Suspected oil spill seen on satellite images near Iran's Kharg Island export hub

Published 08 May, 2026 07:43pm 2 min read

A suspected oil spill covering dozens of square kilometres of sea near Iran’s main oil ​hub of Kharg Island has been seen on satellite imagery ‌this week.

The likely spill - appearing on images as a grey and white slick - covered waters to the west of the 8-kilometre (5-mile) long island, pictures from Copernicus’s ​Sentinel-1, Sentinel-2 and Sentinel-3 satellites showed on May 6-8.

“The slick ​appears visually consistent with oil,” said Leon Moreland, researcher at ⁠the Conflict and Environment Observatory, who estimated that it was covering ​an area of approximately 45 square km.

Louis Goddard, co-founder of ​consultancy Data Desk, which focuses on climate and commodities, agreed that the images likely showed an oil slick, which he said was potentially the largest to occur ​since the start of the US-Israel war against Iran 70 days ago.

The ​US military and Iran’s mission to the United Nations in Geneva did not immediately ‌respond ⁠to requests for comment on the images.

The cause of the possible spill and the point of origin are currently unknown, Moreland added, noting that images from May 8 showed no evidence of additional active spills.

Kharg Island, where US ​forces said ⁠they had destroyed military targets earlier in the war, is the hub for 90% of Iran’s oil exports, ​much of which is bound for China.

The US ​Navy has ⁠been blockading Iran’s ports in an attempt to stop Tehran’s tankers from entering and exiting, while US and Iranian forces have clashed in the Gulf.

The war ⁠has ​also trapped hundreds of ships in the ​Gulf and caused the world’s biggest disruption to crude oil supply, as well as hitting ​global supplies of oil products and liquefied natural gas.

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