London. The price of Brent crude climbed above $92 a barrel this morning following a series of precision strikes by Israeli forces on Iranian-linked fuel depots near the Strait of Hormuz. The escalation injects a fresh dose of volatility into a market already strained by OPEC+ cuts and depleted global strategic reserves. For the United Kingdom, which imports roughly 15% of its crude oil from the Middle East, the immediate threat to energy security is not hypothetical but physical. Every barrel of oil that does not transit the Strait of Hormuz is a barrel that must be sourced elsewhere, at a higher cost, with longer lead times. The government's own modelling suggests that a sustained price above $100 could push household energy bills back above the £3,000 annual mark within two billing cycles. This is not alarmism; it is arithmetic.
The geological reality is simple. Hydrocarbons are finite and geographically concentrated. The Strait of Hormuz handles about 20% of the world's petroleum liquids. A disruption there ripples through the global supply chain within hours. The UK's North Sea production, which once cushioned such shocks, has declined by 60% since its peak. We now rely on a patchwork of imports from Norway, the US, and the Middle East. Each source carries its own geopolitical exposure. The notion of 'energy independence' is a political construct, not a physical one. Energy is a networked system, and networks are only as resilient as their most vulnerable nodes.
The immediate response from Whitehall was predictable: a statement affirming the government's commitment to energy security and a pledge to release a small fraction of the UK's 4.5 million barrel emergency oil stockpile. That stockpile, by law, covers 90 days of net imports. At current consumption rates, that is roughly enough to keep the country's transport and heating sectors operational for nine weeks, assuming no further disruptions. But stockpiles are not pipelines. Releasing them into the market does not create new oil; it merely redistributes existing supply. The real bottleneck is refining capacity, much of which is concentrated in regions also affected by the conflict. Britain's last major refinery, the Lindsey Oil Refinery, has already reduced throughput due to high feedstock costs.
The language of crisis is often overused in energy reporting, but the physics of the situation demands precision. The Earth's atmosphere does not care about geopolitical borders. The carbon burned from the oil that does flow will add to the stock of CO2 already warming the planet. The irony is that the same countries now scrambling for supply are the ones that have consistently underinvested in alternatives. The UK has added 20 GW of wind capacity in the last decade, but wind power cannot replace the energy density of liquid hydrocarbons for aviation or heavy transport. The laws of thermodynamics are not negotiable.
What we are witnessing is a stress test of a system designed for an earlier era. The global oil market is a series of just-in-time inventory chains with no slack. When a trigger event like an airstrike occurs, the system jerks. Prices spike. Governments talk of intervention. Consumers absorb the cost. The UK is better positioned than some European nations due to its diversified gas supply and domestic renewable sector, but it is not immune. Every degree of price increase translates directly into economic activity lost and household budgets squeezed.
The science on climate change tells us that the transition away from fossil fuels must accelerate. Market shocks like today's do not incentivise that transition; they incentivise panic buying and short-term contracts. The only permanent solution is to build a system that does not rely on a fragile resource extracted from a narrow strip of the Earth's crust. That requires infrastructure investment on a scale comparable to the post-war reconstruction. The question is whether the present crisis, like those before it, will fade from memory once the headlines shift. Physics suggests otherwise.








