U.S.-Iran war still trails the 1979 oil shock by total losses
The Iran war has created the largest oil supply shock ever in terms of daily production losses but the 1979 Iranian Revolution remains the biggest oil crisis by cumulative supply loss, according to calculations based on International Energy Agency (IEA), OPEC and U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) data.
The scale of the disruption from the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has revived comparisons with the 1973 Arab oil embargo, the Iranian Revolution and the 1991 Gulf War, while highlighting how global energy markets have evolved.
A different kind of energy shock. Unlike previous crises, the Iran war has simultaneously disrupted crude oil, natural gas, refined fuels and fertilizer supplies, exposing vulnerabilities created by decades of rising energy demand, globalized trade and the Middle East’s growing role as a supplier of finished fuels.
The oil shocks of the 1970s left lasting economic scars and reshaped energy policy in major importing countries. In response to those crises, the IEA was established to advise industrialized nations on energy security and coordinate emergency stockpiles.
The agency has responded to the current crisis by releasing a record 400 MMbbl from strategic reserves to help stabilize markets and offset lost Middle Eastern supply.
How does the current disruption compare by scale? The IEA said peak supply losses exceeded 14 MMbpd, equivalent to about 13.6% of expected global oil demand of 103.3 MMbpd this year.
That dwarfs the peak losses of 4.5 MMbpd during the 1973–1974 Arab oil embargo, 5.6 MMbpd during the Iranian Revolution and 4.3 MMbpd during the 1991 Gulf War, according to IEA figures.
The conflict has also shut in roughly one-fifth of global liquefied natural gas production in Qatar. During the oil shocks of the 1970s, LNG trade was negligible; Qatar did not begin exports until 1996.
The disruption extended beyond crude and gas into fuel markets after Gulf refinery outages contributed to shortages of diesel and jet fuel. Large refineries built across the Gulf over recent decades have become major suppliers to markets in Africa, Europe and Asia.
Argus Media estimates the conflict removed around 24 MM tonnes (t) of LNG supply from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. Based on IEA data showing global LNG trade of 428 MMt in 2025, that equates to about 5.6% of annual global LNG supply.
How do duration and losses compare with past shocks? According to an IEA report published on May 13, cumulative supply losses from Gulf producers had already exceeded 1 Bbbl. Adding a further 14 MMbpd lost over the 35 days between May 14 and the June 17 U.S.-Iran interim deal that halted the war suggests the conflict removed around 1.5 Bbbl from the market, according to calculations.
Despite the deal, disruptions are expected to continue for months and, in the case of gas, potentially years.
The Iranian Revolution produced smaller daily losses than the current crisis but a larger cumulative impact.
The U.S. Department of Energy estimates Iran’s crude production fell by an average of 3.9 MMbpd between 1978 and 1981. That implies roughly 4.3 Bbbl of lost output over three years, according to calculations, although some of the lost supply was offset by increased output elsewhere in the Gulf.
Oil journalist and author Ian Seymour estimated in his book published in 1980 that Iran produced an average of 3.1 MMbpd in 1979 compared with around 6 MMbpd before the revolution, implying losses of more than 1 Bbbl that year alone.
Production fell further to an average of 1.47 MMbpd in 1980, according to OPEC data. Compared with 1978 production levels, cumulative losses in 1979 and 1980 exceeded 2.7 Bbbl, according to calculations, still greater than the losses recorded so far in the current crisis.
During the 1973–1974 Arab oil embargo, producers gradually increased cuts to 4.5 MMbpd over three months. Calculations suggest the embargo removed roughly 530 MMbbl–650 MMbbl from the market, substantially less than the current disruption.
The 1991 Gulf War disrupted oil output for around four months, according to a government document from IEA member Australia. Assuming losses averaged 4.3 MMbpd, cumulative losses totaled roughly 516 MMbbl, according to calculations, also less than the current crisis.


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