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Business & Commerce

Pakistan says POL stocks are sufficient into June, but keeps a close eye on supply risks

Last updated: May 4, 2026 11:44 pm
Yamna Shahid
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Pakistan says POL stocks are sufficient into June, but keeps a close eye on supply risks
Pakistan says POL stocks are sufficient into June, but keeps a close eye on supply risks
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has assured markets and consumers that petroleum oil and lubricants, or POL, stocks are in place to meet demand into the third week of June, as officials try to calm nerves over regional instability and the knock-on effect on energy supplies. The government’s position, repeated in recent official reviews and regulator statements, is that the country is not facing an immediate fuel shortage even though the broader external environment remains uneasy.

The message from Islamabad has been fairly consistent: there is enough product in the system for now, and the bigger concern is making sure companies do not let inventories slip below required levels if global shipping or crude flows come under pressure. OGRA has said the country holds sufficient stocks to meet existing demand, while also reminding oil marketing companies to maintain mandatory 20-day reserves under their licence conditions.

That balancing act matters because Pakistan is heavily dependent on imported energy, and a large share of crude and refined fuel supplies move through sensitive regional routes. Reporting over the past year has repeatedly tied official concern to tensions in the Middle East and the risk of disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint that matters enormously for import-dependent economies like Pakistan.

Behind the scenes, officials have been reviewing not just headline stock numbers but the whole chain: import schedules, refinery output, shipping arrivals and the pace at which companies lift product from local refineries. In more recent government meetings, ministers and senior officials were told that domestic petroleum inventories remained stable, while the state continued to monitor crude and refined-product logistics closely.

There is, though, a familiar complication. Having “enough stocks” on paper is one thing; keeping the market smooth is another. Industry reports and regulator warnings suggest Islamabad has been especially wary of panic buying, uneven retail supply and the tendency of some firms to run lean when international prices are volatile. That is why official messaging has paired reassurance with instructions to maintain higher preparedness.

Recent official briefings give a rough sense of the cushion policymakers have been working with. In March 2026, government reviews said petrol availability was comfortable, diesel cover stood at roughly 23 to 24 days, and crude stocks were lower at around 11 days. Separate reporting around the same period cited petroleum ministry officials as saying the country had around 25 days of petrol and diesel stocks.

That context helps explain why authorities have sounded confident, but not exactly relaxed. Pakistan has dealt before with supply-chain strains, foreign exchange pressure and abrupt swings in oil prices, so even a short-lived regional shock can ripple through domestic pricing, transport costs and inflation. In recent months, the government has kept fuel supply under active review while also weighing the fiscal and inflationary effects of global market volatility.

For consumers, the immediate takeaway is simple enough: there is no official sign of a looming nationwide fuel shortage. For policymakers, it is a bit messier than that. The state is trying to buy time, keep inventories comfortable and prevent market anxiety from turning into real disruption. Whether stocks remain sufficient deeper into June and beyond will depend less on today’s reassurance and more on uninterrupted imports, disciplined inventory management and how the regional security picture evolves in the weeks ahead.

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