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Editorials Print edition: 2026-05-26

Oil smuggling: a dangerous parallel market

Published Updated

EDITORIAL: The surge in Iranian oil smuggling into Pakistan during the ongoing Middle East conflict has exposed serious weaknesses in the country’s energy and regulatory framework at a moment when economic stability is already under pressure.

Local refineries are now warning that illegal petroleum inflows are beginning to disrupt refinery operations and distort the formal supply chain, creating an urgent challenge the government can no longer afford to treat as secondary.

The scale of the problem is already alarming. Estimates cited by industry sources suggest that nearly 5,000 tonnes of high-speed diesel are being smuggled into the country daily, accounting for almost a quarter of national diesel consumption.

The associated revenue losses through unpaid petroleum levies and customs duties are immense.

More importantly, the unchecked inflow directly undermines formal refinery operations at a time when Pakistan’s domestic energy infrastructure already operates under considerable strain.

The concerns raised by local refineries are therefore legitimate. Companies cannot realistically be expected to invest billions of dollars into upgrading refining capacity and maintaining operational sustainability if illegal products continue undercutting formal supply channels.

Refinery economics become impossible to manage when legitimate producers must compete against untaxed and unregulated inflows moving through informal networks.

At the same time, the situation also reveals the harsh contradictions produced by economic distress. Some communities and market participants view the smuggled fuel as a temporary cushion against soaring international oil prices triggered by the Strait of Hormuz crisis and the wider US-Iran war.

Pakistan’s oil import bill has already surged sharply amid disrupted global supply chains and elevated crude prices. In a country where inflation and energy costs weigh heavily on households and transport networks alike, cheaper fuel inevitably finds willing buyers.

That reality does not justify the smuggling. But it does explain why the problem persists despite repeated crackdowns. Economic pressure creates demand for informal alternatives, particularly when formal supply remains expensive and vulnerable to global volatility.

The challenge for policymakers is therefore more complex than simply increasing enforcement operations along border regions.

The broader energy backdrop makes the issue even more sensitive. Pakistan has long failed to develop adequate strategic oil reserves despite repeated warnings about external supply vulnerabilities.

The present conflict has once again demonstrated how dangerously exposed the economy remains to disruptions in Middle Eastern shipping routes. Emergency cargo support from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait may provide temporary relief, but they do not alter the underlying structural weakness.

Against that backdrop, the emergence of a parallel fuel market becomes both economically dangerous and politically tempting. Illegal inflows may temporarily ease shortages or soften price pressures in some regions, but they simultaneously weaken the formal energy system upon which long-term stability depends.

Allowing such networks to deepen would further damage regulatory credibility, encourage organised smuggling operations and undermine already fragile state revenues.

The reports regarding calls to effectively tolerate or regularise smuggled diesel within parts of Balochistan, therefore, deserve careful scrutiny.

While local economic pressures are real, normalising illicit supply chains would send deeply damaging signals to both investors and formal industry participants. It would also risk institutionalising a shadow energy economy operating beyond meaningful oversight.

There is another dimension policymakers cannot ignore. Smuggling networks of this scale rarely function without broader governance failures.

Previous investigations had already exposed extensive collaboration involving petrol pumps, smugglers and corrupt officials. If such networks are once again expanding, then enforcement failures must be examined with seriousness rather than treated as isolated lapses.

Pakistan’s energy vulnerability cannot be resolved through informal coping mechanisms. Stability requires a functioning formal supply chain, credible enforcement and long-overdue investment in strategic reserves and domestic infrastructure.

The current situation demonstrates how quickly external geopolitical conflict can spill into internal economic disorder when underlying structural weaknesses remain unresolved.

The government, therefore, needs to act urgently on multiple fronts simultaneously: strengthen anti-smuggling enforcement, stabilise refinery operations, accelerate plans for strategic reserves and ensure that legitimate supply channels remain economically viable.

Allowing the present drift to continue would deepen both fiscal losses and energy insecurity at a moment when the country cannot afford either.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2026

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