Published: 12 March 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
Global oil prices climbed sharply on Thursday even after governments agreed to release a record volume of crude from strategic reserves in a bid to calm markets shaken by geopolitical upheaval. The International Energy Agency (IEA) announced that 32 member countries would collectively release approximately 400 million barrels of emergency oil — the largest coordinated deployment in its history — aimed at reducing supply pressure caused by the ongoing conflict affecting Middle East exports.
Despite this unprecedented intervention, crude benchmarks rose significantly in Asian and European trading sessions, with Brent crude briefly jumping above $100 per barrel before settling slightly lower. Market sentiment remained elevated as traders assessed the limited immediate impact of the reserve release alongside persistent concerns about supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping lane for global oil shipments.
Analysts attribute the price surge to a risk premium built into the market due to continued attacks on shipping and oil infrastructure in the Persian Gulf region. Even though the reserve release was intended to ease price volatility, many traders view it as insufficient to replace volumes lost from disrupted flows and halted exports. Early logistical constraints in deploying stockpiles, coupled with rising tanker insurance costs and shipping bottlenecks, have further undermined confidence in the strategy’s immediate efficacy.
Industry experts say that while the strategic reserve release may offer a temporary supply infusion, it does little to alter the broader supply–demand balance amid a crisis that has constrained nearly one‑fifth of global oil throughput. Moreover, significant parts of the released crude may take weeks to reach key refining centers in Asia and Europe, limiting the short‑term impact on available fuel stocks.
Financial markets also reflected the unease. Equities declined in major markets as investors weighed the implications of elevated energy prices and potential inflationary effects on corporate earnings and consumer costs. Energy sector stocks showed relative strength on expectations that higher crude prices could bolster upstream profits, but the broader market reaction remained cautious.
The continued rally of oil prices despite a record strategic reserve release highlights the severity of current supply risks and suggests that geopolitical tensions in the Middle East will continue to exert upward pressure on energy costs globally. Policymakers and market watchers are now monitoring developments closely to determine whether further interventions — or a de‑escalation of the conflict — will be required to stabilize prices in the weeks ahead.


























































































