Hey Dutch friends,

"Goldman Sachs said a month-long halt to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz could cause European gas prices to more than double."

Better get on with the verduurzaming.
It's expensive, yes.
But in the long run you're better off not dealing with these unexpected spikes in heating costs.

https://www.investing.com/news/commodities-news/european-gas-prices-could-jump-130-on-hormuz-disruption-goldman-estimates-4534261

"Decentralised systems are harder to manipulate through supply chokepoints. Solar panels, once installed, generate energy locally. The vulnerability shifts from ongoing fuel imports to upfront manufacturing dependence.

Reducing oil dependence is often framed as climate policy. But it is also vital to energy security and national security."

https://theconversation.com/the-strikes-on-iran-show-why-quitting-oil-is-more-important-than-ever-277192

The strikes on Iran show why quitting oil is more important than ever

Oil isn’t a normal commodity – it shapes politics around the world.

The Conversation

"The strait is a key shipping route. Not only does a fifth of the global seaborne oil pass through it, so does a fifth of worldwide LNG shipments and about a third of global trade in urea – the most widely used fertiliser.

European wholesale gas prices could triple to US$100 per megawatt hour were the strait to close entirely for three months, or operate at half capacity for six months."

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/02/iran-strait-hormuz-oil-global-prices-cost-of-living?CMP

What disrupting the strait of Hormuz could mean for global cost-of-living pressures

The narrow shipping route on Iran’s southern border carries one-fifth of global seaborne crude oil, one-fifth of LNG shipments and one-third of the most widely used fertiliser

The Guardian

The Strait of Hormuz is an energy chokepoint. A world running on renewable energy has far fewer such prominent chokepoints. Even with the same war scenario,

"Governments would be less exposed to sudden demands to subsidise fuels and an inflationary shock.

Energy security would become less about controlling distant shipping lanes, and more about building a distributed and resilient domestic electricity grid, more storage capacity and diversified supply chains."

https://theconversation.com/how-would-the-iran-crisis-play-out-in-a-world-powered-by-renewables-not-fossil-fuels-277537

How would the Iran crisis play out in a world powered by renewables not fossil fuels?

This conflict exposes the fragility of the global fossil fuel economy and how renewables create resilience.

The Conversation

"As the war in Iran sends global fuel prices soaring, the U.S. Dept. of Justice has released a legal opinion claiming that Trump has the authority to override California laws and regulations that have blocked a controversial offshore oil operation by invoking the Defense Production Act.

Sable’s proposal has generated intense resistance, particularly because it seeks to restart a pipeline that ruptured in 2015, causing one of the biggest oil spills in state history."

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-03-07/trump-administration-sets-stage-controversial-offshore-oil-plan

Trump administration sets stage to OK controversial offshore oil plan

The Defense Production Act provides the president broad authorities to influence domestic industry in the interest of national defense or emergencies.

Los Angeles Times

"Saudi Arabia has joined Kuwait and Iraq in beginning the process of drawing down oil production, a response to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and a shortage of storage options."

https://maritime-executive.com/article/report-saudi-aramco-shuts-down-two-supergiant-offshore-oil-fields

Report: Saudi Aramco Shuts Down Two Supergiant Offshore Oil Fields

 Saudi Arabia has joined Kuwait and Iraq in beginning the process of drawing down oil production, a response to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz an...

The Maritime Executive

Electricity prices are spiking in the UK because they are determined by gas prices, and those are spiking.

"By far the cheapest component of our energy supply is the electricity produced by renewables, principally wind and solar.

The war on Iran has put fossil-fuel prices centre stage, but don’t believe those who tout ‘maximising the North Sea’ as our salvation."

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/mar/13/uk-energy-prices-soaring-war-iran-fossil-fuel-north-sea

UK energy prices are soaring – and propagandists want to sell you a false reason why

The war on Iran has put fossil-fuel prices centre stage, but don’t believe those who tout ‘maximising the North Sea’ as our salvation, says Guardian columnist George Monbiot

The Guardian
@CelloMomOnCars UK generation just now.

@TimWardCam

COOL!

But it's that small blue bar that determines the price for all of it.

Difficult to think of a more insane scheme to set electricity rates, if you ask me.

@CelloMomOnCars @TimWardCam The fact that the bid price from the gas generators sets the wholesale price is ridiculous but if you let the far cheaper renewables set the price the gas generators would go bust.

Sounds like the solution is more renewables, storage, grid capacity and lets price gas and oil out of existence. But what do I know.

While there still are fossil fuel plants on the grid, every wind, solar and especially battery installation has excellent return on investment. That's why it makes sense to set the price on margin - to incentivize clean build-out.
@rbphotographic @CelloMomOnCars @TimWardCam

@osma @rbphotographic @TimWardCam

There must be better ways to incentivise clean energy than by households getting smacked on the head every time the price of gas goes up.

We all know which households get hit hardest.

There is a plethora of ways the UK government subsidises fossil fuels: let them retool those for clean energy.

Well, yes, removing all the subsidies on fossil fuel and slapping them with the full impact of carbon pricing would certainly incentivize shutting those down. But then you'd not be paying high price for electricity when demand is high - you'd not have enough electricity supply. It's not an easy problem. Building more renewables and storage will solve it, but it takes time.
@CelloMomOnCars @rbphotographic @TimWardCam

@osma @rbphotographic @TimWardCam

Shivering in the dark? Be careful not to sound like fossil fuel scare talk.

There will be gas in the mix for some time to come, I have no illusions about that.

I'm just pleading for the consumer price to reflect the mixture of generation sources, not just the most expensive one.