The Strait of Hormuz, a 33-kilometre wide chokepoint through which roughly 20% of the world’s oil passes, remains impassable. The disruption, now entering its second week, has sent crude prices soaring and triggered emergency talks across Whitehall. For Britain, the calculus is stark: our national grid still relies on gas and oil for nearly 40% of electricity generation and the vast majority of transport fuel. The immediate physical reality is that every litre of petrol, every kilowatt-hour from a gas-fired plant, is now subject to a volatile global supply chain operating at reduced capacity.
The UK’s Strategic Oil Reserves, held at sites like Aldermaston and in underground caverns, can cover roughly 90 days of net imports. But that assumes a smooth drawdown and no further disruptions to refining or distribution. The real vulnerability is not just crude, but the refined products, particularly diesel, which powers critical infrastructure: hospitals, emergency services, agricultural machinery. A sustained blockade could force the government to implement rationing within weeks, not months.
Beyond the immediate fuel shock, the cost of liquefied natural gas (LNG), which Britain imports from Qatar and the United States (transiting the Strait for Qatari supply), has climbed 40% in a week. This will feed directly into household energy bills, which were already elevated due to global market volatility. The Bank of England now faces a compounded threat: inflationary pressure from energy costs colliding with a slowing economy.
The response so far has been measured. The government has activated the emergency alert system for oil stocks and is engaging with the International Energy Agency for a coordinated release of strategic reserves. But here is the uncomfortable truth that the data make clear: Britain’s energy transition, while accelerating, remains too slow to insulate us from these geopolitical shocks. Wind power contributed around 25% of our electricity last year, but the intermittency of that supply means gas plants remain the essential backup. Without rapid deployment of inter-seasonal storage (hydrogen, compressed air, or advanced batteries), we are tethered to the whims of global fossil fuel markets.
There is a deeper, longer-term risk. A prolonged disruption could accelerate the very behaviour that worsens the climate crisis: a dash for coal. Already, the National Grid has pre-positioned coal-fired units for winter contingency. If gas prices remain extreme, coal becomes economically attractive despite its higher carbon intensity. The result would be a temporary spike in UK emissions, a signal of systemic fragility that cannot be ignored.
The scientific consensus on the need to decarbonise the global energy system is not in question. But the physics of energy density and storage does not bow to political timetables. The Strait of Hormuz crisis is a brutal reminder that energy independence is not just a strategic goal, it is a buffer against the collapse of the complex systems that underpin modern society. Britain must invest not only in generation capacity but in resilience: distributed microgrids, domestic storage, and a transport fleet that can run on diverse fuels.
For now, the nation watches the tankers queued in the Gulf of Oman. The calmest voice in the room is the data. And the data says: we have a short window to act before the physical constraints of energy supply become the limiting factor on our way of life.








