400 million barrels of oil to be released from strategic reserves as Iran targets commercial ships
Attacks on multiple commercial ships in the waters around Iran on Wednesday increased global energy concerns, pushed nations to unleash strategic oil reserves and sparked fresh critiques of the Trump administrationβs readiness for a war it started.
As Trump administration and U.S. military officials continued to claim increasing success and advantage in the conflict, leaders around the world scrambled to respond to the latest attacks and the International Energy Agencyβs call for the largest ever release of strategic oil reserves by its members to help stem energy price spikes.
In an address Wednesday morning, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said energy shipments through the Strait of Hormuz had βall but stoppedβ amid the conflict, driving massive global competition for oil and gas in wealthier countries and fuel rationing in poorer nations.
He said the IEAβs 32 member nations have brought a βsense of urgency and solidarityβ to recent discussions on the matter, and had unanimously agreed to βlaunch the largest ever release of emergency oil stocks in our agencyβs history,β making 400 million barrels of oil available.
However, he said the most needed change is the βresumption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.β
A vendor pumps petrol from Iranian fuel oil tankers for resale near the Bashmakh border crossing between Iraq and Iran.
(Ozan Kose / AFP/Getty Images)
Several countries, including Germany, Austria and Japan, had already confirmed their plans to release reserves.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on any U.S. plans to release its strategic reserves, or how much would be released. The U.S. is an IEA member.
However, U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum backed the idea of releasing oil reserves in a Fox News interview.
βCertainly these are the kinds of moments that these reserves are used for, because what we have here is not a shortage of energy in the world; weβve got a transit problem, which is temporary,β Burgum said. βWhen you have a temporary transit problem that weβre resolving militarily and diplomatically β which we can resolve and will resolve β this is the perfect time to think about releasing some of those, to take some pressure off of the global price.β
Burgum said that while Iran is βholding the entire world hostage economically by threatening to close the strait,β President Trump has made the consequences of such actions βvery clear,β and βthereβs a lot of options between ourselves and our allies in the region, including our Arab friends in the region, to make sure that those straits keep open and that energy keeps flowing for the global economy.β
While some tankers believed linked to Iran were still getting through the Strait of Hormuz, which under normal circumstances carries 20% of the worldβs oil and natural gas, Iranian officials threatened attacks on other vessels β saying they would not allow βeven a single liter of oilβ tied to the U.S., Israel or their allies through the channel, which connects to the Persian Gulf.
Trump has repeatedly claimed that the U.S. and its powerful Navy would support commercial vessels and ensure the strait remains open to oil shipments, but that has not been the case.
Tankers wait off the Mediterranean coast of southern France on Wednesday.
(Thibaud Moritz / AFP/Getty Images)
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center, run by the British military, has reported at least three ships struck in the region Wednesday β including ships off the United Arab Emirates and a cargo ship that was struck by a projectile in the strait just north of Oman, setting it ablaze.
The Trump administration and the U.S. military, meanwhile, have been pushing out messaging about wiping out Iranβs ability to plant mines in the strait β posting dramatic videos of major strikes on tiny boats on small docks.
Adm. Brad Cooper, the leader of U.S. Central Command, said in a video posted to X on Wednesday morning that βin short, U.S. forces continue delivering devastating combat power against the Iranian regime.β
βIβve said this before, but it bears repeating: U.S. combat power is building, Iranian combat power is declining,β he said.
The U.S. has struck more than 60 Iranian ships, and just βtook out the last of four Soleimani-class warships,β he said. βThatβs an entire class of Iranian ships now out of the fight.β
Cooper said Iranian ballistic missile and drone attacks have βdropped drasticallyβ since the start of the war, though βitβs worth pointing out that Iranian forces continue to target innocent civilians in gulf countries, while hiding behind their own people as they launch attacks from highly populated cities in Iran.β
He also addressed the attacks on commercial shipping in the region directly, saying that βfor years, the Iranian regime has threatened commercial shipping and U.S. forces in international waters,β and that the U.S. militaryβs βmission is to end their ability to project power and harass shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.β
Other U.S. leaders called the U.S. war plan β and specifically its approach to protecting the Strait of Hormuz β into question.
In a series of posts to X late Tuesday, which he said followed a two-hour classified briefing on the war, Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) slammed the administrationβs plans as βincoherent and incomplete.β
Murphy wrote that the administrationβs goals for the war seemed to be focused primarily on βdestroying lots of missiles and boats and drone factories,β and without a clear plan for what to do when Iran β still led by βa hardline regimeβ β begins rebuilding that infrastructure, other than to continue bombing them. βWhich is, of course, endless war,β he wrote.
Murphy also specifically criticized the administrationβs plan for the Strait of Hormuz β which he said simply doesnβt exist.
βAnd on the Strait of Hormuz, they had NO PLAN,β he wrote. βI canβt go into more detail about how Iran gums up the Strait, but suffice it say, right now, they donβt know how to get it safely back open. Which is unforgiveable, because this part of the disaster was 100% foreseeable.β