# [WARNING] Iran Oil Storage Days From Capacity as Hormuz Blockade Drags On

*Tuesday, April 28, 2026 at 8:08 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-28T08:08:03.308Z (8d ago)
**Tags**: Iran, United States, StraitOfHormuz, Oil, EnergyMarkets, NavalBlockade, MiddleEast, Sanctions
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4892.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 07:30 and 08:00 UTC, multiple sources including Bloomberg and Kpler reported that Iran has only about 12–22 days of crude storage capacity remaining under the ongoing U.S. naval blockade that has largely severed its oil exports. With exports around 1.85 mb/d pre‑blockade and oil now trading above $110 per barrel as U.S.–Iran talks stall, Iran is on the brink of forced production shut‑ins, locking in a prolonged global oil supply shock. This materially raises the risk of further regional escalation and sustained energy‑driven market volatility.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From roughly 07:30–08:00 UTC on 28 April 2026, several reports refined our understanding of the oil shock created by the U.S. naval blockade of Iran and the disrupted Strait of Hormuz:

- At 07:30:16 UTC (Report 5), Bloomberg, citing Kpler, reported that Iran has only about 12–22 days of remaining empty crude storage capacity. The U.S. blockade has 'severed' Iran’s ability to export normally.
- At 07:53:02 UTC (Report 2), Kpler data were further summarized: Iran has 12–22 days of unused storage; once filled, production must be cut. Pre‑blockade exports were roughly 1.85 mb/d and 'largely unaffected by the war' until the current disruption.
- At 07:56:07 UTC (Report 1), the U.S. Treasury Secretary publicly stated that Iran’s oil industry is 'starting to shut in production' due to the blockade, warning that pumping will 'soon collapse' and forecasting domestic gasoline shortages.
- At 07:58:53 UTC (Report 8), both the New York Times and Wall Street Journal were cited as reporting that President Trump is dissatisfied with Iran’s latest proposal, which would reopen the Strait of Hormuz but postpone nuclear talks. Talks are not dead, but no breakthrough has occurred.
- At 07:45:43 UTC (Report 21), market coverage noted that oil prices are rising as U.S.–Iran talks stall and Hormuz disruption tightens supply. Report 8 explicitly states oil is already trading above $110/bbl.

These points update prior alerts: the blockade is not only curtailing exports but is now rapidly driving Iran into a hard storage constraint that will force shut‑ins, making the disruption longer‑lived and structurally tightening supply.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

- United States: The naval blockade and associated sanctions are U.S.‑led. Public commentary by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent underscores that economic pressure on Iran’s oil sector is a deliberate part of policy. The President (Trump) controls the blockade’s continuation and any deal to reopen Hormuz.
- Iran: The Islamic Republic’s leadership is directly impacted. Remaining IRGC leadership is described as degraded, but Tehran still controls national oil production and storage decisions. Domestic fuel shortages could heighten internal unrest and alter Iran’s negotiating stance or escalation calculus.
- Market intelligence providers (Kpler, Bloomberg) are the main technical sources on capacity and exports; their data are widely trusted by trading desks and policymakers.

3. Immediate military and security implications

- The blockade remains intact, with no political agreement in place as of 08:00 UTC to reopen the Strait.
- As storage fills in ~2–3 weeks, Iran faces a choice: (a) shut in large volumes of production, (b) attempt sanction‑busting exports via covert shipping and higher risk routes, or (c) escalate militarily/asymmetrically to force relief.
- Forced shut‑ins raise the probability of Iranian retaliation against U.S. and allied interests in the Gulf (including shipping, regional bases, and partners like Saudi Arabia and the UAE), as well as cyber actions against energy infrastructure.
- Iran’s internal stability risk increases if domestic fuel shortages emerge as forecast, potentially triggering protests and regime‑security crackdowns.

4. Market and economic impact

- Crude oil: The imminent inability of Iran to export ~1.8–2.0 mb/d for an extended period significantly tightens the global balance, particularly given concurrent damage to Russian export facilities (Tuapse) and ongoing Hormuz restrictions. Prices already above $110/bbl may push higher, particularly at the front of the curve, with steeper backwardation.
- Refined products: Expect upward pressure on gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel, especially in Asia and Europe. Iran’s need to divert remaining capacity to domestic use may reduce any grey‑market refined product flows.
- Shipping: Continued Hormuz disruption elevates tanker rates and risk premia, particularly for VLCCs transiting the Gulf. Insurance costs and war risk premiums will remain elevated.
- Currencies and assets: Oil‑importing emerging markets face FX pressure and inflation concerns. Energy exporters (GCC, Russia, some African producers) benefit from terms‑of‑trade gains. Global equities, especially energy‑intensive sectors (airlines, chemicals, transport), are at risk if prices remain high. Gold and the U.S. dollar may see safe‑haven demand.
- Policy: Higher and more persistent energy inflation complicates central bank disinflation efforts, notably in Europe, where 3‑year CPI expectations just printed at 3% vs 2.6% expected (Report 6), suggesting inflation expectations are already drifting higher.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Diplomacy: Intense back‑channel activity is likely as U.S. officials weigh whether to accept a limited deal to reopen Hormuz without nuclear concessions. Markets will trade headline‑to‑headline on any sign of a breakthrough or collapse.
- Iran’s posture: Expect more explicit Iranian warnings about shut‑ins and possible domestic fuel rationing, as well as rhetoric blaming the U.S. for shortages. Tehran may test the blockade with limited tanker movements or escalate via proxies to gain leverage.
- Market reaction: Crude is likely to remain bid with intraday spikes on any reports of further disruptions, sabotage, or failed talks. Volatility in energy equities and related derivatives should remain elevated. Watch for additional statements from OPEC+ members and any hint of emergency supply coordination.
- Security: U.S. and allied naval forces will maintain high alert in and around Hormuz. Any incident involving commercial shipping—mine, drone, or missile attack—could rapidly push this situation into TIER 1 / FLASH territory.

Overall, the transition from an export disruption to a looming production shut‑in represents a step‑change in the duration and severity of the oil supply shock, with direct implications for global markets and the trajectory of the U.S.–Iran confrontation.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
High and rising upside pressure on crude benchmarks (Brent/WTI), likely steepening backwardation and supporting refined products (gasoline, diesel). Bullish for energy equities, tanker rates, and select LNG; negative for oil‑importing EM FX and global risk assets if prices stay >$110. Increases safe‑haven flows to gold and potentially USD.
