Pakistan plans oil reserves, storage push as Hormuz constraints expose vulnerabilities

Pakistan lacks strategic oil reserves despite relying on Hormuz for 90% of oil and LNG imports

People on their motorbikes wait for their turn to get fuel at a petrol station, hours before fuel prices are raised in Pakistan, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Karachi, Pakistan, April 30, 2026. Picture taken with a mobile phone. REUTERS

Pakistan plans to boost domestic storage ​for crude oil and refined products to increase its energy security, according to a government document that was ‌shared with oil producers and some of the world's leading trading firms.

Despite depending on supplies through the Strait of Hormuz for up to 90% of its oil and liquefied natural gas imports, Pakistan has no strategic petroleum reserves.

That has left it exposed to supply shocks provoked by the Iran war, even as its ​lending programme with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) limits room for costly state-owned emergency stocks.

According to the document reviewed by Reuters, ​the energy ministry is proposing to build strategic petroleum reserves as well as commercial storage through bonded ⁠terminals, refineries and oil marketing companies. It is also pushing for more oil and gas exploration and production, upgrades to its ​refineries and a consolidation of its downstream sector.

"Pakistan's oil security requires both emergency reserves and stronger local supply capacity," the ministry said in ​the document.

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