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The biggest risk right now isn’t just the war.
It’s the energy system getting squeezed from multiple sides at once.
Around 20% of global oil trade moves through the Strait of Hormuz. At the same time, roughly 20% of global LNG supply comes from Qatar and much of it also transits that same chokepoint.
This isn’t just crude. It’s gas.
In 2025, about 81 million tonnes of LNG moved through Hormuz. There is effectively zero spare LNG capacity globally.
If Qatari volumes are disrupted, replacement supply doesn’t just appear.
Europe is already entering spring with gas storage around the mid-40% range, lower than recent years. Refill season hasn’t even started properly. A three month disruption scenario has models showing Dutch TTF prices pushing back toward €90/MWh or higher.
Asia takes over 80% of Qatar’s LNG exports. Japan, China, South Korea, India, all directly exposed. If cargoes fall short, Europe and Asia start bidding against each other for US and Atlantic LNG. That drives global prices up fast.
On oil, roughly 15–20 million barrels per day are linked to Hormuz flows. Even partial disruption tightens balances.
Full closure scenarios have price projections north of $130 per barrel, with extreme cases modeling far higher.
Now zoom out.
Higher oil = higher transport and food costs globally.
Higher LNG = higher power prices and industrial input costs.
That’s a classic stagflation setup.
Slower growth because energy costs crush demand.
Higher inflation because energy feeds directly into CPI.
Central banks then face a dilemma: cut rates into inflation or hold tight into a slowdown.
This isn’t just geopolitical noise.
It’s a synchronized oil + gas supply risk at a time when storage buffers are thin and spare capacity is limited.
If disruption lasts weeks, markets absorb it.
If it lasts months, recession risk rises sharply.
That’s the real risk building here.
Not just conflict headlines, but the energy math behind them.