Shock Doctrine, Oil Addiction, and the War We Refuse to Quit
A “shock” isn’t just a medical term. It’s an economic one. And when economists start using plain language, it means something has gone very, very wrong.
That’s exactly where we are.
What global energy markets have endured since the outbreak of the Iran war is not volatility, not turbulence, not a “temporary disruption.” It’s a full-blown shock to the system. The kind that exposes how fragile, delusional, and dangerously interconnected our world really is.
For decades, the global economy ran on a comforting lie: that oil and gas would always be there—cheap, abundant, and flowing through invisible arteries we never had to think about. That illusion just shattered.
The Strait That Broke the World
Before the war, a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz was a thought experiment for analysts. A theoretical risk. A “what if.”
Now it’s reality.
That narrow strip of water between Iran and Oman—barely a choke point on the map—has become the world’s economic pressure valve. And it’s tightening. Fast.
With shipping routes now too dangerous, the world has effectively lost:
- ~15% of its oil supply
- ~20% of its liquefied natural gas (LNG)
That’s not a disruption. That’s amputation.
Prices responded exactly how markets always do when scarcity hits: they spiked. Brutally. Brent crude surged by over 50% at its peak. Even now, it sits roughly a third higher than before the war. And yes—you’re already paying for it at the pump.
The International Energy Agency is calling this the largest energy shock in history.
You can argue about the label. You can’t argue about the consequences.
The Absurdity of “Solutions”
What are we being told to do?
Drive slower.
Work from home.
Carpool.
Stop flying.
Cook with electricity instead of gas.
This is the emergency response to a system that powers 8 billion lives.
It’s not wrong—but it’s laughably insufficient. Like putting a bandage on a severed artery and calling it resilience.
In Europe, people mostly feel the pain as rising prices—for now. In parts of Asia, it’s already something else: actual shortages. In India, cooking gas is missing. Not expensive—missing.
That’s what real crisis looks like.
The Lie of Stability
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: this didn’t come out of nowhere.
We’ve been here before.
In the 1980s, during the Iran-Iraq “Tanker War,” oil shipments were attacked, and the U.S. had to escort vessels through the same waters. The difference?
Back then, supply was abundant enough to cushion the blow.
Today, we run leaner, tighter, and far more dependent on just-in-time global flows. Efficiency replaced resilience. Profit replaced redundancy.
And now we’re paying for it.
Markets Are Not Rational—They’re Hopeful
Despite everything, oil prices aren’t as high as they could be. Why?
Because markets are clinging to a fantasy: that this will end quickly.
Traders, investors, governments—they want to believe that what shouldn’t happen won’t last. That normalcy will snap back.
But here’s the problem: even if the war ends tomorrow, the illusion is gone.
Iran now knows it can choke the world with relatively simple means.
And the world knows it too.
That changes everything.
Globalization’s Dirty Secret
Europe learned this lesson during the Ukraine crisis: dependence is vulnerability.
But here’s the part no one wants to admit:
There is no such thing as “safe dependence” in a global resource market.
You don’t need to import directly from the Middle East to be affected. If Asia scrambles for LNG, Europe pays more. If supply tightens anywhere, prices rise everywhere.
This is what globalization actually means—not convenience, but shared exposure.
The Desperate Scramble for Alternatives
Oil exporters are panicking too.
Saudi Arabia is pushing more through its East-West pipeline to the Red Sea. The UAE is routing exports around Hormuz. Together, they’ve reduced the missing oil share slightly.
But let’s not pretend this is security.
Drones can reach pipelines. Infrastructure can be hit. There is no “safe route” in a destabilized region.
Geopolitical risk is now permanently priced into energy.
Welcome to the new normal.
So What Does Real Change Actually Take?
Here’s where the conversation gets uncomfortable.
Everyone agrees on the conclusion:
We need to become less dependent on imported fossil fuels.
Great.
Now let’s ask the questions nobody wants to answer.
1. Do we have the money?
Transitioning energy systems isn’t a policy tweak—it’s a civilizational overhaul.
- Rebuilding grids
- Scaling renewables
- Expanding storage
- Electrifying transport
- Retrofitting buildings
This is trillions of dollars. Not billions. Not “stimulus packages.” Trillions.
And we’re already drowning in debt, inflation, and political gridlock.
So yes, we can afford it.
But only if we stop pretending we can also afford everything else at the same time.
2. Do we have the political will?
This is the real bottleneck.
Energy transitions demand:
- Long-term planning
- Short-term sacrifice
- Coordinated global action
What we actually have:
- Election cycles
- Culture wars
- Governments terrified of angry voters paying higher bills
You cannot run a wartime-scale energy transition in peacetime political conditions.
And that’s exactly the contradiction we’re stuck in.
3. Do we even want change?
This is the question that cuts deepest.
Because change isn’t just about infrastructure—it’s about behavior.
- Driving less
- Flying less
- Consuming less
- Accepting higher upfront costs
We say we want energy independence.
But do we want it enough to live differently?
So far, the answer looks like no.
The Inevitable, Messy Transition
What happens next won’t be clean.
- Nuclear energy will make a comeback
- Coal will surge in some countries (yes, really)
- Renewables will expand faster than ever
- Electric vehicles will gain momentum
- Grids will strain under the pressure
This won’t be a smooth green revolution. It’ll be a chaotic, contradictory scramble.
And yes—climate will take hits along the way.
Because when survival and stability are on the line, governments prioritize security over sustainability.
The Winners (For Now)
Let’s not ignore the cynical reality:
In the short term, some players win.
- The U.S. expands exports
- Russia finds new buyers
- Other producers cash in on high prices
Because demand doesn’t disappear overnight. Addiction rarely does.
The Brutal Bottom Line
This shock changes one thing permanently:
Energy security is now more powerful than climate arguments or cost savings.
That’s the new driver of change.
Not idealism. Not environmentalism.
Fear.
And Maybe That’s the Only Thing That Ever Works
Because here’s the uncomfortable truth:
We don’t change when we understand.
We change when we’re forced to.
A blocked strait.
Empty reserves.
Unaffordable fuel.
That’s what it takes.
Final Thought
Doctors know something economists are finally admitting:
A shock can kill you.
Or it can force you to live differently.
The global energy system just had its heart attack.
What happens next depends on whether we treat the disease—
or just numb the pain and wait for the next one.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide

