Saudi Aramco Plans to Bypass Strait of Hormuz
Saudi Arabia is on the verge of ramping up an alternate pipeline to export its oil, rather than through the Strait of Hormuz, a move that could ease—though not eliminate—the bottleneck that has driven crude prices higher.
A pipeline to move oil from the kingdom’s oil fields to the Red Sea in the west is days away from hitting full capacity.
Aramco’s East-West pipeline is no panacea. It can only export about five million barrels a day of crude oil, or about 70% of the seven million barrels Aramco exports every day.
Currently, tanker ships are unwilling to travel through the Strait of Hormuz, which takes upward of 17 million barrels of oil a day from the Middle East to Asia and Europe—including the vast majority of Saudi production in normal times.
The Saudi East-West pipeline and a few others in the region can reroute some of that product.
Source: Barron's
