The U.S.-Israel attacks on Iran threaten global fuel trade


UPSC Study Note: U.S.-Israel Attacks on Iran & the Threat to Global Fuel Trade


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Operation Name Operation Epic Fury (U.S.-Israel joint strike on Iran)
Start Date 28 February 2026
Casualties (Iran) >780 killed, >500 locations struck (as of 3 March 2026)
Strait of Hormuz share of global oil ~20% of world oil exports (20 mb/d crude + products)
Strait of Hormuz share of global LNG ~20% of global LNG trade
Global oil share via Strait (seaborne) 25–30% of world seaborne oil trade
West Asia share of global oil production 31% of global oil production (2024)
West Asia top-10 oil producers Region includes 5 of the top 10 oil-producing nations globally
LNG facility suspended Qatar's North Field — world's largest LNG export facility
Oil price on 2 March 2026 $78.31/barrel (≈12% surge week-on-week)
Brent crude monthly rise (March) ~65% ($46/bbl) — highest monthly rise ever recorded
Global supply disruption (March) 10.1 mb/d crash in global oil supply
UNSC veto China + Russia vetoed Gulf States' Hormuz shipping resolution
Key concept Oil chokepoint — geographic bottleneck for global energy trade
Alternative bypass routes Extremely limited — no pipeline capacity matches Strait volume

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Economic / Trade (India-specific)

Legal / Constitutional (International)

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. The U.S.-Israel joint operation against Iran (Feb 2026) was named "Operation Epic Fury" by the U.S. Pentagon. [S4]
  2. The Strait of Hormuz is approximately 33 km wide at its narrowest point, between Iran and Oman. [S1]
  3. The Strait carries approximately 20% of the world's oil exports and 20% of global LNG trade. [S1][S3]
  4. 25–30% of global seaborne oil trade passes through the Strait of Hormuz. [S1]
  5. West Asia accounted for 31% of global oil production in 2024 and hosts 5 of the top 10 oil-producing nations. [S4]
  6. Qatar's North Field is the world's largest LNG export facility; it was halted following an Iranian drone attack on 2 March 2026. [S4]
  7. Oil prices reached $78.31/barrel on 2 March 2026 — approximately 12% higher than the previous week. [S4]
  8. By end-March 2026, Brent crude had risen ~65% ($46/bbl) — the highest monthly rise ever recorded. [S1]
  9. Global oil supply fell by 10.1 mb/d in March 2026 — the largest oil market disruption in history. [S3]
  10. The UN Security Council draft resolution on Hormuz shipping safety was vetoed by China and Russia. [S5]
  11. Under UNCLOS Article 38, all ships enjoy the right of transit passage through international straits used for international navigation — the key legal provision in Hormuz disputes.
  12. Iran's retaliation targeted U.S. military bases in six Gulf nations: Qatar, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Jordan. [S4]
  13. As of 3 March 2026, Iran's Red Crescent (not Red Cross — Iran's equivalent humanitarian body) reported >780 deaths in Operation Epic Fury. [S4]
  14. The World Bank's April 2026 Commodity Markets Outlook described the energy price surge as the "biggest in four years." [S2]
  15. India's Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) are located at Visakhapatnam, Mangaluru, and Padur — capacity ~9.5 million tonnes — the first line of defence against import shocks.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests; bilateral, regional and global groupings; India and its neighbourhood — issues
GS-III Indian economy — energy security; infrastructure (petroleum sector); effects of liberalisation on economy; disaster and its management (energy crisis)
GS-I (Essay) Geopolitics and global order; resource wars

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Strait of Hormuz is as much a political chokepoint as a geographical one." Examine in the context of the 2026 U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict and its implications for India's energy security. (GS-II/III, 250 words)
  2. "Oil price shocks originating in West Asia expose structural vulnerabilities in India's external sector." Analyse with reference to recent events and suggest policy measures. (GS-III, 250 words)
  3. "The UNSC's inability to safeguard the Strait of Hormuz reflects deeper fissures in the multilateral world order." Critically evaluate. (GS-II, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
Strait of Hormuz & Global Chokepoints (Malacca, Bab-el-Mandeb, Suez) The Hormuz crisis is part of a broader pattern of chokepoint vulnerability in global trade
India's Energy Security Policy & SPR India imports ~85% crude; Hormuz disruption directly hits India's CAD and inflation
JCPOA & Iran Nuclear Deal The 2026 conflict is the culmination of the JCPOA breakdown; background essential for Mains
India-Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Relations India's diaspora remittances (~$35 bn/yr from Gulf) and oil imports from Saudi Arabia, UAE at risk
LNG Trade & Global Gas Markets Qatar's North Field shutdown illustrates India's growing LNG import dependence
UNCLOS & Maritime Security Law Transit passage rights, freedom of navigation, and India's position in maritime disputes
India's Current Account Deficit & Rupee Management Oil price surge = CAD widening = currency pressure; RBI intervention mechanisms
Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) — India & Global IEA coordinates SPR releases during crises; India's SPR at Vizag, Mangaluru, Padur

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "Hormuz handles 20% of world's oil" vs. "25–30% of seaborne oil" — both figures are correct but measure different things (total oil consumption vs. seaborne trade only). Do not conflate them. [S1][S3]
  2. Qatar's facility: Aspirants often confuse the North Field (natural gas/LNG) with an oil facility — it is a gas field, not an oil field. Qatar's significance is in LNG, not crude oil.
  3. Iran's Red Crescent vs. Red Cross: Iran is a member of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies; the domestic body is the Iranian Red Crescent (not Red Cross). Mixing these up is a common error. [S4]
  4. UNSC veto detail: The veto was cast by China AND Russia together — not unilaterally by one power. Also note the resolution was initiated by Gulf States, not by Western nations. [S5]
  5. "Pre-emptive strike" vs. international law: The U.S.-Israel framing of a "pre-emptive strike" is legally contested under the UN Charter (Article 51 allows self-defence only against an actual armed attack, not anticipated ones — a key point for GS-II legal questions). Do not accept the operational framing as settled law.

11. Sources


Note on sourcing: S1, S2, S3, S5 are Tier 2 international institutions (IEA, World Bank, IMF, UN). S4 is the primary article (Tier 4). All facts are grounded in retrieved snippets or the supplied article excerpt; no speculative content has been added.