Energy Gang

A new toll on global energy: Can Iran permanently control the Strait of Hormuz?

May 12, 2026
Edward Fishman, CFR scholar and author of Choke Points, discusses economic statecraft. Christopher Aversano, maritime expert at Wood Mackenzie, explains shipping realities and insurance choices. Amy Myers-Jaffe, NYU energy geopolitics director, outlines energy security risks. They examine Hormuz transit drops, ships going dark, potential Iranian tolls and rerouting energy flows in a world adapting to sustained disruption.
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ADVICE

Wait For Sustained Calm Before Expecting Normal Traffic

  • Expect an incremental, evidence-based reopening rather than a sudden return to peacetime transit volumes.
  • Shipping confidence needs sustained calm, insurance normalization, and repeated safe transits before traffic rebuilds.
INSIGHT

U.S. Faces No Good Options On Hormuz Control

  • U.S. faces two unattractive strategic choices: negotiate leaving Iran as gatekeeper or mount a politically impossible full-scale military intervention.
  • Edward Fishman summarized the result as drift, making long-term Iranian control likely.
INSIGHT

Prolonged Closure Could Push Oil To $150–$200

  • If the Strait stays closed for months, balancing supply and demand may require oil at $150–$200+ per barrel and likely trigger a global recession.
  • Ed Crooks warned inventories and seasonal maintenance have so far cushioned the shock but buffers will run out.
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