Iran War Oil Crisis Is Worse Because Of Bad Energy Policy


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– The piece argues that energy security is being strained by a combination of Middle East disruption and U.S. and California policy choices,using Iran’s actions in the Persian Gulf and an accompanying EIA chart as context.

– It critiques U.S.policy decisions under the Biden administration, including temporary restrictions on federal land oil and gas leases and new regulations, claiming these moves reduced drilling, refining capacity, and overall supply, while the administration claimed they were boosting refinery output and reducing prices.

– California is portrayed as tightening its oil industry through regulation, leading to lower production, refinery closures, and higher gasoline dependence on imports from other regions (even described in media headlines about shortages).

– The discussion notes a prominent industry backlash, including a Chevron letter warning that proposed California greenhouse gas rules could shutter the last remaining refineries in the state, with broader implications for neighboring states and national security.

– It highlights the view of the U.S. oil and gas industry that a domestic-and-regional approach is essential: expanding production in the Western Hemisphere (Alberta, Argentina, the U.S., Venezuela, and possibly Brazil and Mexico) could provide a diversified mix of crude and reduce exposure to global shocks.

– The piece contrasts this with the idea that simply “drill, baby, drill” won’t quickly resolve price shocks from geopolitical events, pointing to near-term refinery capacity as a bigger bottleneck and urging modernization to handle lighter crude produced domestically.

– It notes political shifts,including Donald Trump’s 2025 national energy emergency declaration and his push for streamlined permitting and expanded drilling,as part of a broader debate about energy security versus environmental policy.

– the article argues that while strategic reserves have value, true energy security lies in energy that’s physically available where it’s needed-“the safety net underneath our feet”-and in a more resilient, diversified supply chain that can weather global disruptions. The piece is attributed to Chris Bray, who also maintains a Substack.


As Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz and attacks oil tankers in the Persian Gulf, take a moment to look at this chart from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA):

Image CreditScreenshot

A series of policy choices in the U.S. has caused preventable energy insecurity that worsens the shock from foreign disruptions. The Biden administration temporarily restricted the sale of oil and gas leases on federal lands, implemented new regulations that made it harder to drill oil and refine gasoline, and then dishonestly “increased the pressure on them to boost refining capacity and bring down costs at the pump.”

Meanwhile, California has been strangling its oil industry with a regulatory environment that has reduced oil production and driven refineries to close. Here’s a much-discussed current reality, summarized in a recent Bloomberg headline: “Gasoline-Starved California Is Turning to Fuel From the Bahamas.” On social media, a random user made the point with great clarity, despite posting under a handle calling himself a ham sandwich:

In 1980 California had 43 oil refineries, and 179,700 active, exploratory, or ‘drilling’ wells.

Californias economy ranked #4 on the globe producing 622,000 barrels a day.
Price of Gas,67 cents a gallon.

Today, 39,000 active wells, 8 refineries,and price per gallon, $6.

— I want a BLT (@3584HamSammich) February 20, 2026

See that cluster of black on the California coast? The EIA says that California has about 1.5 billion barrels of proven reserves, though there are credible estimates that the state’s actual reserves are far higher. And most of it isn’t coming out of the ground, or about to.

In a letter to California officials, Chevron warned that new greenhouse gas regulations being considered by the California Air Resources Board would drive the last few refineries out of the state entirely. “The California energy industry’s economic, industrial, environmental, and national security benefits have been the foundation of a healthy, prosperous state and nation,” a Chevron official wrote. “Adversarial policies at local, regional and state levels have eroded that foundation. These proposed regulatory changes threaten to destroy it.”

The loss of more refineries in California would be a logistics threat to the state’s significant military bases, but it would also be devastating to Arizona and Nevada, which get much of their gasoline from their neighbor.

On social media, the US Oil and Gas Association (OGA) has ruthlessly mocked California’s failed governor for his recent attacks on the Trump administration over rising prices at the pump.

Ah Governor,

When it comes to talking about gas prices, you are like a small child that has accidentally wandered into a movie theater.

Except in this case – no one is being touched by your helpless cries.

They just wish you would be quiet.

Because you did this 👇 https://t.co/RFOHl6fzoJ pic.twitter.com/fdPjKTqOrT

— US Oil & Gas Association (@US_OGA) March 12, 2026

Appreciating anyone who makes fun of Gavin Newsom, I got in touch with them. The president of the OGA, Tim Stewart, views the war in Iran as a crisis that will pass, but the madness of California energy policy is a threat to the nation that keeps getting worse. The point, for now, is to see what the bottleneck in the Persian Gulf is teaching us about energy stability. “Smart economies learn from circumstances like this,” he said.

Early in Donald Trump’s second term, national energy policy took a hard turn away from the Biden years. Trump declared a national energy emergency on inauguration day, arguing for the the need to secure “a reliable, diversified, and affordable supply of energy.” Among the elements of the plan: more drilling, expedited regulatory approval for new oil infrastructure, and fewer regulations.

Stewart argues that more domestic oil and gas production isn’t primarily about cheap gas and consumer convenience. “If your energy supplies depend on a foreign choke point,” he said, “that’s a national security issue.”

But domestic production is only part of the solution. “The administration is working to build out a block in the Western Hemisphere that will provide that insurance in the future,” he said. “Between Alberta, Argentina, the U.S., Venezuela and depending on if Brazil and Mexico play nice – that is 40% of the global production today,” providing “a wide mix of heavy, light, sour and sweet crude.”

With that expanded and diversified supply, Stewart said, “the next time something bad happens across the globe, the Western Hemisphere will be truly insulated from price shocks elsewhere.”

The policy of “drill, baby, drill” isn’t going to settle the Iran War price shocks soon, Stewart said, because it’s a slow process to bring on significant new production. And refinery capacity is a bigger near-term problem. “Our refinery infrastructure is still outdated and designed to process the heavier sour crude we used to import from the Middle East, Canada and Venezuela,” he said. “They are slowly in the process of recalibrating to take the light sweet crude we produce here.”

And new refinery capacity should follow, incentivized by the Trump administration’s energy policies. In a positive sign from Texas, investors are planning to build the first new American refinery in fifty years.

Finally, as the administration releases emergency oil reserves, Stewart argues that the Strategic Petroleum Reserve isn’t our real source of energy security. The real safety net oil reserve, he says, is “the one underneath our feet.” We just need to be able to use it.


Chris Bray is a former infantry sergeant in the U.S. Army, and has a history PhD from the University of California Los Angeles, not that it did him any good. He also posts on Substack, at “Tell Me How This Ends,” here.


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