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Home.forex news reportGlobal Supply Shock Exposes the Myth of Energy Independence

Global Supply Shock Exposes the Myth of Energy Independence

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The shock halt to oil and LNG supply at the Strait of Hormuz is reverberating to all major energy-consuming regions and exposes the energy security issues of Asia, Europe, and the United States.

No region can be insulated from the biggest disruption in the history of the oil market, though some suffer more than others in terms of supply crunch. But all see soaring fuel prices and a very real threat of accelerating inflation, and no interest rate cuts soon.

Asia experiences the biggest and most imminent disruption, while Europe loses the competition with Asia for LNG supply and remains very much dependent on gas and oil imports. The U.S., while theoretically the most secure in terms of domestic supply, is seeing unprecedented spikes in diesel and gasoline prices as the refining business remains closely linked to global oil prices.

China Buffer amid Supply Shock in Asia

The shock to supply in Asia is massive. This is the region most dependent on LNG and crude oil supply from the Middle East, most of which passes – or at least used to pass – through the Strait of Hormuz.

Asian buyers are racing to cover supply needs with purchases of now-allowed Russian oil on tankers and crude from much further afield, including the United States, West Africa, and Brazil.

Related: The Invisible Metals Powering a Trillion-Dollar Economy

“While SPR releases in Japan, South Korea and potentially more countries in Asia are expected to help refiners overcome the immediate supply shortage—likely for only several weeks from late March into April—this policy band-aid will not be able to address the supply gap over a prolonged period,” Muyu Xu, senior crude oil analyst at Kpler, said earlier this week.

Asian countries have hiked the use of coal for power generation, where possible, to try to limit the loss of 20% of global LNG flows due to the shutdown in Qatar and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Asia is attracting most flexible-destination LNG cargoes away from Europe amid renewed competition for supply.

But prices are so high that many countries in the region are buying only if they have to avoid emergency situations.

Interestingly, China, the world’s top oil and LNG importer, is not as exposed as the massive import figures would suggest. Chinese reliance on Qatari LNG is an estimated 6% of its gas supply mix, while it has built a large crude stocks buffer at low oil prices over the past year.

Still, if this “mother of all disruptions” drags on for more weeks, as it is increasingly looking that way, China would feel the full extent of the shock, too.



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