(By Oil & Gas 360) – The global oil market remains focused on the immediate disruption caused by the Iran conflict, vessels trapped inside the Strait of Hormuz, reduced exports, tightening inventories, and volatile prices.Yet some of the industry’s largest players are increasingly warning that the bigger challenge may not be the current supply shock, but what happens after it.The emerging concern is that markets are underestimating the scale of demand that could be unleashed once the conflict eventually subsides.Today, much of the attention remains centered on the Strait of Hormuz, where shipping disruptions continue to strain global supply chains. Tankers remain delayed, cargo movements remain uncertain, and insurance costs have risen sharply as operators navigate a corridor that is increasingly defined by risk rather than efficiency. Every day vessels remain trapped, delayed, or rerouted effectively removes supply from the market, tightening balances and reducing the flexibility that once characterized global energy trade.But according to senior industry executives, the current disruption may be creating an even larger problem beneath the surface.A senior executive at Abu Dhabi National Oil Company recently warned that oil demand could surge once the conflict ends as governments, refiners, traders, and consumers move aggressively to rebuild depleted inventories.During periods of disruption, strategic stockpiles, commercial inventories, and supply buffers are drawn down to keep markets functioning. Eventually, those barrels must be replaced.That replenishment cycle can be significant.History shows that markets emerging from major supply disruptions often experience a second wave of demand as countries rush to restore energy security. Strategic reserves that were depleted must be rebuilt. Refiners seek additional feedstock. Commercial storage operators increase purchases. Importing nations attempt to secure future supply before the next disruption occurs.In many cases, this restocking demand arrives precisely when production systems are still recovering, that creates a dangerous combination, recovering supply colliding with rising demand.The risk is amplified by a problem that predates the Iran conflict entirely.According to executives at Saudi Aramco, the global refining sector has suffered from years of underinvestment. While much attention has been focused on upstream production capacity, refining infrastructure has received comparatively less capital. The result is a system that has become increasingly vulnerable to disruptions in both crude supply and product manufacturing.This distinction matters because consumers do not purchase crude oil, they purchase gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, petrochemical feedstocks, and heating fuels. Even if crude production recovers relatively quickly, refining bottlenecks could continue to constrain product availability and keep prices elevated.Recent events have exposed that vulnerability, across several regions, refined product markets have tightened faster than crude markets themselves.Diesel, jet fuel, and marine fuels have experienced greater volatility than benchmark crude prices as refiners struggle with feedstock disruptions, maintenance issues, and logistical bottlenecks.Industry leaders are increasingly concerned that these constraints may persist even after hostilities ease.At the same time, warnings from global trading houses are becoming more urgent. Executives at major commodity firms, including Vitol, have argued that policymakers are underestimating the severity of the current situation. One senior Vitol executive recently described Western governments as being “asleep at the wheel” regarding the scale of the emerging supply challenge.The criticism reflects a growing belief among physical market participants that policymakers remain too focused on price movements and not focused enough on inventory depletion, infrastructure stress, and declining system flexibility.The issue is not simply whether oil is available.The issue is whether enough oil, refined products, shipping capacity, and infrastructure can operate efficiently enough to meet demand once economic activity and inventory rebuilding accelerate.That concern is also beginning to influence market discussions around energy security. Some analysts have already raised the possibility that governments could revisit emergency measures, including export restrictions, strategic reserve management, or accelerated infrastructure investment if shortages worsen.What makes the current situation unusual is that multiple stress points are converging simultaneously.Shipping remains constrained. Inventories are lower. Refining capacity is tight. Geopolitical risk remains elevated. And if the conflict ends, demand could rise sharply rather than fall as markets rebuild depleted stocks.In many ways, the industry is confronting two separate supply crises, the first is the disruption occurring today.The second may be the recovery itself; markets often focus on the immediate shock while overlooking the structural consequences that follow.The eventual reopening of Hormuz and normalization of trade flows may not immediately ease market pressures if inventory rebuilding creates a powerful secondary demand wave.The prevailing assumption remains that peace will bring relief to energy markets, it probably will.But history suggests that relief and balance are not always the same thing; if inventories remain depleted, refining capacity remains constrained, and governments move aggressively to restore energy security.The next phase of the oil market could be defined less by war and more by the race to rebuild what the war consumed.About Oil & Gas 360 Oil & Gas 360 is an energy-focused news and market intelligence platform delivering analysis, industry developments, and capital markets coverage across the global oil and gas sector. The publication provides timely insight for executives, investors, and energy professionals. Disclaimer This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.