Former International Energy Agency chief Nobuo Tanaka warned on Monday that Asia is at the center of a third global oil shock, triggered by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The disruption has wiped out 15 million barrels per day of oil output, a loss that is impossible to replace, Tanaka said at a hydrogen industry event in Malaysia. "The first oil shock created the IEA in 1973. The second transformed industries and economies. Now we are facing a third oil shock, and Asia is at the centre of it," he said, as quoted by the Borneo Times.
The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, handles about a fifth of the world's oil supply. Its closure has become a nightmare scenario for global energy markets. Tanaka called it exactly that. "The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is a nightmare scenario come true," he said, noting that the region has lost 15 million barrels daily in output.
That figure is. It is roughly equivalent to the combined production of Saudi Arabia and Iraq before the crisis. Asia's dependence on Middle Eastern crude makes it uniquely vulnerable.
As much as 60% of the region's oil imports come from the Middle East, according to data from Kpler cited by Reuters in March. Last year, that translated into an average daily import rate of 14.74 million barrels. The top suppliers—Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and the United Arab Emirates—are all directly affected by the Hormuz disruption.
Iraq has been hit hardest. Its production plunged from over 4 million barrels per day to just 1.4 million barrels daily. In May, the Iraqi oil minister reported that April exports collapsed to 10 million barrels, down from 93 million barrels before the war between the United States and Israel against Iran began.
The economic consequences are already visible. China's oil imports plummeted to an eight-year low, according to a separate OilPrice report. India's economy and finances are weakening under the strain, another OilPrice article noted.
These two countries are Asia's largest oil consumers. Their pain signals a broader regional crisis. Japan, South Korea, and Southeast Asian nations also rely heavily on Middle Eastern crude.
The shock is not just about supply. It is about price. Oil prices jumped after U.S. strikes on Iranian missile sites, OilPrice reported.
The market is jittery. Every headline moves the needle. Tanaka's solution is electrification. "Thanks to electric vehicles, solar power, artificial intelligence and data centres, the age of electricity is here," he said. "The demand for EVs is rising everywhere.
The current crisis may further accelerate electrification because countries want to reduce dependence on imported oil." He pointed to the European Union and China as examples of successful energy diversification. But the reality is more complicated. China remains the world's largest oil importer and a major gas and coal consumer.
The EU is struggling with exorbitant electricity prices that are crushing its economy. The transition is not smooth. Behind the diplomatic language lies a hard truth.
Electrification takes years, even decades. Asia needs oil now. The Strait of Hormuz crisis has no quick fix.
Military escalation continues. Three supertankers carrying 6 million barrels of oil recently exited the strait, OilPrice reported, a sign that some shipments are still moving. But the volume is a fraction of normal flows.
Iran has drawn a red line on uranium, further raising tensions. What this actually means for your family. Higher fuel costs.
More expensive goods. Shipping disruptions ripple through supply chains. A factory in Guangdong that makes your smartphone pays more for electricity.
A farmer in Punjab pays more for diesel to run his tractor. These costs get passed on. Inflation is not just a number on a screen.
It is the price of rice, the bus fare, the electricity bill. The policy says one thing. The reality says another.
Governments talk about green transitions while scrambling to secure fossil fuel supplies. Australia's 344-million-barrel oilfield could finally get the green light, OilPrice noted, as the world hunts for alternatives. Ukraine hit a 300,000-barrel-per-day Gazprom Neft refinery in an overnight drone strike, adding to global supply anxieties.
Every disruption tightens the market further. Both sides claim victory. Here are the numbers.
Before the war, Iraq exported 93 million barrels a month. In April, it exported 10 million. That is an 89% drop.
The Strait of Hormuz normally handles 20 million barrels per day of oil and petroleum products. Now, it handles a trickle. The 15 million barrels per day of lost output that Tanaka cited is not just a statistic.
It is a hole in the global energy balance that no other source can fill. Strategic reserves are limited. Spare production capacity is thin.
Why It Matters: Asia's energy crisis will reshape global politics and economics. Countries that cannot secure affordable energy will face social unrest, industrial decline, and geopolitical realignment. The last two oil shocks redrew the world map.
The first led to the creation of the IEA and a new era of energy cooperation among wealthy nations. The second spurred energy efficiency and the rise of alternative fuels. This third shock could accelerate the green transition but also deepen inequality between nations that can afford renewables and those that cannot.
For millions of families from Mumbai to Manila, the immediate future looks darker and more expensive. Key Takeaways: - The Strait of Hormuz closure has removed 15 million barrels per day of oil from the global market, an irreplaceable loss. - Asia imports 60% of its crude from the Middle East, making it the most exposed region to the crisis. - Electrification and renewables are long-term solutions, but the short-term pain for Asian economies will be severe. What comes next is uncertain but fraught with risk.
The war between the U.S., Israel, and Iran shows no sign of ending. Further military strikes could tighten the strait even more. Iran's nuclear red line raises the specter of a wider conflict.
Oil prices will likely remain volatile, with spikes on every headline. Asian governments may accelerate investments in electric vehicles, solar power, and alternative supply routes. But those take time.
In the meantime, expect higher inflation, slower growth, and tough choices for families and policymakers alike. The third oil shock is here, and Asia is on the front line.
Key Takeaways
— The Strait of Hormuz closure has removed 15 million barrels per day of oil from the global market, an irreplaceable loss.
— Asia imports 60% of its crude from the Middle East, making it the most exposed region to the crisis.
— Iraq's oil exports collapsed 89% in April, from 93 million barrels to 10 million barrels.
— Electrification and renewables are long-term solutions, but the short-term pain for Asian economies will be severe.
Source: OilPrice









