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The Gulf's growing oil storage crunch

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

TODAY: The Gulf’s export problem could become a storage problem

Good morning, nice people, and welcome back. We trust you managed to switch off for at least part of the Eid break. If you spent the holiday avoiding developments in the Gulf, we've got you covered below. The headline is that the on-again, off-again US-Iran understanding is once again off-again, with negotiators still circling the same sticking points and no clear sense yet of whether diplomacy or escalation has the upper hand.

The good news? Some ships are moving again. The bad news? They’re often doing so with their transponders switched off. A growing number of tankers have successfully crossed Hormuz by effectively disappearing on one side and reappearing on the other, suggesting the region is settling into an uneasy new normal.

Elsewhere, we take a look at what could become the Gulf's next energy headache: storage. As exports slow and production gradually restarts, the question is no longer whether producers can pump oil and gas — it's where they can put it if they can't ship it.


Earning well is not the same as investing well — and for most mid-level executives and entrepreneurs, the gap between the two is wider than they’d like to admit. The financial landscape has shifted. Regional markets are opening up, AI is rewriting how portfolios get managed, and Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) are entering the conversation.

And the questions that used to feel straightforward — buy or rent, fund the startup or play it safe, finance the car now or wait it out — are harder to answer than ever.

In Issue 2 of EnterpriseAM Money Matters, we get into the decisions that don’t have easy answers, because at this stage, playing it safe is the riskiest move you can make.

Tap or click here to subscribe to the Egypt edition, delivered to your inbox Wednesday, June 3.


Watch this space

PORTS — Oman’s first minerals port hits tender: Oman’s state-backed mining firm Minerals Development Oman (MDO) launched a tender for Al Shuwaymiyah Port — inviting local and global marine contractors to submit bids for the design-and-build package by 6 September. The project is expected to cost around USD 409 mn and handle 27 mn tons a year.

The details: The greenfield deepwater facility in Dhofar is set to export gypsum, limestone, and dolomite from nearby deposits, with commercial operations scheduled for 1H 2029. The port is tied to a JV with Indian port operator JSW Infrastructure, with JSW holding 51% and MDO 49% through South Minerals Port Company.


OIL — Global oil flows may not recover until next year: It could take at least four months after the war ends for global oil flows to recover to 80% of pre-conflict levels, while a full return to normal volumes through Hormuz may not come before 1Q or 2Q 2027, Adnoc CEO Sultan Al Jaber said.

The UAE’s new crude export pipeline is already halfway complete and is being accelerated toward completion next year, Al Jaber said. Too much of the world’s energy still moves through too few chokepoints, with the recent disruptions validating the UAE’s decade-long investment strategy in bypassing infrastructure, he added.

REMEMBER- Opec and the IEA both cut their 2026 global oil demand growth outlooks amid the war’s economic fallout. Opec now expects demand growth of 1.2 mn bbl / d in 2026, down from 1.4 mn bbl / d previously. The IEA, meanwhile, flipped from forecasting a surplus to projecting a 1.8 mn bbl / d supply deficit in 2026.


AVIATION — Airbus’ A350 ramp-up has another parts problem: European planemaker Airbus warned customers of fresh delays to A350 deliveries scheduled for later this decade, as production issues continue at its recently acquired North Carolina facility. The setbacks stem from ongoing parts shortages and staffing gaps.

The hits keep coming: Airbus is also contending with cargo-door production disruptions in Spain for the A350 Freighter, though the company expects the aircraft’s first flights and first delivery to stay on track for 2027. The added strain comes as Airbus works to safeguard its 2026 delivery target of around 870 commercial aircraft, after deliveries fell 16% y-o-y in 1Q before narrowing to a 6% shortfall by April.

Market watch

Oil prices rose 2% this morning, as US-Iran tensions escalated and Israel expanded operations in Lebanon, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures increased USD 2.05 to trade at USD 93.17 / bbl by 04.36 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) gained USD 2.29 to USD 89.65 / bbl.


