Kuwait oil production cut amid Strait of Hormuz closure
Kuwait has halted oil production after the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, severing its primary export corridor. The move reflects immediate logistical risk to outbound crude flows.
The action is precautionary and temporary, with domestic supply secured and output to be restored once conditions allow, according to Kuwait Petroleum Corporation. The company said adjustments are under continuous review as conditions evolve.
Why it matters: global oil supply disruption and logistics
The Strait of Hormuz is a critical artery for global energy trade, carrying nearly 20% of worldwide crude exports, as reported by Arab Times Online from Kuwaiti oil analysts. Disruption at this chokepoint threatens refinery feedstock, especially across Asia.
Logistics risk compounds when vessels avoid conflict zones and insurers restrict coverage, raising voyage costs and timelines. Al Jazeera reported tanker transits have been curtailed amid insurance pullbacks, magnifying supply uncertainty.
Immediate impact: storage constraints, tanker insurance, timeline bands
Within Kuwait, storage tanks are nearing capacity, forcing output curtailments because barrels cannot be exported, according to Blockonomi. The constraint is mechanical rather than damage-driven.
Insurance retrenchment and shipowner caution make near-term loadings harder to place, constraining immediate exports. Those mechanics, rather than field integrity, are dictating the scale and cadence of production cuts.
“The Strait has become near impassable,” said Rachel Ziemba, senior adjunct fellow at the Center for a New American Security. Her assessment reflects insurer withdrawals and tanker avoidance that have triggered precautionary supply adjustments.
Analyst scenarios and Kuwait’s contingency options
Day 8/15/18 disruption ranges per J.P. Morgan
J.P. Morgan estimates global crude supply losses could reach about 3.3 million barrels per day by day eight of a continued closure. The bank models roughly 3.8 million bpd by day 15 and 4.7 million bpd by day 18 if no relief emerges. Its analysts also flag Kuwait could be forced to curb output within roughly two weeks if exports remain blocked.
Rystad: 8–10 mbpd immovable despite alternatives
Rystad Energy assesses that even with alternative routes, 8–10 million barrels per day would remain effectively immovable if the disruption continues. That implies limited near-term relief from bypass pipelines, swaps, or re-routing.
FAQ about Strait of Hormuz closure
Is Kuwait’s production cut temporary, and how will KPC ensure domestic supply remains secured?
Yes. The company describes the halt as precautionary and temporary, with domestic demand fully covered. Output will be restored once conditions allow and will be reviewed as risks evolve.
If the Strait stays closed, how much oil supply could be lost globally and on what timeline?
Day 8: ~3.3 mbpd; day 15: ~3.8; day 18: ~4.7, per bank models. Even with alternatives, 8–10 mbpd could remain immovable.
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