ThinkTankWeekly

The Iran war is exacting a heavy toll on Gulf oil and gas exporters – and creating risk and opportunity in North Africa

Chatham House | 2026-03-19 | energy

Topics: China, Indo-Pacific, Middle East, Nuclear, Russia, Trade

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English Summary

The US-Israeli conflict with Iran is severely disrupting Gulf energy exports through the Strait of Hormuz, forcing major producers to rely on insufficient and vulnerable alternative pipeline routes. This disruption is straining national budgets, especially in oil-dependent Iraq, and threatening the long-term market share of Gulf LNG as Asian buyers seek more reliable suppliers. In North Africa, the crisis presents a dual reality where energy importers like Egypt face significant inflationary pressures, while exporters like Algeria benefit from higher prices. These developments underscore the strategic fragility of the Gulf's economic model and may accelerate a permanent global shift in energy trade patterns and infrastructure.

中文摘要

美以與伊朗之間的衝突正嚴重干擾經由荷姆茲海峽的海灣能源出口,迫使主要生產國依賴運能不足且脆弱的替代管道。此種中斷正加劇各國財政預算壓力,特別是高度依賴石油收入的伊拉克;同時,隨著亞洲買家轉向尋求更穩定的供應來源,海灣液化天然氣(LNG)的長期市場份額亦面臨威脅。在北非,此危機呈現出兩極化的現狀:埃及等能源進口國承受顯著的通膨壓力,而阿爾及利亞等出口國則受惠於能源價格上漲。這些事態發展凸顯了海灣地區經濟模式在策略上的脆弱性,並可能加速全球能源貿易格局與基礎設施的永久性轉變。

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