Supply crunch bites harder than markets admit, Strait of Hormuz closure rattles Asia and Europe
Global energy leaders are issuing their starkest warnings yet: the Iran war is hitting physical oil and gas supplies far more severely than financial markets reflect. At the CERAWeek conference in Houston, top executives from Shell, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, and Kuwait Petroleum painted a picture of an unfolding crisis that goes beyond price volatility — it’s about real barrels, real molecules, and real shortages.
Strait of Hormuz: The Chokepoint Crisis
With the Strait of Hormuz effectively shut, the world is staring at a supply shock of historic proportions. ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance bluntly noted: “You cannot remove 8–10 million barrels a day of oil and a fifth of global LNG without significant repercussions.”
Kuwait Petroleum’s Sheikh Nawaf al-Sabah went further, calling the closure an economic blockade that is “holding the world’s economy hostage.” Analysts compared the disruption to the 1973 Arab oil embargo, warning this could be even more severe.
Industry vs. Washington: A Disconnect
While the Trump administration insists the disruption is temporary and manageable, industry leaders disagree. Executives described evacuations of staff, drone attacks on LNG hubs, and stranded investments in Qatar. This is no longer about futures curves — it’s about infrastructure under fire and supply chains breaking down.
Prices Surge, But Reality Is Worse
- US crude has jumped nearly 50% to $99.64 a barrel.
- Brent has surged 55% to $112.57.
Yet CEOs argue futures still understate the tightness of physical supply. Shell’s Wael Sawan warned that jet fuel and diesel are already under extreme pressure, with ripple effects spreading across Asia and soon into Europe.
TotalEnergies’ Patrick Pouyanné put hard numbers on the crisis: jet fuel up $200 a barrel, diesel up $160, with China banning exports and Thailand rationing gasoline.
LNG Stress: Asia Most Exposed
Gas executives say Asia is at the sharpest edge of the crisis. Cheniere CEO Jack Fusco admitted US LNG cannot reach Asia fast enough — voyages take 28 days, while demand is immediate. Governments are already stockpiling, rationing, and scrambling for alternatives.
Strategic Risk: No Easy Endgame
Geopolitical experts at CERAWeek warned the war is unlikely to end quickly. Former US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis cautioned that Iran is fighting a total war, while the US is waging a limited campaign, leaving shipping lanes vulnerable. Analyst Paul Sankey warned Gulf economies could see GDP collapse by 30% if the disruption persists.
The Takeaway
What emerged from Houston is a clear disconnect: markets are clinging to hope, but industry leaders insist the damage is already real and escalating. This is not just about oil benchmarks spiking — it’s about energy flows grinding to a halt, inventories draining, and economies bracing for shortages.
“The world is not just paying a risk premium. It’s paying the price of a supply shock.”

