
The head of the International Energy Agency (IEA), Fatih Birol, has warned of a "black April" due to the worsening situation for global oil supplies amid the war in Iran and the largely blocked Strait of Hormuz.
Birol told French newspaper Le Figaro in an interview published online late on Monday that while March had been very difficult, April would be much worse.
He said the states in The Gulf were producing only a little more than half the amount of oil they pumped before the war and that natural gas was no longer being exported at all through the crucial narrow waterway that has been effectively blockaded by Iran.
"If the strait really remains closed throughout April, we will lose twice as much crude oil and refined products as in March. We are facing a 'black April,'" Birol said.
"I am very pessimistic today because this war is paralysing one of the lifelines of the global economy. Not only oil and gas but also fertilizer, petrochemicals, helium and much more."
Most serious energy crisis in history
The world has never experienced a disruption to energy supplies on this scale, Birol said
"If you look at the three major oil and gas crises of the past, the current crisis is more serious than those of 1973, 1979 and 2022 combined. We are facing a major energy shock that combines an oil shock, a gas shock and a food shock," Birol said.
The IEA-driven release of oil reserves only eased the pain, Birol said. "The only real solution lies elsewhere: reopening the Strait of Hormuz. As long as it remains closed, the global economy will face enormous difficulties."
latest_posts
- 1
RFK Jr. wants to scrutinize the vaccine schedule – but its safety record is already decades long - 2
See the first close-up photos of the moon from NASA's Artemis II mission - 3
Artemis 2 moon rocket gets 'America 250' paint job | Space photo of the day for Dec. 23, 2025 - 4
The hunt for dark matter: a trivia quiz - 5
Los Angeles County sees significant uptick in norovirus cases, officials say
Would you ever turn to AI for companionship? 6% of Americans say they could — or already have.
Chinese mega embassy could bring security advantages, says No 10
6 Home Cleaning Administrations to Keep Your Home Unblemished
Scientists dove hundreds of feet into the ocean and found creatures no human has ever seen. Our trash beat us there
Looking for under-the-radar adventures? Try Norway's Vesterålen
Inflammatory Merz remarks on migrants' violence against women slammed
South Carolina confirms 124 new measles cases as outbreak on the Arizona-Utah line grows
PA accuses Israel of 'human trafficking' after planeload of Gazans arrives in South Africa
Figurine of a woman and a goose offers peek at prehistoric beliefs













