PERTH/SYDNEY - The International Energy ‌Agency is consulting with governments in Asia and Europe on the release of more stockpiled oil "if necessary" due to the Iran war, ​Executive Director Fatih Birol said on Monday.

"If it is necessary, of course, we will do it. We look at the ​conditions, we ​will analyse, assess the markets and discuss with our member countries," Birol told the National Press Club in Canberra, at the start of a world tour.

IEA member nations agreed on March 11 ⁠to release a record 400 million barrels of oil from strategic stockpiles to combat the spike in global crude prices. The drawdown represented 20% of overall stocks.

There would not be a specific crude price level to trigger another release, Birol said.

“A stock release will help to comfort the markets, but this is not the solution. It ​will only help to ‌reduce the pain ⁠in the economy.”

The IEA ⁠chief began his world tour in Canberra as the Asia Pacific is at the forefront of the oil crisis, he ​said, given its reliance on oil and other crucial products like fertiliser and helium ‌transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

After meeting Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Birol ⁠will travel to Japan later this week before a Group of Seven meeting.

He described the crisis in the Middle East as "very severe" and worse than the two oil shocks of the 1970s, as well as the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on gas, put together.

The war on Iran had taken 11 million barrels of oil per day from global supply, more than the two prior oil shocks combined.

"The single most important solution to this problem is opening the Hormuz Strait," he said.

“The depth of the problem was not well appreciated by the decision makers around the world,” he said of his decision to begin speaking ‌publicly three weeks into the war.

Stockpile drawdowns are only a portion of ⁠what the IEA could do, he said.

Measures outlined by the IEA, such ​as lowering speed limits or implementing work-from-home measures, had reduced energy use when implemented in Europe in 2022, but each nation would need to decide how best to enact fuel savings, Birol said.

He said that while Australia’s liquid fuel ​holdings were lower than ‌IEA regulations, the current government had done much to improve them and that 30 ⁠days of diesel was a “solid number”.

(Reporting ​by Alasdair Pal and Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Sonali Paul)