On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated military strikes against Iranian strategic assets. Reuters has confirmed multiple explosions near Kharg Island, the terminal responsible for approximately 90–95% of Iran's crude oil exports. Any damages to the terminal’s export infrastructure have not been disclosed.
Vulcan Infrastructure Watch (IW) reviewed satellite imagery of Kharg Island immediately following the strikes. Initial imagery from February 28 was fully obscured by cloud cover. Partial visibility was achieved on March 1, and the results of that assessment are presented below.
Located approximately 25 km off Iran’s Bushehr coast, Kharg Island is the most critical node in Iran’s energy architecture. As one of the world's highest-capacity terminals, its facilities have historically handled volumes exceeding 2 million barrels per day (mb/d).
Using our agent we asked for a publicly available information dashboard on Kharg Island and its infrastructure.
You can view the complete dashboard - and clients with API key can import the dashboard:
|
Metric |
Details |
|
Export Share |
90–95% of Iranian crude; 5x the volume of all other domestic terminals combined. Simultaneous loading of 8-9 Supertanker. |
|
Current Volume |
~1.6 mb/d average. Iran loadings to ~3 mb/d of recent confirmed by SynMax Dark Oil. |
|
Primary Offtaker |
China. Significant disruption forces Chinese refiners to seek substitutes on the spot market. |
|
Lack of Redundancy |
The Jask terminal remains functionally incomplete. Effective pipeline capacity is only 300,000 b/d, compared to Kharg’s 1.6 mb/d. |
Satellite Imagery & Assessment
Vulcan Infrastructure Watch (IW) reviewed imagery following the strikes. While February 28 imagery was fully obscured by cloud cover, partial visibility was achieved on March 1.
Kharg Island — February 27, 2026. Southern terminal area, clear condition. Imagery: Planet Labs PBC.
Kharg Island — March 1, 2026. Southern terminal area, partial cloud cover.Imagery: Planet Labs PBC.
Market Context
Brent crude closed Friday Feb 28 at $72.48/bbl (+2.45%), a seven-month high.
If the Strait of Hormuz is closed several pundits are noting over $100/bbl prices.
Decision: Resume production increases at an accelerated pace for April.
OPEC+ agreed to resume oil production increases at a slightly accelerated pace as a conflict sparked by US-Israeli strikes on Iran threatened to bolster a rally in crude prices. Key members led by Saudi Arabia and Russia will add 206,000 barrels per day in April, according to a statement after their monthly video conference on Sunday.
This is a bigger jump than the standard 137,000 b/d increment the group had been using - and the timing is clearly deliberate.
Vulcan Infrastructure Watch remains committed to monitoring significant events and providing insights to our customers regarding the status of affected energy infrastructure.