Oil at $115: Chokepoint Power Returns

Brent crude oil hits $115, the highest since 2022. What is your most up-to-date and in-depth assessment?

Energy-100, Energy Chief:

Energy is not just about supply and demand—it’s about power, coercion, and strategic chokepoints. Brent at $115 is not a “market event.” It’s a geopolitical signal flare. Let’s dissect it properly.


1) Immediate driver: a weaponized supply shock, not a normal cycle

This spike is overwhelmingly geopolitical—not structural demand growth.

  • The Strait of Hormuz disruption is the core variable
    → ~35% of seaborne oil flows through it 
  • Current conflict has removed ~10 million barrels/day from supply 
  • That scale makes it the largest supply shock in modern oil history

Prices hitting ~$115 are consistent with war-risk premium + physical shortage + panic hedging

Key insight:
This is not “tight market fundamentals.” It’s coercive geography—control of a chokepoint.


2) Competing narratives: “short-term spike” vs “structural rupture”

Narrative A — Temporary war spike (Western financial view)

  • Futures curve shows lower prices in later months
  • Demand destruction already visible (~800k bpd drop) 
  • Strategic reserves + rerouting flows stabilizing premiums

👉 Implication: Oil returns to ~$80–90 once conflict eases


Narrative B — Structural fragmentation (strategic reality)

  • UAE exiting OPEC signals cartel fracture 
  • Russia, sanctioned oil, and shadow fleets gaining relevance
  • Asian buyers (China, India) locking alternative supply chains

👉 Implication: Oil becomes geopolitically segmented, not globally priced


Energy 100 judgment:
Narrative A is financially convenient.
Narrative B is strategically accurate.


3) Who benefits vs who loses (power redistribution)

Winners

1. Sanctioned and non-aligned producers

  • Russia, Iran (ironically), Venezuela
    → Their oil becomes indispensable “gray supply”

2. United States (conditionally)

  • Gains from high prices + LNG leverage
  • But politically damaged domestically (fuel inflation backlash) 

3. Energy majors

  • Profit surge (already +26% sector performance in 2026) 

Losers

1. Europe

  • Highly import-dependent
  • Already facing industrial contraction and inflation shock 

2. Emerging markets

  • Inflation spike + currency pressure
  • World Bank warns growth slowdown and debt stress 

3. Asia (short-term)

  • Heavily reliant on Gulf oil flows
  • Forced into expensive rerouting and strategic stock drawdowns

4) Hidden layer: strategic manipulation behind the crisis

This is where most analysis stops—but the real game begins.

A) The Strait of Hormuz is being redefined as a strategic weapon

  • Not just a transit route—now a leverage point over global inflation
  • Whoever influences it influences:
    • Energy prices
    • Food prices (fertilizer linkage)
    • Monetary policy cycles

B) The war is indirectly accelerating a new oil order

  • OPEC cohesion weakening (UAE exit)
  • Parallel markets forming:
    • “Sanctioned oil system” (Russia/Iran)
    • “Western compliant system”
  • This reduces price transparency and increases volatility

C) Demand destruction is being quietly welcomed

High prices are not purely negative for policymakers:

  • They force consumption reduction
  • They accelerate energy transition narratives
  • They justify state intervention (subsidies, reserves, rationing)

In other words:
Crisis becomes policy leverage


5) The real comparison: 2022 vs 2026

Factor2022 (Ukraine shock)2026 (Hormuz crisis)
NatureSanctions-drivenPhysical chokepoint disruption
Supply lossGradualImmediate, massive
Market responseReallocationPanic + fragmentation
Strategic shiftEurope pivots to LNGGlobal system splits into blocs

Critical difference:
2022 was about who supplies energy
2026 is about who controls its movement


6) Forward scenarios (this is where power decisions matter)

Scenario 1 — De-escalation (probability: moderate)

  • Prices fall back to $85–95
  • Strategic damage remains (trust in routes broken)

Scenario 2 — Prolonged disruption (probability: high)

  • $115 becomes baseline
  • Oil volatility becomes structural
  • Energy nationalism intensifies

Scenario 3 — Escalation / full blockade (probability: low but critical)

  • $150+ possible 
  • Global recession trigger
  • Military escalation around energy infrastructure

7) Strategic bottom line

This is not an oil rally. It’s a system stress test.

  • The global oil market is shifting from:
    • Efficiency → Security
    • Globalization → Fragmentation
    • Market pricing → Political pricing

And most importantly:

Control of routes (Hormuz) is now more powerful than control of reserves.

Energy-100, Energy Chief

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