Forget "is there enough oil?" The market already answered it. Even as the U.S. bombs Iran and a second tanker burns off Oman, crude is being shorted, with Brent near its lowest since February. That tells you the current fight is not about crude availability. There is enough, today.
The real war is over buffers — and it is a war of attrition. The question that matters is not whether oil leaves the Gulf. It is who is forced to absorb the next shock with nothing left.
The wrong question
A market that shorts oil during U.S. airstrikes on Iran is a market that believes supply is ample: Saudi Aramco has restarted Ras Tanura, Atlantic-basin barrels (U.S., Brazil, Guyana, Venezuela) are flowing, and OPEC+ is sitting on spare capacity. So "is there a crude shortage?" is the wrong frame. The right one is: how much cushion is left, and who is spending it fastest?
The U.S. ledger: a thinning insurance policy
America's buffers are genuinely depleted. The Strategic Petroleum Reserve sits at ~331 million barrels — its lowest since 1983; commercial crude is about 7% below the five-year average; and distillate (diesel) stocks are ~12 million barrels below average, the tightest of any product. The U.S. has been the world's emergency swing supplier, spending its reserves to keep the world supplied.
And the cushion, once spent, is gone for years. The DOE is reportedly seeking ~$20 billion to refill the SPR; contracted exchange returns run from 2026 into 2028, and on current plans the reserve will not even recover to its current ~414-million-barrel level until around 2028. Refilling a strategic reserve is slow and expensive — especially if prices spike again.
But here is the crucial qualifier: the U.S. pumps a record ~13.8 million barrels a day and is a net exporter of crude and products. A depleted SPR is a thinner insurance policy, not a supply shortage. The U.S. is not going to "run out."
The global cushion is thinner than it looks
The buffer the market is leaning on to short oil is real but smaller than the headline. OPEC+'s nominal spare capacity is around 5 million bpd, but independent analysts (Energy Aspects, Rapidan) put realistically deployable spare at just 1.5–2.5 million bpd — concentrated almost entirely in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. A shock absorber held by one or two producers is a single point of failure, and it is already being called on.
Iran's ledger is bleeding too
"Iran just has to wait" assumes Iran can outlast the West cheaply. It cannot. Its economy is sanctions-crushed and it needs to sell oil — which is exactly why it is rushing crude out under the U.S. general licence for the revenue, the opposite of a blockade. It gains sanctions relief from the 60-day framework. And every time it escalates, it absorbs U.S. airstrikes that degrade its air-defence, drone and minelaying capability — on 27 June, the very tools it would need to sustain a long campaign. Attrition drains Iran, arguably faster than it drains a global system that still pumps 100-million-plus barrels a day.
The real danger: the second shock
The risk is not the current exchange. It is that the world is rebuilding flows before it rebuilds buffers. When the cushion is spent — SPR thin and years from refill, deployable spare just 1.5–2.5M bpd, distillates already 12M below average — the next shock lands with no absorber. A refinery outage, a wildfire, a sustained Hormuz closure, a sanctions escalation: in a thin-buffered system each hits harder than it should.
That is the attrition trap, and the thinnest cushion of all is not crude but product — diesel (see Crude Is Falling, Diesel Isn't and The Oil Crisis Is Moving Downstream). You can model the depletion arithmetic on our inventory runway tool.
So who runs out first?
This is a framework, not a prediction. The U.S.'s cushion is the SPR plus distillate stocks plus the years it would take to refill; Iran's is its economy, its military hardware, and its need to sell. The market is currently betting the global system outlasts Iran — that is why oil is short, and it may be right.
But the loser is not the side with the smallest reserve today. It is the side forced to meet a second shock with no cushion left. A system this thinly buffered is fragile, and fragility, not scarcity, is the story. Watch the buffers, not the headlines.
What it means for Europe
Europe's cushion is the EU's 90-day strategic stock obligation — real, but stock-weighted it is thinner than the headline, and it is the product balance (diesel and jet), not crude, that is the weak point. With Russian refining capacity hit by drone strikes, Middle East jet-fuel flows pressured, and EU methane-import rules looming from 2027, Europe's buffer is most exposed exactly where attrition bites first: refined fuel, not the barrel. A cheaper Brent does little for a continent short the refined cushion.
What to watch
- SPR and commercial crude draws — refill is years away, so every draw thins the insurance.
- Deployable OPEC+ spare (1.5–2.5M bpd, Saudi/UAE) — the global shock absorber, and a concentrated one.
- Distillate stocks and diesel cracks — the thinnest cushion.
- The pace of the U.S.–Iran exchange — attrition favours whoever can sustain it most cheaply.
Sources: EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report (SPR ~331M, commercial crude ~412M, distillates ~106M / 12M below average); RBN Energy and CRS (SPR refill timeline to ~2028, ~$20bn cost); Energy Aspects / Rapidan and EIA (OPEC+ deployable spare capacity 1.5–2.5M bpd); CNBC, NBC and CENTCOM (27 June strikes); ICE/CFTC positioning (speculative shorts). Brent via the dashboard (Stooq). Analysis, not financial advice.