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Saudi Arabia restores full capacity on East-West oil pipeline to 7 million bpd after attacks

By Thomson Reuters Apr 12, 2026 | 2:16 AM

CAIRO, April 12 (Reuters) – Saudi Arabia has restored full oil pumping capacity through the East-West pipeline L1N40S100 to about seven million barrels per ​day, it said on Sunday, days after ‌providing an assessment of damage on its energy sector from attacks during the Iran conflict https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/.

The ministry said energy facilities and the pipeline affected by attacks L1N40S100 during the conflict ‌have ​recovered and restored operational capacity.

Saudi ⁠did not specify who ⁠launched the attacks, but the kingdom has intercepted many Iranian missiles and drones in recent weeks.

The strikes also disrupted operations nL1N40S0LS at key oil, gas, ​refining, petrochemical and electricity sites in Riyadh, the Eastern Province and Yanbu Industrial City.

OUTPUT RECOVERY TO ⁠HELP SUPPLY CONTINUITY

Saudi said on ⁠Thursday the attacks had cut its oil ​production capacity by around 600,000 barrels per day and ​throughput on its East-West Pipeline by about 700,000 ‌bpd.

The East-West Pipeline has been Saudi Arabia’s only crude export route amid the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Reuters reported on Wednesday that Iran attacked ⁠the pipeline https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/saudi-arabias-east-west-oil-pipeline-hit-iranian-attack-damage-being-assessed-2026-04-08/ just hours after the ceasefire was agreed.

The ministry said it recovered affected volumes from the Manifa ⁠oilfield, where output ‌had previously been reduced by around ⁠300,000 bpd.

Work was ongoing to restore ​full ‌output at the Khurais facility, after strikes ​on it ⁠reduced Saudi capacity by a further 300,000 bpd, the ministry said.

It said the quick recovery would enhance the “reliability and continuity of supplies to local and global markets.”

(Reporting by Menna Alaa El-Din and Muhammad Al GebalyEditing ​by Bernadette Baum)