With on-and-off negotiations persisting between the United States and Iran over freight passage via the Strait of Hormuz, the effect of petroleum and petrochemical supply restrictions is persisting to filter down supply chains.
Shortages of bitumen and tar used to bind asphalt threatens to disrupt major road-building and infrastructure construction programmes in India and South Korea,as well as general road maintenance from Europe to Australia. India has a government goal to construct 100km of highway per day, and generally imports around 40% of its bitumen from the Gulf.
Across India and much of south Asia, an current shortage of cooking gas is affecting households, street vendors and restaurants that depend substantially on cylinders of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). India imports over 60% of its LPG, and round 90% of that might commonly come from the Gulf.
India’s environment ministry has informed state pollution boards to allow restaurants and hotels to temporarily switch to biomass (wooden, dried crops, animal manure), fuel pellets, kerosene and coal for a month, prioritizing cooking gas for households and critical sectors. India’s households and hospitality industry have been robustly inspirating by government programmes in latest years to replace away from those fuels, since burning them releases higher ranges of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and fine particles, with considerable health effects– mainly in constrained living spaces. In some city areas, it can be possible to interchange to electric cooking, despite the fact that lots of the more electricity needed would be generated from coal-fired power stations, similarly contributing to air pollution and carbon emissions.
Shortages of jet fuel have led to increasing cost, with important airlines worldwide cutting flights. While US manufacturers have increased jet fuel manufacturing in response to global demand, they can not replace all of the supplies that might normally have originated from Gulf petroleum. Uncertainty over future supplies seems set to keep as the summer travel peak approaches in the northern hemisphere.
Meanwhile, continued restrictions on fuels, fertilisers and polymers used in packaging are pushing up prices for food and consumer items more widely, and causing local shortages of numerous products– from Diet Coke in India to potato snacks, bottled water, cosmetics and rubber gloves in Asia, and the possibility of worsening existing shortages of medicines within the UK.






