United States — Oil Import Dependency
Detailed breakdown of United States's crude oil import profile: share originating from the Middle East, top supplier countries, exposure to Strait of Hormuz transit risk and total net import volume. Sourced from the U.S. EIA, IEA and JODI Oil World Database.
Key statistics
- Region: Americas
- Middle East crude oil share: 9%
- Net crude oil imports: 6,300 thousand barrels/day
- Top supplier: Canada (60% of imports)
- Strait of Hormuz exposure: 8% of imports transit Hormuz
- Risk tier: Low
What this means for United States
A sustained Strait of Hormuz disruption would directly affect roughly 8% of United States's crude inflows. With 9% of imports sourced from Middle East producers and Canada alone supplying 60%, alternative supply requires re-routing through the Cape of Good Hope, the SUMED pipeline or increased reliance on US, Brazilian and West African crudes.
See the full route cost projections and the Hormuz reopening probability model to understand the timeline and cost of alternative supply.
Compare with regional peers (Americas)
| Country | ME share | Net imports | Hormuz exposure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Uruguay | 32% | 40 kbd | 30% |
| Chile | 22% | 220 kbd | 21% |
| Peru | 18% | 130 kbd | 17% |
| Panama | 14% | 100 kbd | 13% |
| Brazil | 12% | 200 kbd | 11% |
| Argentina | 8% | 60 kbd | 7% |
| Costa Rica | 8% | 50 kbd | 7% |
| Canada | 5% | 480 kbd | 4% |