A Pakistan petrol shortage warning has been issued by the country’s top oil industry body, with fuel reserves at a dangerously low level and several supply problems hitting at the same time. The Oil Companies Advisory Council (OCAC) sent an urgent letter to the federal government on July 15, 2026, asking for immediate action to stop a fuel crisis before it reaches ordinary consumers at the pump.
How Much Petrol Does Pakistan Have Right Now?
Pakistan currently has about 370,000 metric tons of petrol, which is roughly equal to 15 days of national consumption. That number looks manageable at first, but the real picture is worse. The actual available stocks are lower because recently imported fuel remains stuck in customs due to delays in the WeBOC clearance system. So the 15 days figure is already an overcount.
Petrol inventories, including local refinery production, are enough for only about 14 days based on current demand trends. Industry data shows petrol sales during the first 13 days of July averaged 25,000 tonnes per day, almost 16% higher than projections and 26% above the same period last year. That kind of demand surge, when stocks are already thin, is a serious combination.
Why Is the Pakistan Petrol Shortage Risk So High Now?
Several problems have landed at the same time, and together they are putting the fuel supply chain under real pressure.
1. Customs Clearance Is Stuck
Technical issues in the Customs WeBOC system could delay the clearance of fuel shipments arriving between July 15 and July 17, increasing pressure on domestic supplies. Three petrol cargoes are scheduled to arrive in that window, making their timely clearance critical to maintaining uninterrupted supplies, particularly in upcountry markets. Cities like Lahore, Faisalabad, and Multan depend heavily on supply chains that run from port to inland depots, so a delay at customs hits inland areas hardest.
2. A PSO Import Was Blocked in June
The situation was made worse after one planned import cargo of Pakistan State Oil (PSO) was not approved by the National Coordination and Management Council (NCMC) in June 2026, disrupting expected inventory replenishment. That missed cargo is a gap that was never filled, and it shows up directly in today’s low stock numbers.
3. Oil Companies Are Running Short on Cash
This is the deepest structural problem. The crisis is being compounded by severe liquidity constraints faced by oil marketing companies (OMCs) due to the continued non-payment of Rs66.7 billion in pending Price Differential Claims (PDCs). These are amounts the government owes the companies for past pricing arrangements, and they have not been paid.
The real-world impact is significant. Industry estimates show the blocked amount could finance nearly 250,000 tonnes of petrol, equivalent to almost five import cargoes, which could substantially strengthen the country’s fuel reserves. In other words, the money the government owes could have already prevented the current shortfall.
4. Global Prices and Demand Are Both Rising
International developments, particularly tensions around the Strait of Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb, have pushed up global oil prices and freight costs. When consumers hear that prices may go up, they fill their tanks early. The spike in consumption is being linked to expectations of another hike in petroleum prices, prompting both consumers and dealers to ramp up purchases. That cycle of pre-emptive buying drains stocks faster than any forecast.
What OCAC Is Asking the Government to Do
The OCAC has asked the Petroleum Minister for urgent action on three fronts: immediate release of the Rs66.7 billion in outstanding PDC claims, directing relevant authorities to remove WeBOC bottlenecks for faster customs clearance, and ensuring full government support for uninterrupted import and distribution of petroleum products across the country.
The industry has also warned that it no longer has the financial capacity to absorb unilateral changes to the pricing formula or any further increase in working capital requirements while financing higher-cost imports. That is a clear signal that oil companies are at a breaking point and cannot keep subsidising the supply chain on their own.
What Happens If Nothing Changes?
Failure to act could trigger the familiar cycle of panic buying, hoarding, and dry-outs at filling stations that has accompanied previous fuel shortages. Pakistan has been through this before, and every past shortage followed a similar pattern: slow official response, then sudden queues, then price shocks.
Industry officials warn that swift action is necessary to prevent disruptions to transportation, businesses, and consumers if demand rises while supply remains constrained. The transport sector, which moves goods across the country, runs on petrol and diesel. Any shortage at the pump quickly becomes a shortage of goods on shelves.
Government Response So Far
The Petroleum Division has asked OCAC to issue a public statement confirming that there are sufficient stocks in the country and that all imports of petroleum products are lined up to meet demand, while OGRA has been asked to deploy vigilance teams to verify available stocks at OMC depots and retail outlets. OGRA has urged the public to remain calm, assuring that there are sufficient petroleum reserves in the country, and has advised against unnecessary panic buying.
The gap between the government’s public reassurances and the oil industry’s urgent internal warnings is itself a concern. The OCAC letter was marked urgent and addressed directly to the minister, it was not a routine communication. How quickly the government acts on the three demands will determine whether the next two weeks stay calm or turn chaotic at filling stations.
For Pakistani consumers, the simplest advice right now is to keep your tank reasonably full without panic-buying, watch for any official price change announcements from OGRA (Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority), and note that Pakistan State Oil (PSO), as the country’s largest fuel distributor, is at the centre of both the blocked import and the path to a solution.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many days of petrol stock does Pakistan have right now?
Pakistan has around 370,000 metric tons of petrol in storage, which covers roughly 14 to 15 days of national demand at current consumption levels. However, part of that fuel is stuck in customs and is not immediately available for sale or distribution.
What is OCAC and why is its warning important?
OCAC stands for the Oil Companies Advisory Council. It is the main representative body of oil marketing companies (OMCs) operating in Pakistan. When OCAC sends an urgent letter to the petroleum minister, it means the companies that actually import and sell fuel are telling the government they cannot keep the supply chain running without government action.
What are Price Differential Claims (PDCs) and why do they matter here?
PDCs are payments that oil companies are owed by the government from past periods when fuel was sold at government-set prices below the market cost. The government owes Rs66.7 billion in these unpaid claims. Without that money, OMCs cannot finance new fuel imports, which directly reduces the amount of petrol coming into the country.
Could there be a shortage at petrol pumps across Pakistan?
OCAC has warned of possible localised shortages, especially in upcountry cities away from the ports. If the three incoming cargoes are delayed at customs and no new imports are arranged quickly, pumps in inland cities could run dry first. OGRA says the situation is under control, but the industry’s warning is serious and should not be ignored.













