California oil dependency reveals wider US energy risks | This is America
California oil dependency reveals wider US energy risks | This is America
California Oil Crisis Hits Hard: Last Tanker From Middle East Arrives as Iran War Shuts Down the Flow
This is breaking right now. As of today, the final oil tanker from the Gulf before the Iran conflict escalated has docked in Long Beach, California, unloading two million barrels of crude. That shipment marks the end of an era for a state already staring down a six-week oil and gas reserve.
California imports roughly one-third of its foreign oil from the Middle East. With the Strait of Hormuz effectively a war zone, the spigot is turned off. The rest of the country should pay attention—because what happens in Long Beach does not stay in Long Beach.
Six Weeks and Counting: California's Dangerous Countdown
State officials are downplaying the immediate panic, but the math is brutal. Six weeks of supply at current burn rates. No new tankers lined up. Refineries already adjusting output. Drivers in Los Angeles and the Central Valley will feel this first at the pump, then in supply chains for everything from food to medicine.
The arrival of this tanker is not a victory lap. It is a warning flare. California has long bragged about its green transition while quietly leaning on the same unstable region it claims to want to move away from. That spin collapses the moment war breaks out.
The Strait of Hormuz: The Choke Point America Pretends Doesn't Exist
Twenty percent of global oil moves through that narrow waterway. Iran has made clear it can disrupt traffic at will. Yet Washington still sells the myth of U.S. energy independence while Gulf crude keeps flowing into our refineries.
This week's events expose the lie. Domestic shale production cannot instantly replace Middle East barrels when a major chokepoint gets contested. Strategic reserves are finite. Political posturing does not fill gas tanks.
Broader U.S. Risks: This Is California Problem
Other states importing heavy crude from the same sources are watching the same clock. East Coast and Gulf Coast refineries built for foreign heavy oil face similar squeezes. Prices are already ticking higher this week. Expect volatility to spread fast.
The real scandal is how little has changed since the last energy shocks. Decades of warnings ignored. Infrastructure built for cheap foreign oil instead of resilience. Politicians on both sides peddling comforting narratives while the supply lines remain fragile.
What Comes Next: Hard Choices, Not Empty Rhetoric
California will likely tap every drop of in-state production and beg for federal releases from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. That buys time, nothing more. The deeper fix requires honest talk about diversification, rapid permitting for domestic projects, and realistic timelines for alternatives.
Spin will not solve this. The tanker in Long Beach is the last one for the foreseeable future. The war in Iran just made America's energy vulnerabilities impossible to ignore.
This is Jessica Ali for Global 1 News. 🔥
Source: Al Jazeera via YouTube — 2026-05-11T21:48:47+00:00.
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