Trump said Iran could start “exploding from within” in a few days if its oil gets “clogged.”
It sounds exaggerated, but there’s truth to it.
Iran produces roughly 2 to 3.5 million barrels of oil every day, and that oil has to keep moving through ports, tankers, and export terminals like Kharg Island.
A large share of the government’s budget depends on that flow, so when exports are blocked and there’s NO EXIT ROUTE, the system doesn’t just pause, it starts backing up.
Storage tanks fill quickly, and while Iran does have capacity, somewhere in the range of 40 to 90 million barrels, that space can get used up surprisingly fast under full production.
Once those tanks hit their STORAGE LIMIT, there’s no room left to absorb anything, and that’s where the real pressure begins.
At that point, Iran is forced into a difficult position. They can either cut production and immediately lose massive daily revenue, easily over $100 million, or keep pumping oil into a system that has nowhere to send it.
That tradeoff is brutal: LOSE REVENUE OR DAMAGE INFRASTRUCTURE.
If production continues, PRESSURE BUILDUP starts inside pipelines and wells, and the crude itself begins to create problems.
Oil isn’t uniform, it contains heavier components like waxes and asphaltenes that start separating and sticking when flow slows down. This leads to clogging inside tubing and pipelines, reduced efficiency, and in some cases damage to the reservoir itself, which can make future extraction harder and more expensive.
As pressure builds, the risks expand beyond just clogging:
⚪️ Equipment is put under stress
⚪️ Safety systems get pushed
⚪️ In more extreme cases, you can see ruptures
⚪️ Longer-term infrastructure damage
It’s not about everything literally exploding at once, but the system starts degrading internally in ways that are costly and sometimes irreversible.
When Trump talks about “exploding from within,” he’s compressing all of that into a simple phrase. If you trap oil inside a system that depends on constant flow, you create physical strain that spreads quickly through the entire operation.
At the same time, this isn’t just about engineering, it’s part of a broader strategy.
This approach builds on the idea of MAXIMUM PRESSURE by going beyond financial sanctions and directly targeting Iran’s ability to export oil.
The goal is:
⚪️ Cut off revenue
⚪️ Weaken the state’s ability to fund itself
⚪️ Create internal economic stress that forces a decision
For Iran, this is exactly the situation they want to avoid.
Shutting down wells risks LONG-TERM DAMAGE to fields, while continuing production under blocked conditions risks harming infrastructure.
On top of that, losing oil revenue puts pressure on the budget, the currency, and internal stability.
So the message behind the rhetoric is fairly straightforward. If exports stay blocked, Iran is pushed into choosing between immediate financial loss and potential long-term damage to its most important industry.
That combination of physical and economic pressure is what’s meant to force movement without direct military escalation.
As expected, this means Iran’s storage capacity is full, and they have nowhere left to put their oil. The problem for them is that turning off their rigs is a nightmare as it’s not only a problem getting them to produce again (it could take months and mountains of $$), but even if they do, the damage to the fields means most are likely to never produce again at capacity, if at all. Meanwhile, they’re missing half a billion dollars a day in revenue they can’t afford to lose. Oil exports are their primary source of income.