Commodities June 22, 2026 08:21 AM

Saudi Crude Shipments Fall to Record Low in April as Production Slumps

JODI data shows consecutive monthly declines in Saudi exports and output amid Gulf disruptions linked to the Iran war

By Caleb Monroe
Share
Twitter Reddit Facebook LinkedIn

Saudi Arabia's crude oil exports dropped to a record low in April, falling to about 3.990 million barrels per day from 4.974 million bpd in March, while production also fell to a record low of 6.316 million bpd, according to Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI) figures. The decline follows disruptions to Gulf shipments related to the Iran war, with wider regional tensions persisting over Lebanon and the Strait of Hormuz.

Saudi Crude Shipments Fall to Record Low in April as Production Slumps
Summarize with
ChatGPT Perplexity Claude Grok Gemini

Key Points

  • Saudi crude exports fell to about 3.990 million bpd in April, down from 4.974 million bpd in March - a record low in the JODI dataset.
  • Crude production in Saudi Arabia dropped to 6.316 million bpd in April from 6.967 million bpd in March - also a record low.
  • Disruptions tied to the Iran war have affected Gulf shipments, with the Strait of Hormuz and regional energy facilities cited as points of impact.

Overview

Data published by the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI) show that Saudi Arabia's crude oil exports dropped to roughly 3.990 million barrels per day (bpd) in April, down from 4.974 million bpd in March. The April figure represents the lowest monthly export level on record in the JODI dataset for Saudi crude, which extends back to 2002.

Production figures

Alongside the export decline, Saudi crude oil production fell to 6.316 million bpd in April, also the lowest on record, from 6.967 million bpd recorded in March. The monthly export and production numbers are part of routine submissions made by Riyadh and other Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) members to JODI, which publishes the consolidated data on its website.

Context and driving factors cited in the data

The JODI release notes the export decline came as the Iran war disrupted shipments across the Gulf region. Those disruptions included Iranian attacks on Gulf states following U.S.-Israeli strikes that began in late February, which damaged major energy facilities and interfered with shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. The strait is a key artery for energy trade, normally carrying about 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows.

Negotiations related to the conflict have seen developments; mediators described the first round of talks between the U.S. and Iran as having made "encouraging progress" toward a final peace deal. However, tensions were reported to remain over Lebanon and the Strait of Hormuz.

Estimates of regional output impact

The International Energy Agency (IEA) is cited in the same context as estimating the war has blocked more than 14 million bpd of Middle East oil output. The JODI figures for Saudi Arabia reflect how such regional disruptions coincide with lower production and shipments from one of the world's largest oil producers.


Data limitations

The figures reported are drawn from monthly submissions to JODI by Riyadh and other OPEC members. The dataset for Saudi Arabia's crude exports and output extends back to 2002; beyond those submitted monthly numbers, the JODI release does not provide additional analysis or attribution beyond the disruptions and contextual notes referenced above.

What sectors are directly implicated

  • Energy producers and exporters, given the declines in both production and shipments.
  • Shipping and maritime logistics, owing to disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz and damage to energy facilities.
  • Global oil and liquefied natural gas supply channels, with the strait typically carrying about one-fifth of global flows.

Risks

  • Continued disruptions from the Iran war could further affect oil shipments and regional production - impacting energy producers and shipping sectors.
  • Persistent tensions over Lebanon and the Strait of Hormuz may prolong instability in maritime transit routes that carry a significant share of global oil and LNG flows.
  • Damage to major energy facilities in the Gulf region raises uncertainty around the speed of recovery for affected production and transport infrastructure.

More from Commodities

Trump Says He Will Act If Iran Fails to Honor Interim Deal Jun 22, 2026 U.S. Proposes Major Rollbacks to Bonding and Permitting Rules for Drillers on Federal Lands Jun 22, 2026 U.S. Issues 60-Day License Allowing Iranian Oil Sales Amid Continued Peace Talks Jun 22, 2026 Seventh Leader in Ten Years as Peace Talks Temper Oil Moves and Markets Weigh Political Shockwaves Jun 22, 2026 European Gas Inches Higher as Hormuz Transit Confusion and U.S.-Iran Talks Unnerve Markets Jun 22, 2026