Latest News

Crude oil shipments from Saudi Arabia’s Yanbu Port near maximum levels amid Houthi concerns

Data and industry sources indicate that daily crude loadings in Saudi Arabia's Red Sea Port of Yanbu are close to their maximum levels as tensions with Yemen's Houthi militants intensify. The kingdom also seeks to maximize oil exports.

Since the U.S. - Israel conflict with Iran began February 28, Saudi?Aramco has increased its use of the Yanbu Terminal.

Sources have said that Saudi Arabia also considers expanding its capacity of the oil pipeline to the western Red Sea Coast, which would enable the kingdom and?possibly?neighbours to transport more crude oil without having to cross the Strait of Hormuz.

Aramco didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment Tuesday.

According to Signal Ocean data, the number of barrels shipped from Yanbu increased from 3.36 million around July 10 to 4.7 million around July 13. This is a significant increase from 4.6 million around July 2.

The data revealed that the average loadings since June have been above?4 million bpd, as opposed to 973,000 bpd in the same period of 2025.

Kpler data shows that daily loadings have averaged around four million barrels over the past few weeks.

OPEC’s largest producer relies increasingly on Yanbu for exporting crude oil as disruptions in shipping through the Strait of Hormuz during the conflict has curbed Gulf exports. This has prevented hundreds of millions of barrels of?oil from leaving the area and affected other?producers.

Yemen's Houthis launched missiles against Saudi Arabia on Monday after accusing Riyadh of?bombing a?airport that they controlled. This broke a four-year-old truce between Riyadh, which is aligned with Iran, and the group.

According to industry sources, there were concerns that Yanbu might become a Houthi-target.

In March, a refinery near Yanbu was attacked. However, this incident was attributed to Iran and not the Houthis.

One shipping industry source stated that "Yanbu is at its maximum capacity and there are fears the Houthis could open another front. However, there's little room to increase shipments." Reporting by Jonathan Saul & Ahmad Ghaddar. Mark Potter (Editing)

(source: Reuters)