Oil Updates — crude set for biggest weekly drop since Oct on tariff uncertainty, supply gains

Brent futures rose 17 cents, or 0.24 percent, to $69.63 a barrel by 6:15 a.m. Saudi time. Shutterstock
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Updated 07 March 2025
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Oil Updates — crude set for biggest weekly drop since Oct on tariff uncertainty, supply gains

  • US tariff suspension for Mexico, Canada provides temporary reprieve
  • But trade war risks and OPEC+ supply increase weigh on market

NEW DELHI: Oil prices were little changed on Friday but were set for their biggest weekly decline since October as the uncertainty around US tariff policy is creating concerns about demand growth at the same time major producers are set to increase output.

Brent futures rose 17 cents, or 0.24 percent, to $69.63 a barrel by 6:15 a.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate futures rose 12 cents, or 0.18 percent, to $66.48 a barrel.

However, for the week Brent is down 4.9 percent, set for its biggest weekly decline since the week of Oct. 14. WTI is set to drop 4.8 percent, also its biggest weekly fall since that week.

Markets, including oil, have been whipsawed by fluctuating trade policy in the US, the world’s biggest oil consumer.

“It looks like the financial markets are in full panic mode, no longer easily pacified by Trump’s one-month postponements and exemptions on import tariffs,” said Vandana Hari, founder of oil market analysis provider Vanda Insights.

“That leaves crude stuck around four-month lows, albeit vulnerable to further slides,” she added.

On Thursday, US President Donald Trump suspended the 25 percent tariffs he had imposed on most goods from Canada and Mexico until April 2, although steel and aluminum tariffs would still go into effect on March 12 as scheduled.

The amended order does not fully cover Canadian energy products, which are under a separate 10 percent levy.

The tariffs themselves are considered a drag on economic growth and therefore oil demand growth. But the uncertainty over the policy is also slowing business decisions, which is also impacting the economy.

“The risks to oil prices remain tilted to the downside with new supply from OPEC+ and non-OPEC producers expected to push the market well into an oversupply,” Fitch’s research unit, BMI, said in a note.

Brent prices on Wednesday fell to their lowest since December 2021 after US crude inventories rose and in the wake of the decision by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, known as OPEC+, to increase their output quotas.

The group said on Monday that it had decided to proceed with a planned April output increase, adding 138,000 barrels per day to the market.

Some of the downward momentum in prices has eased as the US is looking at steps to halt exports from key OPEC producer Iran.

“We are going to shut down Iran’s oil sector and drone manufacturing capabilities,” US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in his first major speech to Wall Street executives.

Reuters reported on Thursday that Trump is considering a plan to inspect Iranian oil tankers at sea using an accord aimed at weapons of mass destruction, according to sources, part of the US president’s “maximum pressure” to drive Iranian oil exports down to zero.


War threatens food supplies in Asia as fertilizer prices soar 

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War threatens food supplies in Asia as fertilizer prices soar 

RIYADH: How could a missile strike on a Qatari gas facility drive up the price of rice in Bangladesh? The answer lies in an unappealing commodity, yet one that forms a significant part of the world’s food supply: fertilizer. 

Qatar burns natural gas to produce ammonia, which is then converted into urea. Urea is added to the soil, where grain is grown. 

According to the South China Morning Post, disrupting the first step, as Iran did when it struck QatarEnergy’s liquefied natural gas processing facility on March 1, will have cascading effects along the food production chain. 

The price of urea in Southeast Asia has jumped by more than 40 percent since the Qatari LNG plant went offline. 

By March 9, prices for April and May shipments had surpassed $700 per tonne, their highest level since the third quarter of 2022, when the Russia-Ukraine War disrupted global supplies. 

The Gulf region currently accounts for about 45 percent of global urea exports. 

But the Iranian attacks have made passage through the Strait of Hormuz extremely risky. As a result, shipments representing about one-third of the world’s fertilizer trade have been halted, with Asia being among the most vulnerable regions. 

3 to 4 million tonnes of fertilizer will not reach markets monthly 

According to estimates by analytics firm Signal Ocean, between 3 and 4 million tonnes of fertilizer per month will not reach markets as long as the Strait of Hormuz remains closed. 

The impact will be particularly severe on South Asia. Pakistan imports most of its LNG from Qatar and the UAE, while Qatar supplies India with more than 40 percent of its LNG imports and about two-thirds of Bangladesh’s. 

All 32 ammonia plants in India — one of the world’s largest producers of nitrogen fertilizers — run on gas. According to Indian media reports, one plant has shut down due to shortages, while three others have reduced production. 

CRU Group vice president of market intelligence and pricing Chris Lawson believes the three South Asian countries will have to “pay a very high price” for fertilizers if they can obtain them on the open market. If they cannot, it will ultimately affect their upcoming harvests.  

Timing is crucial, as farmers in northern India and Pakistan typically fertilize their summer monsoon crops, such as rice, sugarcane, corn, and cotton, between April and July. 

CRU Group estimates that if the disruption to Gulf supplies continues until early April, South Asian buyers could need up to 1.5 million tonnes of additional supply per month. 

The impact of the delay in August 

What makes managing this impending crisis even more difficult is that its effects are not immediate. Fertilizers not purchased in March do not necessarily mean empty shelves in April, but rather a decline in crops in August, by which time the season will be over and nothing can be done about it. 

In an analysis distributed to clients earlier this month, CRU Group warned that if the Gulf crisis continues beyond March 20, “the main risk will shift to wider supply disruptions” due to restricted export routes and limited storage capacity. 

Even if tensions subside, restarting idle production capacity will take an additional two weeks, resulting in a “significant reduction” in Middle East supplies until at least late March. 

Disruptions of this magnitude have triggered a chain reaction in the past, according to Signal Ocean. Farmers use less fertilizer, marginal land requiring more inputs is left uncultivated, and producers switch to crops with lower nitrogen requirements. 

For example, soybeans may replace corn, leading to a surplus in one market and a shortage in another. If enough producers abandon corn cultivation, animal feed will become scarce and prices will rise, followed by higher prices for farmed meat and fish. 

India, China most vulnerable to disruptions 

According to Signal Ocean, India and China are the most vulnerable to supply disruptions, as each relies on the Gulf for approximately 20 percent of its fertilizer imports. 

The company explained that the likely outcome would be lower global crop yields, higher feed and food prices, and increased volatility in agricultural commodity markets. 

Alternative exporters, most notably the US and Brazil, may attempt to compensate for some of the shortfall, but the company indicated that the timing and scale of this response will be crucial in determining the severity of the impact. 

Impossible Choices 

For individual farmers at the periphery of supply chains, the effects could be devastating, according to Alexandra Brand, vice president of sustainability and corporate affairs at Syngenta Group. 

She explained that these farmers already operate on very thin profit margins and may be forced to make difficult choices in the coming months if fertilizer costs rise sharply and supplies dwindle. 

Brand explained that small farmers, family farms, and large commercial farms will all feel the pressure, as each will have to choose between paying prices they cannot afford, cultivating less land, or forgoing fertilizer altogether and accepting a smaller harvest. 

She said that the continued disruption of fertilizer supplies threatens “agricultural productivity and food security for millions of people.” 

Currently, fields are still being planted but most of the fertilizer that was supposed to reach Asian farms is either stuck in the Gulf or has not been produced at all. 

This year’s harvest will reveal this reality. By the time the effects become apparent, it may be too late to act.