
Before you do the math, the numbers seem enormous. 400 million barrels. The largest emergency oil release in the International Energy Agency’s fifty-year history. Standing at the lectern in Paris on March 11, Fatih Birol described it as “unprecedented.” The word was used twice by him. The cameras lingered on him for an excessive amount of time, as they do when reporters are unsure whether they have just witnessed something historic or something that will be irrelevant by Friday.
Brent crude was still rising by Friday. For the second consecutive session, it closed above $100 per barrel, which gives you most of the information you need.
Observing this from a distance, it is tempting to think that a number this big must indicate something proportionate. It doesn’t. Every day, about 105 million barrels of oil are burned worldwide. Perhaps four days of worldwide demand are covered by the IEA’s record release, which is dispersed over weeks or months. Analysts at Capital Economics and Rystad have echoed Vandana Gombar of BloombergNEF’s direct statement from various perspectives. How dramatic the press conference was is irrelevant to the math.
| Key Facts at a Glance | |
|---|---|
| Organization | International Energy Agency (IEA) |
| Founded | 1974, in the aftermath of the OPEC oil embargo |
| Headquarters | Paris, France |
| Executive Director | Fatih Birol |
| Member Countries | 32 nations, including most of the OECD economies |
| Announcement Date | 11 March 2026 |
| Volume Released | 400 million barrels (roughly a third of total IEA reserves) |
| Total IEA Emergency Stockpiles | 1.2 billion barrels of government reserves |
| U.S. Contribution | 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve |
| UK Contribution | 13.5 million barrels |
| Trigger Event | US–Israel war on Iran (begun 28 Feb 2026); closure of Strait of Hormuz |
| Pre-war Hormuz Flow | ~20 million barrels/day (about 25% of seaborne oil trade) |
| Brent Crude (post-announcement) | Above $100/barrel, up more than 17% |
| Previous Coordinated Releases | 1991, 2005, 2011, and twice in 2022 |
The chokepoint itself is what sets this release apart from others, such as Katrina in 2005, Libya in 2011, and the two tranches during the conflict in Ukraine. Approximately 20 million barrels are typically transported daily across the Strait of Hormuz, the slender waterway that separates Iran and Oman. Its exports are currently operating at less than 10% of their pre-conflict levels. With pipelines that cross the strait and end in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Oman, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates are able to absorb five to six million barrels per day. The others are stuck behind a closed door and simply sit there.
The tankers come next. The cost of insurance for ships passing through the Gulf has skyrocketed. Routes are being rejected by crews. According to a senior analyst at PVM, policy announcements are limited in what they can accomplish until ships are able to move again. The discrepancy between Birol’s statement’s multilateral solidarity language and the real physics of removing crude from the area is difficult to ignore.
It is worth noting that the majority of the heavy lifting is being done by the United States. Washington is using 172 million barrels, or 43% of the IEA total, from a Strategic Petroleum Reserve that can only hold roughly half of its design capacity, or 415 million barrels. It never fully recovered from the drawdowns during the Ukraine period. You’re almost at the operational floor if you take out an additional 172 million. In the world of oil trading, there is a belief that this is the final significant lever the West can pull without revealing genuine vulnerability.
Neil Quilliam of Chatham House referred to it as a “one-shot solution,” which sounds dramatic but seems appropriate. This is not something you get to do twice. The strategic reserves become a memory rather than a tool if the war continues into the summer and Iran‘s new Supreme Leader keeps his promise not to allow “one litre” to pass through Hormuz.
Beneath all of this is a longer story that is difficult to summarize in a market update. The panic that the West is currently experiencing—the 1973 Arab embargo, the gas lines, and the belief that a small number of producers could control the industrial world—gave rise to the IEA in 1974. The world economy is still driven by one closed strait: electric vehicles, shale, renewable energy, and fifty years of efficiency gains. This must be unsettling to the members of OPEC who are observing from outside the IEA tent.
For the time being, markets appear to think the release only helps on the margins. It purchases time. No one in Paris had an answer to the question of whether anyone made good use of that time.
