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Saudi Aramco chief warns that prolonged Gulf conflict oil crisis will devastate global energy supplies

Ongoing shipping disruptions in the Middle East are causing immense panic across global energy markets. Saudi Aramco leadership warns that prolonged standoffs in the Strait of Hormuz could drastically increase fuel costs for dependent nations like India. Daily commuters might soon feel the financial sting if these international tensions continue to escalate.
Published By : Satya Mohapatra | March 10, 2026 2:56 PM
Saudi Aramco chief warns that prolonged Gulf conflict oil crisis will devastate global energy supplies

Global fuel supplies face massive risks amid Middle East tension

Ongoing hostilities in the Middle East threaten to shatter global energy stability in unprecedented ways. Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser recently issued a stark warning regarding the escalating Gulf conflict oil crisis. Speaking shortly after releasing his company's 2025 financial performance data, Nasser described the current shipping disruptions as the absolute most severe emergency the regional energy sector has experienced in modern history.

Rising Tensions Threaten Vital Waterways

Fierce standoffs involving the United States, Israel, and Iran have practically paralyzed normal maritime traffic within the Strait of Hormuz. This specific maritime corridor remains essential to global logistics. Every single day, more than 20 million barrels of crude—representing roughly one-fifth of the entire world's daily consumption—must squeeze through this highly vulnerable chokepoint.

Matters escalated dramatically on Tuesday. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps aggressively declared they would completely halt all petroleum shipments leaving the Middle East if military strikes by American and Israeli forces persist. In immediate retaliation, US President Donald Trump promised an overwhelmingly forceful response should Tehran actually attempt to block this critical maritime route.

Immediate Consequences For Asian Importers

Financial markets worldwide are already reeling from the intense heat of this dangerous international standoff. Driven by widespread panic over potential supply chain failures, Brent crude prices previously spiked past the $100 per barrel mark. This incredible price volatility hits extremely close to home for heavily dependent importing nations.

Since approximately 84% of the petroleum moving through the strait sails directly to Asian heavyweights like India, China, Japan, and South Korea, any prolonged blockage spells absolute disaster. For everyday citizens, including those heavily monitoring daily petrol prices in Odisha, this geopolitical friction could rapidly translate into painful fuel price hikes and surging local inflation. With virtually no viable backup routes available to handle such enormous quantities of export crude from Gulf producers, market experts warn that sustained disruptions will severely cripple global energy flows.

Image Source: MarcoPolis