Friday, 24 April 2026

Trump: Iran Is on a Deadline, Oil Infrastructure Soon to Be Damaged by Lack of Exports

 

Aerial view of large oil storage tanks in Iran, featuring the national flag colors, with pipelines extending across the desert landscape.
Iran has to begin exporting oil immediately to avoid permanently damaging its infrastructure. Image generated by AI.

In a recent press conference, reporters asked President Trump if he needed more time for the Iran war and whether this violated his promise to defeat Iran in under a month. Trump responded, “We don’t need more time. The US is not under time pressure. Iran is.” He went on to point out that wars take time. The Vietnam War took over a decade, but “I took the country out militarily in the first four weeks. Now all we are doing is sitting back” and seeing what deal they offer.

“And if they don’t want to make a deal, then I will finish it up militarily.” He explained that the US had hit over 75% of the total targets originally selected before the operation began. “We have knocked out their manufacturing. We’ve knocked out their missile production. We’ve knocked out their drone production. We’ve knocked out everything.”

The reporter kept pushing him for an exact deadline and an end for the war, but Trump remained unperturbed. “I don’t want to rush myself,” President Trump said of U.S.-Iran negotiations.

“Every source is saying ‘Trump is under time pressure.’ You know who is under time pressure? They are, because if they don’t get their oil moving, their whole oil infrastructure is going to explode because they have no place to store it. If they have to stop it, something happens underground that essentially renders it in very poor shape.” 

Trump acknowledged jokingly that he did not understand exactly how the damage occurs, but said his advisors did. And he is correct about the damage.

Iran has only about 20 million barrels of spare onshore storage capacity. With surplus production of 1.5 million barrels per day unable to be exported, those tanks fill in just 13 days, a hard physical deadline that diplomatic maneuvering cannot alter. Once storage is full, production must halt, and halting production triggers irreversible geological damage.

Forced shut-ins after as few as four days break reservoir pressure balance, drive water and gas intrusion, and trigger paraffin buildup that clogs tubing and pores. The specific mechanism is called water coning: when production stops, water sitting below the oil pushes upward into the well, trapping oil in rock pores where it becomes difficult or impossible to extract. 

The result is a permanent loss of output. Iran’s fields were already declining at 5–8% per year before the U.S. blockade began. Forced shutdowns could permanently eliminate 300,000 to 500,000 barrels per day of production capacity, equivalent to $9–15 billion in annual revenue that cannot be recovered.

The blockade producing this pressure is deliberate. Treasury Secretary Bessent has signaled a strategy of inflicting long-term damage to Iran’s oil infrastructure without direct military force. Restarting shut-in wells can take months and cost billions, and in some cases production never fully returns.

On the diplomatic track, U.S.-Iran talks collapsed on April 12. Trump then declared a naval blockade of Iranian ports, with the U.S. Navy preventing ships from entering or exiting. Iran briefly declared the Strait of Hormuz open on April 17, but Trump confirmed the port blockade would remain regardless. Iran closed the strait again on April 18. Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf stated that reopening the strait is impossible as long as the U.S. blockade stands. 

Rystad Energy estimates Iran’s energy infrastructure will require up to $19 billion in repairs from direct strike damage alone, with full production recovery potentially taking two years, separate from and in addition to the permanent underground reservoir damage accumulating from forced production shut-ins.

Trump made it clear that he is going to patiently take his time and get the best deal possible for the American people. “I don’t want to rush it because you guys are trying to make us look as bad as possible. I want to take my time. We have plenty of time, and I want to get a deal. I want to get a great deal where our nation and the world are safe from lunatics with nuclear weapons.”

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