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The 20% Problem: US Policy, Iran Sanctions, and Argentina’s Shale at the Strait of Hormuz, 2026

20 percent global oil supply risk at Strait of Hormuz with US Iran sanctions and Argentina shale production shift 2026

Last updated: April 27, 2026 | 19 min read | By

1. Why the Strait of Hormuz Is Still the World’s #1 Oil Chokepoint

In 2024, tankers moved 20.3 million barrels per day of crude oil and petroleum products through the Strait of Hormuz. That’s from the US Energy Information Administration’s July 2024 “World Oil Transit Chokepoints” report. Global oil consumption was 102.9 million b/d that year. So Hormuz carries about 1 in 5 barrels the world uses.

The main exporters using the strait: Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, and Iran. The main buyers: China, India, Japan, and South Korea took 69% of Hormuz crude and condensate flows in 2023. Europe took about 18%.

2. Interactive Map: Strait of Hormuz Shipping Lanes

The strait is only 21 nautical miles wide at its narrowest point, with 2-mile-wide shipping lanes for inbound and outbound traffic. Zoom and pan the map to see major terminals at Kharg Island, Ras Tanura, and Fujairah.

Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors. Use mouse wheel to zoom. The marker shows the narrowest point between Iran and Oman.

Table 1: Major Oil Chokepoints vs 2024 Daily Flow

Chokepoint 2024 Oil Flow Share of Global Seaborne Oil Primary Risk Factor
Strait of Hormuz 20.3 million b/d ~30% US-Iran geopolitical tension
Strait of Malacca 23.7 million b/d ~35% Piracy, vessel congestion
Suez Canal + SUMED Pipeline 8.8 million b/d ~13% Regional conflict, physical blockage
Bab el-Mandeb Strait 8.6 million b/d ~13% Yemen conflict, Houthi attacks

Source: US EIA, July 2024. Includes crude oil, condensate, and refined products.

3. US-Iran Sanctions: 2018 to 2026 Data

The US withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action in May 2018. The policy goal, per US Treasury OFAC, was to reduce Iran’s oil exports to “zero” to pressure Tehran on nuclear and missile programs.

Table 2: Iran Crude + Condensate Exports

Period Avg Exports Main Buyers Policy Context
April 2018 2.8 million b/d China, India, S. Korea, Japan, EU Pre-JCPOA withdrawal
May 2019 0.4 million b/d China, Syria US waivers expired
2021 Average 0.8 million b/d China “teapot” refineries Maximum pressure campaign
2023 Average 1.3 million b/d China 90%+ Selective enforcement
Q1 2026 Est 1.4 to 1.6 million b/d China, via Malaysia transfers Per TankerTrackers.com

How do sanctions actually work? I broke it down in How Oil Sanctions Actually Work: From Banks to Tanker Insurance.

2026 Update: No new nuclear deal exists as of April. Sanctions remain. For current designations, check Treasury OFAC Recent Actions.

4. The Hidden Tax: Tanker Insurance and War Risk

The Joint War Committee at Lloyd’s of London keeps the Persian Gulf on its “Listed Areas.” Q1 2026 premiums are 0.10% to 0.15% of hull value, according to Marsh McLennan’s 2026 Political Risk Map. On $80 oil, that’s $0.80 to $1.20 per barrel in extra cost.

“Geopolitical risk is a structural component of the oil price. The market prices it daily through freight and insurance.”
Fatih Birol, Executive Director, International Energy Agency, World Energy Outlook 2023

5. Can Pipelines Bypass Hormuz? The Math

Saudi East-West Pipeline: 5 million b/d capacity to Yanbu. Ran ~2.1 million b/d in 2024.
UAE Habshan–Fujairah Pipeline: 1.5 million b/d to the Gulf of Oman. Ran ~1.2 million b/d in 2024.
Total bypass used: 3.3 million b/d vs 20.3 million b/d through Hormuz.

Iran’s Goreh-Jask pipeline has 1 million b/d capacity and ran ~0.3 million b/d in 2024, per Shana news agency.