The Baltic Index loses a little lift: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segments — slipped 0.1% to 3,224 points on Friday. The capesize index fell 0.3% to 5,503 points, while the panamax index rose 0.5% to 2,343 points. The smaller supramax index was unchanged at 1,569 points.


The Drewry World Container Index rose 3% to USD 2,800 per 40-ft container last week, according to the latest index readings. The lift came as transpacific and Asia-Europe rates moved higher, with Shanghai-New York up (6%), Shanghai-Los Angeles (3%), Shanghai-Rotterdam (3%), and Shanghai-Genoa (4%). Early peak-season, higher FAK (Freight All Kinds) rates, planned peak-season surcharges, blank sailings, and Middle East-linked fuel cost pressure are keeping rates under upward pressure.

PSA

CMA CGM resets Asia-Med FAK rates: French shipping firm CMA CGM will apply a higher Freight All Kinds (FAK) rate from all Asian main ports to the Mediterranean and North Africa from 15-31 June. The new rates range from USD 4.8-6.5k per 20-ft container and USD 6.5-9.2k per 40-ft container, with the highest charges applying to Asia-Algeria shipments.

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The Big Story Today

The Gulf’s storage clock is ticking

Can the region store what it can’t ship? Early in the war, the focus was on whether Gulf producers could keep energy supplies flowing as LNG and crude exports faced mounting disruption, facilities were stranded, and output was curtailed. Today, the concern is different. Production can restart and cargoes can be readied, but if Hormuz remains closed, the critical question becomes one of storage rather than supply: Where will the region put its oil and LNG when it has nowhere to send them?

The model is built for flow, not gridlock

The Gulf’s production system was not initially designed for a prolonged export disruption. “Producers of crude oil and condensates in the Gulf region typically have limited need for large storage capacity beyond what is required for logistical purposes,” global oil markets strategist and former Onyx Group head of research Harry Tchilinguirian tells EnterpriseAM.

Storage serves a logistical, not a strategic, role: Most onshore tanks are designed to manage routine operational fluctuations — smoothing the flow of crude between production fields, gathering facilities, and export terminals, or accommodating temporary reductions in throughput during maintenance periods, Tchilinguirian says.

Short-term disruptions are manageable: Producers can absorb temporary bottlenecks by drawing on onshore storage and, when necessary, floating storage. “Delays in deliveries or changes in volume can be managed through adjustments in onshore — and, at times, floating — storage,” Tchilinguirian notes. That provides a degree of flexibility, but only for disruptions measured in days or weeks rather than months.

The larger buffer sits with consumers: The situation differs markedly for refiners and importing countries, which typically maintain significantly larger inventories. Their supply chains are more exposed to interruptions, and refineries must continue operating through shipping delays, infrastructure outages, geopolitical disruptions, civil unrest, and even discretionary Opec+ production cuts. As a result, strategic stockpiles and commercial inventories tend to be concentrated on the consuming side of the market rather than at the production source.

The bottleneck moves upstream fast: “When producers are unable to deliver crude to customers — as is the case in the current US-Iran conflict, given the effective closure of Hormuz — crude accumulates in storage, which can quickly reach capacity. Production is then curtailed at the wellhead,” Tchilinguirian argues.

The buffer map is uneven

Not all Gulf producers face the same level of exposure: Saudi Arabia and the UAE retain partial alternatives to Hormuz through export infrastructure on the Red Sea and the Gulf of Oman. Saudi crude can be redirected to Yanbu via the East-West pipeline, while the UAE can ship volumes through Fujairah. But those alternatives “offer limited offsets in view of the volumes typically exported from terminals in the Persian Gulf,” Tchilinguirian says.

Saudi Arabia has the region’s strongest fallback option: Riyadh's principal hedge is the East-West pipeline — which, with a capacity widely estimated at around 7 mn bbl / d, gives Saudi Arabia the largest ability in the region to bypass Hormuz, though it still cannot fully replace all Gulf export flows.

Fujairah remains the UAE’s pressure valve: Abu Dhabi already operates the Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline, which can transport around 1.8 mn bbl / d directly to Fujairah, outside the Strait of Hormuz. The UAE is also advancing plans for a new West-East pipeline that would roughly double export capacity through Fujairah by 2027, further reducing its dependence on the strait.

