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This Week in AsiaEconomics

Asia’s energy-reliant economies face ‘existential threat’ from prolonged Iran war

Observers say an extended disruption of energy flows could mean persistently higher fuel costs and widening trade deficits for Asian importers

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A man carries a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinder in Mumbai on Wednesday. India has implemented several measures to secure energy supplies and manage demand. Photo: EPA
Biman Mukherji

Asian economies reliant on energy imports are bracing themselves not just for a spike in oil prices but for the possibility that the Iran war could trigger a prolonged period of energy market disruption.

While markets have already priced in the initial disruption to shipping and energy infrastructure linked to the conflict, economists warn that a war lasting several weeks could leave Asian importers facing persistently higher fuel costs, widening trade deficits and slower economic growth.

According to a report by ratings agency Fitch, Pakistan and India are among emerging markets most exposed to sustained disruption to traffic through the Strait of Hormuz near Iran, through which about a fifth of global oil supplies normally flow.
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“For most major emerging markets, higher oil and gas prices would result in a deterioration in the terms of trade,” Fitch said. “That is most notable in Morocco, Pakistan and Thailand, where energy deficits exceed 4 per cent of GDP.”

China, the Philippines and Indonesia were also affected by the conflict, the report added.

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Asia’s vulnerability has also increased as spot prices for natural gas have more than doubled to three-year highs, reaching over US$25 per MMBtu after Qatar Energy declared force majeure following drone attacks on its Ras Laffran plant.

A security guard stands outside a closed school after a government fuel-saving order led classes to shift online amid soaring oil costs in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on Tuesday. Photo: AFP
A security guard stands outside a closed school after a government fuel-saving order led classes to shift online amid soaring oil costs in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on Tuesday. Photo: AFP
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