By Seher Dareen and Robert Harvey
LONDON, May 13 (Reuters) – Refinery attacks tied to the wars in Iran and Ukraine have knocked out nearly 9% of global oil refining capacity in recent months, deepening a fuel supply crunch and likely delaying recovery by months after fighting ends.
The Iran war has not only slashed energy supply by disrupting tanker traffic out of the Gulf, but marks the biggest hit to refining since the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, with damage to facilities and crude shortages forcing cuts in processing.
“The current tightness will continue to underpin the refined product market,” Saxo Bank analyst Ole Hansen told Reuters. “Not least considering the damage done to refineries.”
Crude prices have surged, with benchmark Brent hitting $126 a barrel in April, a four-year high. Some prices have risen even faster, including jet fuel, which hit a record high in March.
Tightened supply has forced refiners, traders and retailers to tap crude and fuel inventories to meet demand.
About 500 million barrels of oil have been drawn from stocks, TotalEnergies
“Even if the war was to end quickly, prices are expected to remain at high levels,” he said.
WAR DAMAGE ADDS TO CAPACITY CRUNCH
Daily demand for liquid fuels including gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and fuel oil derived from crude is about 104 million barrels.
The Iran war had shut as much as 3.52 million barrels per day of refining capacity as of May 7, according to industry monitor IIR.
Refineries impacted include the 550,000 bpd Ras Tanura plant, Saudi Arabia’s largest. It has restarted, though some units are undergoing turnaround, Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said on Monday.
Two of Kuwait’s three refineries – Mina Al-Ahmadi and Mina Abdullah – were hit by drones. Both, as well as the 615,000 bpd Al-Zour refinery, Kuwait’s largest, have lowered processing rates.
War between Russia and Ukraine has also removed an additional 1.42 million bpd, IIR said.
Reuters calculations show Ukrainian drone attacks aimed at disrupting Moscow’s war machine have forced about 700,000 bpd in Russian crude processing capacity offline between January and May at 16 sites.
Across Asia and Europe, a shortage of crude has reduced refinery processing volumes by about 3.8 million bpd, according to JPMorgan analysts.
The outages linked to the two wars equal almost 9% of the 100.5 million bpd of global refining capacity, according to IIR.
JET FUEL, DIESEL MOST IMPACTED
“Lower refinery runs in Asia and Russia have had a disproportionately large impact on gasoil and diesel,” FGE analyst Qilin Tam said.
“We see the balance in Asia flipping from a solid regional surplus to a glaring regional deficit.”
Oil product stocks on May 7 in oil hub Singapore hit their lowest in more than nine months, official data showed.
Europe could face jet fuel shortages as early as June if Gulf supplies are not fully replaced, the International Energy Agency has said.
Reflecting that shortfall, Nigeria’s giant 650,000 bpd Dangote refinery almost doubled its exports of jet fuel to Europe in April, Kpler data showed.
EU diesel prices at the pump hit a record 2.11 euros per litre in April, according to European Commission data, reflecting lost Gulf supply and halted intake from Russia, once Europe’s top supplier, over the Ukraine war.
COULD TAKE MONTHS
The refining industry entered the year with limited spare capacity after closures during and since the pandemic, Energy Aspects analyst George Dix said.
About 9.69 million bpd of capacity closed between 2019 and 2026 because of the pandemic, operational issues, poor economics and the gradual rise of electric vehicles, IIR data showed, or about 10% of current working capacity.
A return to normal is likely to take months.
The IEA expects processing at Gulf refineries to fall to 8.7 million bpd this year, down 900,000 bpd from 2025.
It has also lowered its forecast for Russian crude runs in 2026, pegging them as low as 4.8 million bpd in the second quarter versus around 5.2 million bpd earlier this year, citing Ukrainian attacks.
(Reporting by Seher Dareen and Robert Harvey in London. Addtional reporting by America Hernandez. Editing by Alex Lawler, Simon Webb, Jason Neely and Mark Potter)






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