Oman benefits from geography: Oman’s main crude export terminal at Mina Al Fahal gives the Sultanate a structural advantage over Gulf-facing exporters, Welligence Energy Analytics MENA analyst Eric Soosay tells EnterpriseAM. Oman’s longstanding neutral relationship with Tehran has also helped shield it from deeper escalation, although risks remain. However, early-March attacks on Duqm and Salalah underscored that even exporters outside Hormuz are not entirely insulated from regional instability.

Iraq and Kuwait have borne the brunt of the disruption: Without meaningful alternatives to Hormuz, both countries have been significantly more exposed. “Iraq and Kuwait have therefore been more immediately affected,” Tchilinguirian says. Iraq’s southern production fell sharply as storage capacity tightened and export routes were cut off, dropping to around 800k bbl / d from roughly 4.3 mn bbl / d before the conflict. Exports through Hormuz in April totaled only 10 mn barrels, compared with a pre-war monthly average of around 93 mn barrels.

In Kuwait, the storage countdown was measured in days: The country exported roughly 1.9 mn bbl / d of crude and 860k bbl / d of refined products through Hormuz in 2025. JPMorgan estimated Kuwait had only around two weeks before storage constraints would force production cuts. Kuwait Petroleum Corporation later declared force majeure and began reducing crude output and refinery operations as shipments were disrupted. Reports also indicated that all three of Kuwait’s major refineries were forced to lower processing rates as inventories continued to build.

Iran offers a real-time example of what happens when production continues but exports cannot leave. If shipments remain constrained, crude inventories at Kharg Island — the country’s main export terminal — will continue to build until storage capacity is exhausted, ultimately forcing production shut-ins, Tchilinguirian tells us.

Can floating storage give Tehran breathing room? Unlike many of its Gulf peers, Iran has developed a sizable offshore storage buffer. “In addition to onshore storage, the country has quite an extensive fleet of vessels no longer fit for travel but that serve as floating storage,” Tchilinguirian says. These vessels effectively extend Iran’s storage capacity and delay the point at which production cuts become unavoidable.

The offshore tanker queue is growing: As US restrictions have tightened export controls, Iran has increasingly relied on aging tankers anchored in the Gulf to store unsold crude. The number of Iranian vessels moored near Kharg Island has risen sharply, and floating crude inventories have continued to climb, illustrating how storage becomes the final outlet when market access is constrained.

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Ports

CMA CGM deepens its Syria inland play

CMA CGM to operate Syrian dry ports: Syria’s General Authority for Borders and Customs reportedly inked an agreement with French shipping group CMA CGM to operate two dry ports in the Adra Freezone outside Damascus and the Aleppo Freezone. The agreement covers the management and operation of the facilities — with the dry ports set to streamline logistics, customs, storage, and inland trade flows.

CMA CGM is building a Latakia-plus network: The dry-port agreement builds on CMA CGM’s 30-year concession to modernize and operate Latakia Port, with a EUR 230 mn investment ticket. The upgrades cover terminal capacity expansion, cargo-handling digitization, larger-vessel access, rail-road integration, and new dry ports elsewhere in Syria.

And it’s not the only global operator moving in: DP World also signed a 30-yearconcession last year to redevelop and operate Tartus Port under a USD 800 mn build-operate-transfer model, with plans to add cargo-handling equipment and digital systems.

Momentum is building on the ground: The signing coincided with the restart of the freight rail link between Latakia Port and Adra after a 14-year halt. The move is expected to ease logistics bottlenecks, accelerate import and shipping flows, and support a broader recovery in trade activity.

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Also on Our Radar

GulfNav’s earnings turn positive + Mawani debuts new services

Gulf Navigation Holding had a solid 1Q

GulfNav back in the black: Dubai-listed maritime firm Gulf Navigation Holding (GulfNav) posted a net income of 19.8 mn in 1Q 2026, reversing an AED 807k loss recorded in the same period last year, according to its financial release (pdf). The firm’s revenue jumped 63.6% y-o-y to AED 109.8 mn during the quarter.

