If you’ve been watching global headlines lately, it would be easy to assume oil prices would be sky-high: a major oil-reserve country mired in crisis, sanctions on perennial producers, regional conflicts simmering, and social unrest in several exporters. And yet Brent and WTI have been languishing around $60 a barrel, a level that, a decade ago, most analysts would have dismissed as impossible in such conditions
What’s happening?
At first glance, the logic of oil pricing should be straightforward: supply risk should mean higher prices. But today’s market tells a very different story, one where geopolitical shocks don’t automatically translate into price shocks.
The Changing Nature of Supply Risk
Take Venezuela, the poster child of dysfunctional oil production. Sitting on the world’s largest proven crude reserves, you’d expect its political upheavals to roil markets. In reality, Venezuela’s output has already shrivelled over years of mismanagement, sanctions, and capital flight. What matters most to traders isn’t headline reserve totals, it’s actual barrels available to buy, ship, refine, and burn. Caracas no longer moves global supply balance sheets in any meaningful way. This is also unlikely to change with the US intervention, as companies require a stable regime to operate in. Such is a long way away in Venezuela.
Meanwhile, traditional trouble spots like Russia and Iran are constrained by sanctions more than geology. Their exports find buyers, but often at steep discounts and under complex legal and logistical workarounds. Oil markets have, over the past decades, learned to price sanctions as part of the baseline, not an extraordinary disturbance.
Demand Is the New Wild Card
What’s truly different now isn’t just supply, it’s demand behavior.
A decade ago, oil demand growth was almost a given. Emerging markets industrialized en masse; transportation fuel demand climbed inexorably; industrial energy use marched upward. Today, that certainty has fractured. Efficiency gains, electrification of vehicles, alternative fuels and regulatory pressures have altered the trajectory. Even in markets where oil demand hasn’t peaked, it’s plateauing, or at best growing slowly.
In today’s world, traders don’t simply ask: “Will supply tighten?”
They increasingly ask: “Will demand growth falter before supply truly tightens?”
That shift matters. A potential drop in consumption, driven by EV uptake, fuel efficiency, and energy transition policies, is far more price-inhibiting than any single supply disruption is price-supporting.
Strategic Stocks and Spare Capacity
Another layer to this puzzle is the buffering effect of strategic reserves and spare capacity. Where once a refinery outage or pipeline strike would send instant ripples through crude curves, today there are more mechanisms to cushion temporary disruptions. Strategic Petroleum Reserves, coordinated production management by OPEC+, and stock builds in consuming economies are all part of a toolkit that dampens sharp price spikes.
In other words: markets aren’t as quick to panic. They assume that if one area falters, another can fill gaps at least temporarily. That assumption has become baked into pricing algorithms and risk premia.
A Broader Shift Underway
Perhaps the most profound change isn’t in oil markets alone, it’s in the broader energy landscape. The global energy transition has expanded the palette of strategic fuels. Renewables and gas are increasingly central to power generation. Electrification is eating into transportation demand. Energy systems are becoming more localized and less dependent on seaborne crude. These trends don’t make oil irrelevant—but they do reduce the hammer-lock that geopolitical risk once had on prices.
The result: oil markets behaving less like they used to.
So, Is Oil Still Critical?
Yes, but in a different way.
Oil remains essential for aviation, shipping, petrochemicals, and many industrial processes. It’s not suddenly optional. But the market’s muted response to geopolitical disruption suggests something structural has changed.
Oil is still a strategic commodity, but it’s no longer the sole arbiter of energy security. Its price now reflects not only geopolitical risk, but demand uncertainty, competitive fuels, and a world in transition. And in that world, crises that once guaranteed a spike in prices now barely trouble the market’s equilibrium. That’s not just a market signal, it’s a reflection of a broader energy evolution that’s well underway.
By Leon Stille for Oilprice.com
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