Economy & Markets
4 min read
WTI Oil Prices Surge Past $59.50 Amid Kazakh Supply Woes
FXStreet
January 21, 2026•1 day ago

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WTI crude oil prices rose above $59.50 due to a major outage at Kazakhstan's Tengiz oilfield following two fires. This unplanned shutdown, expected to last seven to ten days, exacerbates existing supply disruptions from drone strikes on the Caspian Pipeline Consortium. Traders are also awaiting US crude oil stockpile data.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the US crude oil benchmark, is trading around $59.65 during the early Asian trading hours on Wednesday. The WTI price edges higher amid the escalating Greenland crisis and an unplanned outage at a major Kazakhstan field. Traders await the release of the American Petroleum Institute (API) crude oil stockpiles report later on Tuesday.
Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that Kazakh oil producer Tengizchevroil, led by Chevron, said that it had temporarily halted production at the Tengiz and Korolev oilfields after two fires at power generators. The Tengiz field will be shut for another seven to 10 days, and supply disruptions could provide some support to the WTI price.
Kazakhstan had already reduced 900,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude production that feeds the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal on Russia's Black Sea Coast due to drone strikes.
"Tengiz is amongst the largest fields in the world and so the outage is certainly disruptive for crude flows," said Ajay Parmar, director of energy and refining at ICIS. "But this disruption does look to be temporary, and so if the tariffs rhetoric continues, we expect prices to fall back," he said
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