Oil and gas supplies could take months to return to normal after Iran deal, energy experts say
Source: AP
Updated 10:14 PM EDT, June 14, 2026
NEW YORK (AP) High oil and gasoline prices and energy supply problems wont be solved overnight, despite an agreement to end the Iran war and open the Strait of Hormuz announced Sunday.
It will likely take months before energy companies can resume operations to the point of meeting the worlds demand, according to energy experts. The slow pace of the process of shipping and refining crude oil, and doubts about the security of traveling through the strait mean the effect wont be seen immediately, they said.
Ships loaded with crude oil have been stranded in the Persian Gulf for more than three months, unable to safely travel through the waterway, through which about a fifth of the worlds oil and gasoline supplies typically traveled before the war began. Its going to take time for people to feel comfortable and for insurance to be in place ... particularly to get people on the ground to restart some of these assets, said Daniel Evans, global head of fuels and refining research at S&P Global Energy.
Still, oil prices slipped early Monday after the deal was announced. Brent crude, the international standard, was down $3.45 at $83.89 per barrel. U.S. benchmark crude oil lost $4.03 to $80.85 per barrel. Those prices are still well above the roughly $70 per barrel where oil was trading before the war started.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/iran-war-trump-deal-oil-supply-strait-of-hormuz-42bdd71d5afa6fb5ac5d0c3e7857de6c
Lovie777
(24,213 posts)oil companies like that profit margin, if the cost goes down it won't be much.
At this point in time, the greedy has gotten more greedier.
Cheezoholic
(4,066 posts)was given 100's of billions of dollars of missile's to light off like he just left a Tennessee firecracker stand and couldn't wait to get home. I've seen estimates that it could be 2029 to get our Tomahawk stockpiles back. And he's still at the wheel. These economic engines just don't start right back up after they've been shutdown. They're like my old truck in February. Jump it, crank it, crank it, crank it, idle it for 30 min lol
-misanthroptimist
(1,924 posts)WSHazel
(890 posts)Trying to justify higher prices for months. I don't believe them. I think the blockade was lifted because so much oil and LNG was getting around the blockade that the blockade became pointless other than to raise costs for Trump's Gulf State allies. Qatar and Saudi Arabia make most of Trump's decisions in that part of the world.
Oil companies want you to think that oil prices need to be high, but with the Strait open, and the rapid adoption of alternative energy, oil producers are in a rush to pump out as much as possible. There was already an oil glut this year, and it is getting worse if you are a producer. Also, oil was trading closer to $60/barrel than $70/barrel prior to the wall, and many experts were predicting prices in the 50's by Q4.