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Work from home, avoid air travel to deal with higher energy prices, IEA says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 20, 2026 | 1:05 AM

PARIS, March 20 (Reuters) – The International Energy Agency (IEA), which this month agreed a record release of oil from strategic stockpiles to deal with ​the effects of the U.S-Israeli war with ‌Iran, outlined on Friday proposals to ease oil price pressures on consumers, such as working-from-home and avoiding air travel.

The U.S-Israel war with Iran has driven up energy prices, causing ‌concerns ​over inflation across the world.

The IEA ⁠said its proposals were ⁠actions that governments, businesses and households could take to ease the pain on consumers from the recent spike up in energy prices.

The IEA said ​such proposals included working from home, reducing highway speed limits by at least 10 kilometres per ⁠hour, and avoiding air travel ⁠if other means of transport were ​available.

“We have recently launched the largest ever release of IEA ​emergency oil stocks – and I am in ‌close contact with key governments around the world, including major energy producers and consumers, as part of our international energy diplomacy,” said IEA executive director Fatih ⁠Birol in a statement.

“In addition to this, today’s report provides a menu of immediate and concrete measures that can ⁠be taken ‌on the demand side by governments, ⁠businesses and households to shelter consumers from ​the ‌impacts of this crisis,” added Birol.

The ​IEA agreed ⁠on March 11 to release a record 400 million barrels of oil from strategic stockpiles to combat the spike in global crude prices, with the U.S. contributing the bulk of the supply.

(Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta;Editing ​by John Irish)