6. Argentina’s Vaca Muerta: Reserves, Production, Breakevens

The EIA’s 2013 assessment, updated 2022, estimates Vaca Muerta holds 16.2 billion barrels of technically recoverable shale oil and 308 Tcf of shale gas.

Table 3: Vaca Muerta Production Growth

Year Vaca Muerta Oil b/d Argentina Total Oil b/d Source
2018 90,000 490,000 Argentine Secretariat of Energy
2021 210,000 540,000 Argentine Secretariat of Energy
2024 355,000 680,000 Argentine Secretariat of Energy
2025 Estimate 410,000 740,000 Rystad Energy, Dec 2025
2030 Target 1,000,000 1,300,000 YPF Corporate Plan 2024

7. Interactive Map: Vaca Muerta Shale Formation

Vaca Muerta spans ~30,000 sq km in Neuquén Province. The map shows the main producing blocks: Loma Campana, La Amarga Chica, and Bajada del Palo.

Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors. The marker shows central Neuquén Basin near Añelo, the shale operations hub.

8. Why Chevron, Exxon, and Shell Are in Neuquén

Chevron: Loma Campana with YPF since 2013. $1.6B invested to 2024. ~50,000 b/d net. Source: Chevron 2024 10-K, p.42.

ExxonMobil: Bajo del Choique-La Invernada. Sold 70% to QatarEnergy in 2023, kept 30%. Source: ExxonMobil press release, June 2023.

Shell: Sierras Blancas, Cruz de Lorena. 50,000 b/d gross in 2024. Source: Shell Energy Transition Report 2025.

Breakevens are $35-$45/bbl per Wood Mackenzie 2025. For geology, see Vaca Muerta vs Permian: Why Geologists Are Excited.

9. How Non-OPEC Supply Changes Hormuz Risk Premiums

The IEA Oil Market Report, April 2026 models that each 1 million b/d of new supply outside Hormuz reduces the risk premium. If Guyana, Brazil, Canada, and Argentina add 5 million b/d by 2030, a full Hormuz shutdown affects 15% of global supply instead of 20%.

Related: Guyana’s Oil Boom: The Newest OPEC Disruptor and Canada’s TMX Pipeline: What It Means for Asian Buyers.

10. Video: How Oil Tankers Navigate the Strait

This explainer from Bloomberg shows actual tanker traffic, navy escorts, and why insurance costs spike. It’s 4 minutes and current as of 2025.

Source: Bloomberg Originals on YouTube. If the embed doesn’t load, watch directly on YouTube.

11. 3 Data-Based Scenarios for 2026-2030

Based on EIA Annual Energy Outlook 2025, IEA Oil 2025, and CME futures data:

Table 4: Hormuz Scenario Matrix

Scenario Probability Est Iran Exports Hormuz Flow Brent 2028 Avg Vaca Muerta 2028
A: New Nuclear Deal 20% 2.5 million b/d Normal, risk premium $1 $75 700,000 b/d
B: Muddling Through 60% 1.5 million b/d Normal, risk premium $3-$6 $82-$90 700,000 b/d
C: Escalation 20% 0.5 million b/d -50% for 90 days $130 spike, $100 avg 600,000 b/d, service bottlenecks

12. 5 Public Dashboards Investors Should Track

  1. EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report: US crude stocks and production. Wednesdays 10:30am ET.
  2. TankerTrackers.com: Iranian export estimates using satellite data.
  3. CME Group OVX: Crude Oil Volatility Index. Above 40 = market fears a shock.
  4. Lloyd’s List Intelligence: War risk premiums and vessel tracking.
  5. Argentina Energy Secretariat: Monthly Vaca Muerta oil and gas data.

13. Sources and Further Reading

Disclaimer: This article uses public data and does not constitute investment, legal, or policy advice. All scenarios are illustrative. Commodity markets are volatile.

Update policy: I revise this post quarterly when EIA and IEA release new data. Next update: July 2026.

Anshuman Vikram Singh
About the author

Anshuman Vikram Singh

Sales & Marketing Leader • AI Trends • Geopolitical Analysis

15+ years of experience in sales, marketing, emerging technology trends, and geopolitical analysis. Focused on turning complex developments into sharp, readable insights for modern audiences.

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