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Energy Economics · Policy Analysis – Voice of London Radio

Energy Economics · Policy Analysis

The Peace Dividend vs. the Engineering Reality: Assessing Energy Optimism in a Post-War Middle East

Stephen Apolima, MSc Oil & Gas Resource Management, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
April 2, 2026


Key Highlights

  • +42% Crude price rise
  • −90% Hormuz daily transits
  • 40× War-risk insurance surge

The Promise of the “Peace Dividend”

President Trump’s assertion that oil and gas prices will plummet within weeks of ending hostilities with Iran appeals to a psychologically satisfying concept — the “Peace Dividend.” In theory, removing the geopolitical risk premium from the world’s most critical energy artery should trigger an immediate market correction.

In practice, however, commodity desks, insurance markets, and infrastructure assessments reveal a far more complicated reality. While a ceasefire may calm trading floors, it cannot instantly resolve the deep-seated physical and institutional disruptions now embedded in the global supply chain.


The Scale of the Disruption

  • Crude oil: Prices surged from the low $60s to nearly $120 per barrel — a 42% rise.
  • Diesel: Retail prices hit $5.45 per gallon, a 45% increase, amplifying inflation across freight, farming, and construction.
  • Europe: Dutch TTF natural gas benchmarks nearly doubled to €60/MWh amid low storage levels.

The International Energy Agency has described the situation as the “greatest global energy security challenge in history.”


Market Sentiment vs. Physical Capacity

Peace talks may trigger immediate dips in futures markets, but physical recovery is slower:

  • Restarting capped wells and repairing damaged infrastructure takes months or years.
  • Qatar declared force majeure on LNG exports after drone attacks.
  • Saudi Aramco’s Ras Tanura refinery remains closed with no timeline for resumption.

The Strait of Hormuz, conduit for nearly 20 million barrels per day, faces years of reconstruction before normal flows resume.


Institutional Costs: The Hormuz Transit Fee

Iran has effectively transformed the Strait of Hormuz into a toll booth.

  • Estimated tolls: up to $2 million per transit.
  • Iranian parliament is drafting legislation to formalize fees.

Even if hostilities cease, this “Hormuz Transit Fee” could enshrine a permanent tariff on Persian Gulf oil, structurally elevating global energy costs.


The Maritime Insurance Floor

War-risk insurance premiums have surged 20–40×:

  • Pre-war rates: 0.15–0.25% of hull value.
  • Current rates: 5–10% of hull value.
  • Example: A $100M crude carrier now faces millions in added costs per voyage.

Insurers typically require 6–18 months of incident-free transit before reducing rates, meaning elevated costs will persist long after peace is declared.


The Strait in Numbers

  • Daily transits: Down 90–95% since conflict began.
  • Brent crude: Peaked at $114 per barrel.
  • Goldman Sachs estimate: $14 per barrel premium tied directly to Hormuz disruption.

Some projections suggest Brent could reach $200 if Kharg Island suffers significant damage.


Domestic Refining Bottlenecks

Even with restored Middle Eastern stability, U.S. consumers face domestic constraints:

  • Refining capacity is maxed out; no new major refineries built in decades.
  • Natural gas basins are pipeline-constrained, with higher breakeven costs.

The bottleneck lies not in crude supply, but in downstream processing capacity.


The Verdict: High-Floor Stability

Ending hostilities will reduce volatility, but three structural anchors remain:

  1. Infrastructure scars — Years to repair Gulf refineries and export terminals.
  2. Institutional costs — War-risk premiums and the new Hormuz Transit Fee.
  3. Refining limits — U.S. downstream bottlenecks unaffected by diplomacy.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration projects Brent crude above $95 per barrel for at least two months, declining below $80 in Q3, and ending 2026 around $70 — contingent on optimistic assumptions.

The world is not returning to the cheap energy era of the early 2020s. Instead, it is entering a period of High-Floor Stability: volatility may ease, but structurally elevated costs will define the post-war energy order.


Sources: Center for American Progress; Goldman Sachs Global Commodities Research; CSIS; Chatham House; Al Jazeera; Bloomberg; U.S. Energy Information Administration (March 2026 Outlook); Lloyd’s List Intelligence.


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