Mawani keeps stitching the Red Sea map

Mawani adds RS1 to its Red Sea network: The Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani) launched a new shipping service — RS1 — linking Jeddah Islamic Port with Oman’s Salalah Port and Djibouti Port, with a capacity of 1.7k TEUs.

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Logistics in the News

Your European summer plans aren’t at risk

Europe’s gonna keep flying — at a price: European airlines and refiners are growing more confident that the continent can avoid outright jet fuel shortages this summer, after refiners boosted kerosene yields, importers secured replacement cargoes from alternative suppliers, and governments tapped strategic reserves.

Price signals were strong enough to reroute global fuel flows: Jet fuel prices in Northern Europe climbed to a record USD 1.9k per ton in early April before easing to around USD 1.3-1.4k per ton — still roughly 60% above pre-war levels.

A reshaped network is now helping stabilize the market: Europe has sharply increased jet fuel inflows from the US and Nigeria, while stronger domestic refinery output and inventory drawdowns have helped offset the loss of Middle Eastern Gulf supplies. The US has emerged as the main relief valve for replacement barrels, with Nigeria and Norway also becoming key suppliers alongside broader West African flows that are helping close the gap.

Is Europe buying time or solving the problem?

Europe’s refiners are stretching every barrel: Spain’s Repsol has raised jet fuel production for the coming months by 20-25% y-o-y by reconfiguring its refineries to increase kerosene yields, while Portugal’s Galp is also maximizing output.

But higher output doesn’t remove Europe’s structural exposure. The Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) hub — the key supply center for northwest Europe — still sources roughly half of its jet fuel imports through Hormuz-linked flows, after inventories had already fallen to a six-year low by mid-April.

Strategic reserves have also bought time, not immunity. The International Energy Agency warned in April that Europe had “maybe six weeks” of jet fuel cover left and noted in mid-May that commercial inventories were depleting rapidly, even after strategic reserve releases added 2.5 mn bbl / d to the market.

Our take: The immediate shortage risk has eased, but the real test is whether Europe’s replacement supply system can hold through peak summer travel demand if Middle Eastern disruptions persist.

Why it matters

Airlines may have enough fuel to fly, but not at yesterday’s economics. Ryanair has signaled that Europe is now better stocked thanks to shipments from West Africa, Norway, and the Americas, while cautioning that fuel remains a cost problem and that sustained high prices could push unit costs higher despite hedging. EasyJet has also flagged an additional GBP 200 mn in summer fuel costs, with spot prices far above its normal levels.

Gulf supply remains the hardest gap to replace. Europe can source more jet fuel from a broader range of suppliers, but those alternative flows still only partially fill a Gulf-sized hole in the market. Around half of Europe’s jet fuel imports typically come from the Middle East, with that share recently climbing to nearly 75% of total EU jet fuel imports.


JUNE

2-4 June (Tuesday-Thursday): ProPak Mena, Cairo, Egypt.

4-5 June (Thursday-Friday): Supply Chain and Logistics Summit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

6-8 June (Saturday-Monday): IATA World Air Transport Summit, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

10-11 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Black Sea Ports and Logistics, Istanbul, Turkey.

21-24 June (Sunday-Wednesday): Saudi Smart Logistics, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

22-23 June (Monday-Tuesday): Decarbonizing Shipping Forum, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

AUGUST

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Air Cargo Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Saudi Warehouse and Logistics Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

SEPTEMBER

16-17 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Maritime & Logistics Congress, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

22-24 September (Tuesday-Thursday): Seamless Middle East, Dubai, UAE.

28-30 September (Monday-Wednesday): Transport Logistics Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

OCTOBER

12-14 October (Monday-Wednesday): The Airport Show, Dubai, UAE.

21-22 October (Wednesday-Thursday): Global Ports Forum, Singapore.

26-29 (Monday-Thursday): Air Cargo Forum, Miami, US.

27-29 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Routes World, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

NOVEMBER

2-5 November (Monday-Thursday): ADIPEC Maritime and Logistics Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

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