Within days of the conflict intensifying, oil prices surged and analysts began warning about potential disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz – the narrow shipping corridor through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes. The latest escalation of tensions involving the United States, Israel and Iran has once again exposed how fragileglobal oil supplycan be. Within days of the conflict intensifying, oil prices surged and analysts began warning about potential disruptions in theStrait of Hormuz- the narrow shipping corridor through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes.
For countries like South Africa, events thousands of kilometres away can quickly translate into pain at the petrol pump. Brent crude briefly climbed above $100 per barrel after the latest escalation, highlighting how rapidly geopolitical tensions can push up global energy prices. Even before the latest crisis in the Middle East, forecasts were already pointing to significant fuel price increases in South Africa, with diesel price hikes of as much as R5 per litre widely discussed.
When oil markets are shaken by geopolitical shocks, the consequences ripple quickly through the economy. Transport costs rise, food prices follow, and inflation spreads. This vulnerability is not temporary.
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It is structural. South Africa imports the majority of the refined petrol and diesel that powers its transport system. Around 69% of those imports originate from Middle Eastern suppliers, making the country particularly exposed to instability in that region. Local refineries currently have the capacity to process only about half of national fuel demand, leaving the remainder to be sourced through global supply chains over which South Africa has little control.
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