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The heads of the International Energy Agency (IEA), International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and World Trade Organization (WTO) met late May and on May 29–30 issued a joint warning that the war in West Asia is straining global energy supplies and draining oil inventories.
They said disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — a critical chokepoint for Gulf oil and gas — and losses of supply risk a rapid depletion of stocks ahead of peak summer demand in the Northern Hemisphere.
The institutions flagged disproportionate impacts on poorer and energy‑importing economies via higher fuel and fertilizer prices, rising uncertainty and job risks.
They said they are coordinating monitoring and responses across energy, trade and agricultural supply chains and preparing multilateral and bilateral support measures for the most affected countries.
The statement also noted that US proposals on a ceasefire with Iran that would reopen waterways and address Tehran’s nuclear capacity were under consideration by Washington.
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Specialised refineries and uneven, limited strategic reserves mean Hormuz disruptions quickly transmit to fertiliser, petrochemical and tech supply chains. Temporary reserve releases will blunt but not remove acute shortages and price pressure for poorer importers.




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