Oil Reserves Hold Steady — LNG Shortage is the Real Threat Amid Iran Conflict
The ongoing Israel-US war against Iran, which began in June 2025, has severely disrupted energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz, raising global alarms. While oil reserves provide a temporary buffer for major economies, the LNG crisis emerges as the more pressing concern, with spot prices surging over 50% in Asia and Europe in just two weeks.
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## War Context and Energy Disruptions
The conflict has weaponized key chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz, critical for global oil and gas transit. Expert Ajay Singh, a Tokyo-based energy-shipping executive, highlights that while oil stockpiles offer weeks to months of supply, LNG faces acute shortages due to lost Qatari and Emirati supplies on top of prior Russian reductions.
Key Insight: IEA’s strategic reserve releases were largely psychological, failing to meaningfully stabilize markets.
## Oil Reserves: A Short-Term Safety Net
Major consuming nations maintain sufficient crude oil reserves to weather initial shocks.
| Country | Days of Oil Reserves |
|---|---|
| China | 100 days |
| Japan | 250 days |
| India | 74 days |
## LNG: The Greater Vulnerability
Europe’s gas reserves sit at low post-winter levels, exacerbated by the new disruptions. China and Japan boast substantial strategic LNG reserves, but India’s situation at LNG terminals remains unclear, heightening risks for the world’s third-largest energy consumer.
- Spot LNG prices up over 50% in Asia and Europe.
- Compounding factors: Reduced Russian supplies and Middle East losses.
## Iran’s Strategy and Potential Outcomes
Iran employs Hormuz closures and drone attacks to spike oil prices, aiming for political leverage against the US.
- Best Case: Iran and US-Israel negotiate terms for coexistence.
- Worst Case: Conflict extends into late April, with inadequate anti-drone defenses allowing continued shipping harassment.
## Maritime and Global Responses
Nations may resort to naval escorts for merchant fleets and anti-drone technologies on commercial vessels to secure passages. Key terms include SPR (Strategic Petroleum Reserve), LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas), Strait of Hormuz (chokepoint), and IEA (International Energy Agency).
This analysis underscores the fragility of global energy supply chains and the urgent need for diversified sources, especially for LNG-dependent economies like India.