June.

The 2022 US Strategic Petroleum Reserve release covered 180 million barrels over six months. The current draw is roughly five times that monthly rate, and the closest comparison available is the 1973 Arab oil embargo's pace of inventory depletion. If sustained, OECD commercial inventories enter end-2026 below the floor that justifies industrial operating reserves, forcing rationing decisions at refinery and consumer level by Q1 2027.

Brent Crude settled at $106 per barrel on Thursday and traded near $105 on Friday, down roughly thirteen per cent from the April peak while the strait remains closed and the IRGC continues to license transits through the Persian Gulf Strait Authority. Brent had been at $99.40 the Wednesday prior before Iran's rejected MOU pushed it back above $104; the market has now reverted toward that lower trajectory. The retreat does not reflect supply returning. It reflects market participants pricing the probability of a near-term deal: paper, not closure.

The split between front-month Brent and longer-dated contracts is the mechanism that matters for consumers. Front-month futures price an option on the next two months of physical supply; the option holders are betting that a deal lands before the deficit becomes acute. Refiners with longer-dated contracts written against the April $120.36 North Sea Dated average pay the closure price regardless of front-month moves. For UK drivers at the petrol pump and European hauliers running diesel fleets, that means paying the rolled-forward longer-dated contracts that the front-month retreat does not touch.

Amin Nasser, the chief executive of Saudi Aramco, warned on Monday that global oil markets would not normalise until 2027 if the blockade continued past mid-June . The IEA's May figures now sit underneath that warning as institutional documentation. If Hormuz reopens in June, the deficit projection collapses by Q4; if it does not, the 1973 embargo comparison becomes the live forecast for consumers across the OECD.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The International Energy Agency is a body representing 31 major oil-importing countries. Every month it publishes a detailed report on the state of global oil supply and demand. The May report said that since the Strait of Hormuz was closed, the world has been consuming its emergency oil reserves at an unusually fast rate: 246 million barrels drawn down in just two months. To put that in perspective, in 2022 the US spent a year releasing reserves at roughly a quarter of that pace. Oil prices fell slightly in mid-May because some traders believe a diplomatic deal is close. The IEA's May report projects a supply deficit through Q4 2026 even if the strait reopens in June. Inventory rebuilding will take months after any reopening, keeping prices elevated well into autumn.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 246 million barrel draw in eight weeks reflects two compounding factors. First, the physical shutting of the Hormuz chokepoint removes roughly 20% of global daily crude supply; this is a flow problem that cannot be compensated by stored inventory beyond roughly six to eight weeks.

Second, the insurance and reinsurance withdrawal from Gulf shipping means even vessels that could physically transit Hormuz cannot obtain war-risk cover, so the effective closure extends beyond Iran's declared blockade perimeter.

The IEA's Q4 2026 deficit projection assumes Hormuz reopening by June. If that assumption fails, the deficit compounds: stored inventories continue drawing, refineries outside the Gulf face crude input shortages, and the market enters the winter heating season already below strategic reserve thresholds.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A Hormuz reopening in June would not prevent a Q4 2026 oil deficit according to IEA modelling; UK and European energy bills and pump prices face a second price surge in Q3-Q4 2026 regardless of diplomatic outcomes.

    Medium term · 0.72
  • Consequence

    The 246 million barrel draw has compressed commercial inventories to levels where any additional supply disruption event triggers a price spike without buffer; the structural resilience of global oil markets has materially diminished.

    Short term · 0.8
  • OPEC's parallel demand-destruction projection (40% offset by August) may partially contradict the IEA's deficit forecast; the divergence reflects different assumptions about price elasticity at $100-plus levels.

    Medium term · 0.58
First Reported In

Update #98 · Three pledges, no paper, twelve sanctions

International Energy Agency· 15 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India's BRICS chair draft communique frames the Iran conflict as a matter of 'safe, unimpeded maritime flows', a formula explicitly neutral on Iran's 'no obstacles' claim and short of endorsing IRGC maritime doctrine. Delhi has maintained separate tracks: a demarche on Iranian tanker firings at Indian-crewed vessels, silence on OFAC designations naming Indian firms.
International Energy Agency
International Energy Agency
The IEA's May 2026 Oil Market Report quantified the closure at 14.4 million barrels per day shut in, more than one billion barrels of cumulative supply loss, and a 246-million-barrel inventory draw in eight weeks, five times the monthly rate of the 2022 SPR release. The IEA projects a deficit through Q4 2026 even if Hormuz reopens in June.
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan's intermediary channel between Washington and Tehran remains active despite Trump's 'totally unacceptable' rebuff of Iran's 10-point MOU reply on 11 May. Islamabad carries the only direct US-Iran track and the only channel with both civilian and military buy-in on the Iranian side, but has not convened a second Islamabad round.
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Iran's state broadcaster reported on 14 May that the Supreme Leader has issued 'new and decisive directives' for military operations, the first such signal since the war began. Mojtaba has not appeared publicly since 28 February; the directives are paper instruments, not verbal statements.
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Beijing's official summit readout mentioned 'the Middle East situation' alongside the Ukraine crisis and the Korean Peninsula, without naming Iran or specifying any Iranian commitment. Chinese state media has not published the three red lines Trump described.
White House / Trump administration
White House / Trump administration
Trump told Fox News from Beijing that Xi had committed to three Iran red lines: no nuclear weapon, an open Hormuz, no military equipment supplied to Tehran. He described the summit as 'a big statement'. The White House issued its own readout confirming those commitments; the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs readout did not.