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Kuwait Can Restore 70% of Oil Output in 6–8 Weeks of Hormuz Reopening, Says KPC Executive
2026-06-04

Kuwait Can Restore 70% of Oil Output in 6–8 Weeks of Hormuz Reopening, Says KPC Executive

Kuwait could restore nearly 70% of ‌its oil production ⁠within six ‌to eight weeks after the Strait ‌of Hormuz reopens, Kuwait Petroleum Corporation's managing director for international marketing, ⁠Shaikh Khaled Ahmad al-Sabah, said on Wednesday.

The remaining 30% would take about another month, he told the S&P Global Energy Middle East Petroleum and Gas Conference.

Kuwait's timeline for its production recovery is shorter than some forecasts for a full reopening of transits through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has effectively closed since US-Israeli ​attacks in late February.

On Tuesday, Adnoc's executive vice president for sales and trading Philippe Khoury said full transits through the strait could take until ‌mid-2027 to recover to pre-war ⁠levels. The International ​Energy Agency's head of oil, Toril Bosoni, said a recovery ​could take six to eight months in the best-case scenario from now if an agreement was reached.

Separately, al-Sabah said KPC could restore its refinery output to normal levels in around two to three weeks. KPC has about 1.4mn barrels per day of refining capacity, he said.

Vitol Bahrain's head of research, Bader Nooruddin, forecast on Wednesday that Gulf refineries could ramp up to about 90-95% of capacity within 40 to 60 ‌days.

Middle East ‌refiners are already planning for ⁠a future after the current supply crisis.

Al-Sabah said Kuwait is in ⁠talks with "friendly countries" on potential ⁠pipeline projects.

"A lot of people thought, why build a pipeline without using it? Now shows the use of a pipeline," he said, adding the crisis had also highlighted Kuwait's need for larger storage capacity.

Austrian oil firm OMV echoed the comments, with general manager Mikael Berthod ​telling the conference that Middle Eastern refiners must become more commercially agile and invest in pipelines and storage over the next two to three years.

They will also need stronger partnerships to handle future supply shocks, he added. OMV has investments in the Middle East.

In the near term, Adnoc expects a spike in oil demand to rebuild inventories, followed by a steady recovery as prices normalise, senior vice ‌president of business ​transformation Fatema Bin Saleem al-Teneiji said.
Source: GULF TIMES