Pakistan has enough petroleum, oil and lubricant stocks to meet current needs until the third week of June, according to the latest official position, as authorities try to reassure the public over fuel availability amid regional supply concerns. Recent parliamentary and media reporting said petroleum officials had informed lawmakers that the country held roughly 27 days of petrol and 21 days of diesel reserves, with the broader fuel cover generally described in the 24-to-28-day range.
The statement is important because it comes at a time of heightened anxiety over energy security and possible disruption to regional oil routes. Officials have stressed that current stocks are adequate for now, even as they acknowledge that Pakistan still does not have a fully developed long-term strategic petroleum reserve system comparable to larger regional economies.
That gap has now become part of the policy debate. The government has formed a high-level committee to prepare recommendations for building 90-day strategic petroleum reserves, with the plan aimed at creating a more durable buffer against future supply shocks. The committee was asked to submit its recommendations by May 8, 2026.
So while the immediate message from the petroleum side is one of reassurance, the larger picture is more mixed. Pakistan says it has enough fuel for the coming weeks, but it is also moving to fix a deeper structural weakness in its energy-security planning.
