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Energy Crisis Sparks Global Shock as Iran War Disrupts Markets
Global Economy

Energy Crisis Sparks Global Shock as Iran War Disrupts Markets

Photography & Words by Arthur Sterling May 15, 2026 2 MIN READ
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How the Iran Conflict Fuels an Unavoidable Energy Crisis

Smoke rose from the Shahran refinery after an overnight strike on March 8, 2026, a stark reminder that the energy crisis sparked by the war in Iran is no longer a distant threat. The International Energy Agency’s chief labeled the clash the biggest danger to global energy security in living memory. With the Strait of Hormuz effectively sealed by a U.S. naval blockade, markets scrambled.

Ripple effects across continents

Even nations that import little Gulf oil felt the shock. About ↓ 30% of world fertilizer shipments pass through Hormuz, linking gas shortages to soaring food prices in East Africa. Japan’s yen fell about 5% despite a massive strategic reserve, prompting a rare intervention. In the United States, gasoline prices surged, eroding confidence in the current administration.

“The system’s interdependence means a single choke point can destabilize the entire market,” a senior analyst told Reuters.

India’s crude basket jumped from $69 to $113 per barrel in a month, a ↑ $44 swing that forced emergency imports from dozens of sources. Yet India’s early push to exceed 50% non‑fossil electricity capacity bought it breathing room, cushioning power‑sector budgets.

Europe’s post‑2022 strategy—expanding renewables, diversifying gas supplies, and cutting demand—has lowered exposure, though it cannot erase risk entirely.

Investors are recalibrating. Insurance firms are tightening cover in fire‑prone California, southern Europe and parts of Australia, a signal that risk pricing is shifting from reactive to proactive. Those higher premiums will soon appear on public balances, corporate ledgers and household bills.

Building resilient infrastructure now demands trillions for clean‑energy grids in the United States and emerging markets like Indonesia and Nigeria, where currency swings and governance issues remain.

The decisive question is not whether the transition proceeds, but whether capital flows align with a world where choke‑point volatility is the new norm.

Correction: An earlier version misstated the date of the refinery strike.


Reported by: Arthur Sterling

Macroeconomics Editor

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