
MALAYSIA maintains a robust structural resilience against external shocks triggered by the ongoing conflict between the United States and Iran, according to Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas).
While the company acknowledges that the impacts are tangible, the full consequences on the country’s energy and economic landscape are complex and cannot be easily measured.
As a net clean energy producer, Malaysia generates approximately two million barrels of oil equivalent per day, with about three-quarters derived from natural gas and one-quarter from crude oil.
“However, Malaysia is also integrated into the global energy market, meaning that disruptions of this scale rapidly propagate through import costs, shipping rates and insurance, supply chain pressures, and fuel subsidy obligations,” Petronas stated.
In response, Petronas has activated a series of concrete continuity measures.
These include prioritising the routing of Malaysian crude to domestic refineries to maximise local fuel output, securing additional crude supplies from West Africa and Latin America to reduce reliance on any single shipping route, and preparing the Pengerang Refinery and Petrochemical Complex to balance petrol and jet fuel demand once crude feedstock is available.
“Petronas is working closely with the government and industry stakeholders to monitor developments and safeguard Malaysia’s energy security. Scenario-based planning and contingency measures have been activated.
“Our priority is clear: to ensure stable and sufficient fuel supply for Malaysia, even as global conditions remain uncertain and volatile,” the company added.
At present consumption rates, Malaysia’s domestic fuel supply is projected to remain adequate until the end of May 2026, with mitigation measures already in place to ensure continuity beyond June.
Petronas emphasised that the national strategy prioritises meeting domestic energy needs first, optimising local crude production, diversifying supply sources, maintaining flexible logistics, and enhancing refinery operations focused on key fuels, including petrol, diesel, jet fuel, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).
The company urged Malaysians, including households and businesses, to avoid panic buying or hoarding, to consume energy responsibly, reduce non-essential usage, and consider conservation a practical contribution to national resilience.
“In times of genuine global uncertainty, responsible energy usage is not trivial. It is part of the solution,” Petronas said, highlighting that the measures in place reflect a thorough risk assessment.
Yesterday, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim reiterated that Malaysia’s petroleum supplies remain under control despite the potential impact of Middle East conflicts on global energy markets.
He confirmed that the country’s petroleum products are sufficient at least until May 2026 and emphasised the government’s continuous monitoring of developments to protect Malaysian interests, sustain economic stability, and support diplomatic efforts for peace and resolution. - March 12, 2026
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