The War That Burns Twice: How the Iran Conflict Is Rewriting the Future of Energy

مارس 27, 2026
10:43 ص
In This Article

By any conventional measure, the war now unfolding around Iran is an energy crisis. Oil prices are surging. Supply chains are breaking. Governments are scrambling.

But beneath the surface, something more consequential is taking shape. This is not just a war over energy. It is a war that is accelerating—and distorting—the global transition away from it.

The Shock That Shook the System

When the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, the world was reminded of a simple, uncomfortable truth: modern economies still run on a narrow set of geographic choke points.

Roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil flows through that corridor. Its disruption has sent shockwaves across global markets, triggering what energy leaders now describe as one of the most severe supply crises in decades.

Prices have climbed past $100 per barrel. Gas markets have tightened. Fertilizer, aluminum, and food systems are beginning to feel the strain.

The immediate response has been predictable. Governments are reaching for whatever energy they can find.

Coal plants are being reactivated. Oil exploration is surging. Liquefied natural gas is suddenly scarce and politically prized again.

In the short term, the war is pulling the world backward.

The Climate Cost of Conflict

War does not just consume energy. It produces emissions.

In the first two weeks alone, the conflict generated more than 5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide—more than the annual emissions of dozens of the world’s lowest-emitting countries combined.

Oil fires, military operations, destroyed infrastructure—each becomes a source of atmospheric damage. Climate targets, already fragile, are pushed further out of reach.

This is the paradox at the heart of the moment: the same conflict exposing the dangers of fossil fuel dependence is simultaneously deepening that dependence.

Energy Security Becomes the New Climate Argument

For years, the case for clean energy was framed around emissions and planetary limits. That argument is still there—but it is no longer the dominant one.

Now, the language has shifted.

Energy security.

Resilience.

Independence.

From Europe to Asia, policymakers are no longer asking how quickly they can decarbonize. They are asking how quickly they can escape volatility.

Renewables—wind, solar, batteries—offer something fossil fuels cannot: stability. Countries with strong clean energy systems are proving more insulated from price shocks and geopolitical disruption.

This shift matters. Because security arguments move faster than climate arguments ever did.

The Risk of a Lost Decade

And yet, there is another force at play—one that could slow progress just as easily as it accelerates it.

War introduces uncertainty. Uncertainty freezes capital.

Supply chains for clean energy technologies are already under pressure, with critical materials becoming more expensive and harder to access.

At the same time, fossil fuel companies—flush with cash from high prices—are doubling down on new production. Infrastructure built in moments like this tends to last decades.

The danger is not just delay. It is lock-in.

A world that invests heavily in fossil fuel capacity during crisis may find itself structurally dependent on it long after the crisis ends.

A Turning Point Disguised as a Crisis

History rarely announces its turning points in real time. But this moment carries the markers.

The Iran war has exposed the fragility of the global energy system more clearly than any climate report ever could. It has shown how quickly markets can unravel, how deeply economies remain tied to fossil fuels, and how high the geopolitical cost of that dependence has become.

At the same time, it has created a new kind of urgency—one not rooted in distant climate targets, but in immediate national interest.

That urgency could accelerate the transition.

Or it could derail it.

The outcome will depend on what governments choose to build in the shadow of this crisis: more pipelines and coal plants, or a system designed for resilience in a fractured world.

Because in the end, this war is not just about who controls energy.

It is about what kind of energy system the world chooses to live with next.

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