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The ‘imminent’ oil crisis isn’t at the pump—it’s under your hood

Jordan Blum
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Jordan Blum
Jordan Blum
Editor, Energy
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Jordan Blum
By
Jordan Blum
Jordan Blum
Editor, Energy
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May 29, 2026, 3:06 AM ET
Take 5 Oil Change shop building. (Photo by: Don and Melinda Crawford/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Take 5 Oil Change shop building. (Photo by: Don and Melinda Crawford/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)Photo by: Don and Melinda Crawford/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
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Prices at the pump have surged and global fertilizer shortages are spreading because of the war in Iran, but the most immediate supply chain crisis hitting consumers may be one that arrives every 5,000 miles: the routine engine oil change.

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Despite the United States’ world-leading oil production and refining capacity, the country is increasingly dependent on Middle Eastern supplies for the specific base oils that comprise most modern motor oils and lubricants. Now, lubricant refiners, automakers, and oil change service stations are sounding the alarm—prices are spiking, and supply shortages will hit in June.

The catalyst is the ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz since late February. Spot prices for the affected base oils have nearly tripled to all-time highs, while many motor oil prices are up roughly 35% and still climbing, according to industry analysts.

The Independent Lubricant Manufacturers Association has warned of a “global base oil supply crisis” and an “imminent shortage” of low-viscosity motor oils—the most common grades used in newer vehicles today.

“[Auto shops] are being warned by their suppliers that availability will be a problem in June, and certain types of oil will become more scarce,” said Michael Chung, senior director of market intelligence for the Auto Care Association. “They’re actually expecting a huge [motor] oil price increase in June.”

Chung told Fortune that more people are expected to delay oil changes as prices rise, triggering a temporary dip in demand. Even so, the situation hasn’t yet reached a point where shops cannot perform the service.

“People are doing the things that are urgent, but waiting on things that aren’t so critical. I just feel like the consumer is a punching bag these days,” Chung said. “It’s inflation from all sides and the stress of everything that’s going on in the world. Customers have basically been absorbing costs.”

The crux of the problem lies with so-called Group III base oils, primarily sourced from the Middle East. About 60% of those base oils go toward motor oil and other automotive applications, but they also supply critical lubricants for industrial manufacturing, agriculture, and the military—all of which depend on them to keep heavy machinery running.

Tom Glenn, president of Petroleum Trends International and editor of the lubricants publication JobbersWorld, explained that modern motor oils are highly engineered with demanding performance and efficiency requirements. They require specialized base oils, and the precise additive packages used often require the same base oils. While the industry is working to develop alternative formulations, viable solutions are still in progress.

The American Petroleum Institute, which sets industry standards, invoked “emergency provisional licensing” to give manufacturers flexibility as they pivot to alternative base oil supplies—typically lower quality—not directly impacted by the war. But Glenn stressed this is not a blanket waiver: Each waiver application requires separate technical documentation demonstrating that performance standards won’t be compromised. The U.S. shortage, in other words, is not for all lubricants—it’s for consistent, fully compliant lubricants.

“I think the pain will grow to a point where solutions will be found,” Glenn told Fortune. “Running out of oil is not an option. A car rental fleet is not going to say, ‘No, we have no cars to rent today because we no longer have oil to change in these vehicles.’

“For consumers. I don’t think there’s a need for panic yet,” he added. “There is a need for awareness that prices are going to go up.”

Sudden wave of awareness

Costa Kapothanasis, CEO of the oil change retail chain Costa Oil, jokingly posted a photo on social media showing canola oil being funneled into an engine block. The caption: “How we are responding to the motor oil shortage.”

He also has shared internal memos from Toyota and Nissan warning of the shortages. Toyota and Exxon Mobil offered “substitution guidelines” for lubricants. Nissan cited “reduced production capacity for most lubricant products,” saying it is allocating supplies at 55% of prior-year volumes and seeking alternatives from other suppliers.

Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, pointed to an AutoZone memo warning that the industry is “facing the largest supply shortage of lubricating fluids in the modern history of America” with supplies falling roughly 40%.

“This is the collateral damage and the cascading impact of the strait being shut down,” De Haan told Fortune. “Your next oil change may be more of a headache. Expect to pay more. It’s not that the dealer just wants to mark it up; it’s a supply-and-availability issue, and that may not fix itself until well into 2027.”

The grades most affected are light-viscosity synthetic oils, including 0W-8, 0W-16, and 0W-20.

The major lubricants manufacturers—Valvoline, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP Castrol, and Shell’s Pennzoil and Quaker State brands—generally carry higher costs and stricter standards. Glenn expects smaller, private-label manufacturers to gain market share during this crisis, as they did during the COVID-19 pandemic rebound. The major companies said in statements that they are adequately supplied for now to meet contractual obligations and are working proactively on compliant alternative formulations But reformulations take time given the technical, safety, and regulatory hurdles, they said.

Exxon Mobil is working to produce more Group III base oils from its Baytown, Texas refining complex, but that won’t be completed until 2028. Chevron aims to churn out the specific base oils from its Pascagoula, Mississippi refinery, which would come online at the end of this year or early 2027.

In the three months of the war, the industry has seen three rapid waves of major price hikes—unprecedented for a sector that relies on gradual, predictable pricing movements, Glenn said.

“It was eye opening to see three price increases come in so quickly,” Glenn said. “It was really the significant magnitude and the frequency.”

How this unfolded

After the U.S. and Israel initiated the war, Iran responded by striking Gulf neighbors and their refining infrastructure. Among the targets were the three primary producers of Group III base oils: Shell’s Pearl GTL complex in Ras Laffan, Qatar; the BAPCO refinery in Bahrain; and the ADNOC Ruwais refinery in the United Arab Emirates. The Pearl facility was particularly hard hit, and Shell says it will take about a year to repair.

Even if the strait reopens and oil flows resume, the Group III supply won’t return to normal anytime soon given the damages, said Amanda Hay, deputy managing editor for global base oils at ICIS information services firm.

Group I and II base oils are lower quality, so modern engine oils have come to depend on Group III supplies, which are more easily refined from certain Middle Eastern petroleum grades through sophisticated hydroprocessing techniques.

“The U.S. is uniquely exposed here because we take the largest share of exports from the [Middle East],” Hay said. “What the U.S. produces is great for gasoline, but it is not ideal for base oil.”

About 44% of the U.S. Group III supplies come from the Middle East. Another 30% is shipped from South Korea, but Korean imports also are at risk because Korea largely refines its base oils with crude oil from the Middle East.

“The automotive industry is moving towards a greater reliance on Group III, and we were moving toward greater reliance on foreign supply for Group III,” Glenn said. “That’s where you had somewhat of a perfect storm of problems occur where we need more and less is available. And that’s where we are today.”

Other refineries cannot easily pivot to produce more Group III base oils either, largely because any spare capacity is devoted to diesel and jet fuel, which are more profitable and face their own supply constraints.

Nearly 50% of crude oil is used to make gasoline, while 30% goes to diesel. Just over 10% is set aside for jet fuel. Lubricants account for only 1%—relatively small in volume, but critical in function.

“This is 1% of the barrel. It’s small, but quite important because you do need motor oil to run your car,” Hay said, “unless you’re in an EV.”

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.
About the Author
Jordan Blum
By Jordan BlumEditor, Energy

Jordan Blum is the Energy editor at Fortune, overseeing coverage of a growing global energy sector for oil and gas, transition businesses, renewables, and critical minerals.

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