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Energy · Daily Brief
Friday, March 6, 2026
Signal
The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz has created an immediate and severe disruption to global energy markets, with impacts radiating far beyond oil prices. The blocking of this critical chokepoint has paralyzed 15 million barrels per day of oil supply and significant LNG flows, triggering a cascade of market responses: Asian refiners are cutting processing rates, LNG shipping rates have surged 650%, and major importers are scrambling for alternative supplies. U.S. shale's inability to fill the supply gap has forced rapid strategic pivots, with China and India racing to secure Russian crude while Japan considers releasing strategic reserves. The market's reaction suggests this isn't just a temporary price shock but a fundamental reshaping of global energy flows. The simultaneous disruption of oil, gas, and refined products through a single chokepoint has exposed the vulnerabilities in global energy security architecture, forcing immediate operational changes across the industry and rapid policy responses from governments worldwide.
Stories
No oil or product tankers have transited the Strait of Hormuz since March 1, blocking more than 15 million barrels per day of oil supply. U.S. shale production cannot compensate for this loss, according to OilPrice.com reports.
Impact · Immediate supply disruption is forcing global refiners to cut processing rates and creating potential shortages in key markets. Asian refiners particularly affected with margins hitting 4-year highs.
Charter rates for 174,000-cubic-meter LNG carriers along U.S. Gulf-Europe route jumped from $40,000 to $300,000 per day, according to Fearnleys' weekly report.
Impact · Dramatic increase in shipping costs will affect LNG procurement strategies and potentially force contract renegotiations.
Chinese authorities have ordered energy companies to suspend new fuel export contracts and attempt to cancel existing shipments, excluding only jet fuel for international flights and bunkering contracts.
Impact · Major reduction in Asian fuel export availability will tighten global product markets and potentially create regional shortages.
Japanese refiners, sourcing 95% of crude from Middle East, are in talks with government to access strategic petroleum reserves to maintain operations.
Impact · Potential precedent for other nations to release strategic reserves, affecting global market balance and price dynamics.
Pattern
Watch for: 1) U.S. implementation timeline for tanker escort program in Hormuz Strait; 2) Strategic reserve releases from major consuming nations within 2-3 weeks; 3) Shift in global trade flows as Asian buyers secure alternative supply sources; 4) Development of new shipping routes and risk premiums; 5) Changes in refinery run rates and product export policies in key Asian markets over next 30 days.
Sources