EuroWire, BRUSSELS: Europe is heading into the peak travel season with a sharply tighter jet fuel market after cargoes from the Middle East stopped reaching the region in April, cutting a major supply source and lifting prices. Shipping data showed no jet fuel loaded from the Middle East was bound for Europe during the month, a break with normal trade flows that has forced buyers to seek replacement barrels elsewhere. European jet fuel prices have climbed back above $200 a barrel as supply tightened.

The disruption matters because Europe remains structurally short of aviation fuel. The region consumes about 1.6 million barrels a day of jet fuel and kerosene but produces roughly 1.1 million barrels, leaving an import gap of at least 500,000 barrels a day. Before the April halt, the Middle East supplied about 375,000 barrels a day to Europe, equal to roughly three quarters of the region’s net jet fuel imports. The April stoppage was the first such month in available shipping data dating back to 2017.
The European Commission has responded by tightening oversight of fuel availability across the bloc as governments, airports and airlines try to keep supply moving ahead of summer schedules. Brussels has set up a fuel observatory to track stocks and flows and to help prevent supply imbalances between member states. Commission officials have said current data still show enough jet fuel to cover demand for now, even as the loss of Middle East cargoes has increased pressure on storage, logistics and procurement across the market.
Alternative Supplies Tighten Market
Alternative supply has started to fill part of the gap. Europe has drawn record jet fuel inflows from the United States and Nigeria, and Nigeria’s Dangote refinery has lifted exports to Europe to record levels as traders redirected cargoes toward the region. Even so, the shift has not fully eased strain on the market because replacement barrels are more costly and must travel longer distances. ACI Europe has said no airport in the region is currently facing a jet fuel shortage and that flights are operating normally.
National authorities have nonetheless kept the issue under close review. Sweden issued an early warning over possible jet fuel tightness, although it said current supply conditions remained good. The broader concern is that Europe relies heavily on commercial inventories rather than dedicated aviation fuel reserves, leaving less room for disruption when import flows are interrupted. Higher crude prices have also added to pressure on airlines and fuel buyers, pushing aviation fuel costs higher even where physical deliveries continue and forcing operators to pay more for cargoes arriving from farther away.
Europe monitors summer fuel risk
The supply shift is already reshaping trade patterns beyond Europe. Strong jet fuel margins have benefited refiners able to deliver into the region, including Dangote, whose export volumes to Europe have risen as buyers replace lost Middle East barrels. For airlines, the immediate issue has been cost rather than outright unavailability, with airport operations continuing even as procurement has become more expensive. The market response has underscored how dependent Europe remains on imported aviation fuel despite increased refinery output and new cargoes from alternative suppliers.
For now, the central fact is that Europe has not entered a continent-wide airport fuel shortage, but it is operating with a narrower margin after a full month without Middle East jet fuel cargoes. The European Commission has said it will keep monitoring stocks, trade flows and distribution across member states as the summer travel period approaches. With prices elevated and replacement supply carrying higher transport costs, the interruption has exposed a critical weak point in Europe’s aviation fuel chain.
