J.P. Morgan’s supply-chain mapping suggests the last pre-disruption Persian Gulf cargoes hit South-East Asia, South Asia and East Africa by about 1 April, Europe by about 10 April, and the US by about 15 April. Australia's is due by 20 April... after those dates, the absence of replenishment becomes much harder to hide.

The Strait of Hormuz disruption is not just about crude. Analysts and logistics reporting say it also hits LNG, LPG, petrochemicals, methanol, plastics feedstocks and helium, which means the pain doesn’t stop at the bowser. It runs through manufacturing, freight, construction inputs, chemicals and tech supply chains as inventories thin out.

So the sequence is roughly this:

First, people panic locally.
Then wholesalers and retailers start paying up to secure supply.
Then inventories that were already on the water get delivered.
Then the pipeline starts running dry.
That is when the shock stops being a story for traders and shipping nerds and starts becoming obvious to everyone else.

Australia sits in that early wave. The map’s timing lines up with reports that parts of Asia have already been scrambling for replacement cargoes, with even unusual US Gulf Coast-to-Australia distillate routes being used to plug gaps.

And if the disruption drags on, this stops being about “higher prices” and becomes about allocation.

Who gets fuel.
Who pays more.
Which industries keep moving.
Which ones start slowing, rationing, or passing costs straight through to households.

Barclays says that the Hormuz disruption could remove 13 - 14 million barrels a day from global supply, while Kpler says cumulative losses could exceed 400 million barrels by mid-April if flows don’t normalise.

So yes, shortages so far have been partly behavioural... fear, stockpiling, domestic scrambling.
But the actual physical supply problem has yet to come.

For our part of the world, the cliff edge is very close. By mid-April, the “surely they’ll sort it out” phase gives way to the “oh, this is real” phase. Europe follows. The US later, but still not immune, especially through price rather than outright physical scarcity.

In other words... the panic buying is the opening act.
The real show starts when the ships stop arriving.

From The Gerk https://substack.com/@snarkygherkin/note/c-234844710?utm_source=notes-share-action

#IranWar

@didgebaba What animal species are you?
@experimentmapass mammal, homo sapien. Why?
@didgebaba Just curious about your mental state. Thank you.
@experimentmapass what does Linnean taxonomy have to do with my mental state?
@didgebaba Healthy Linnean taxonomy, I guess.

@experimentmapass a taxonomy can be neither healthy or unhealthy. It's a scientific system of classification. The taxonomic hierarchy—phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species—organizes living things from broad groups to specific organisms, with each level nested within the one above.

What are you talking about?

@didgebaba I know, i am scientist, just wandering around.
@didgebaba @experimentmapass he is just trolling.
@didgebaba @hhf What animal species are you?
@hhf @experimentmapass he seems unhappy.
@didgebaba @hhf By the way, It is a good question to hunt AI bots. Try it yourself.

@didgebaba Personally, I think all those nations affected should retaliate economically at the #aggressors responsible - most notably the #USA - and enforce a #TotalEmbargo until they both collectively undid harm caused - WITH INTEREST!

#LackOfAccountability #LackOfConsequences #USpol #EUpol #politics #Trump #CrimeOfAggression #politricks #politics

@kkarhan @didgebaba

That isn’t very useful or possible really. They’ve broken eggs and they are not going back together.

The realistic response is to work from the presumption that the global supply chain will breakdown and you and I and all of us in our communities will have to figure out how to go about our lives without the system we all have lived in.

This is why I rant and rave about things like bio-regionalism, walkable cities and relocalizing things like food.

@kkarhan @didgebaba

We tend to think about doing things in terms of financed industrialized processes. What we may have to consider his sophisticated designs that could be accomplished with sweat equity.

Look at the green wall project for the Sahel, where incredibly poor people build swales with nothing more than hand tools and sweat equity. The water cycle for their land is restored, and they go from being starving to well fed.

@GhostOnTheHalfShell @didgebaba those things don't exclude each other either!

@kkarhan @didgebaba

Sure. I don’t no honestly think if the United States would be in any better position than the victims of this ridiculous war.

Consider that 90% of the population doesn’t have the income to make ends meet. People all over the United States are sacrificing necessities in one area or another.

I think we all know where the problem is. It’s Epstein people.

@GhostOnTheHalfShell @kkarhan The USA and its allies have spent the past 30 years establishing hegemonic control over oil production in the Gulf with two massive wars. This had the side effect of creating a global dependency upon and concentration of resource assets in the region. This works fine when military control can be assured. We are about to learn if this will continue.

@didgebaba @kkarhan

I think we’re a little bit beyond about to learn. Military control has already evaporated.

In the same way that Russia had mistakenly been seen as a military near peer, the US presumption of military hegemony is falling apart, because the world is learning about the real limits of fancy military gear.

@GhostOnTheHalfShell @didgebaba or rather that Modern Warfare is really different...

  • Tho it's not really:
  • War is always a matter of attriction and numbers: The only winning strategy is to be cheaper ("Cost per Kill") than the opponent.
@GhostOnTheHalfShell @kkarhan yes and the nature of imperial control is changing. China doesn't invade. It does a lend lease or fixed contract deal. China builds roads and invests. It's like a Marshall Plan without goodwill or democracy.
@didgebaba
Desperate people are much easier to subjugate, just ask the russians.
@didgebaba I expect we will see a lot of interest in shorting at international stock exchanges..
Musk’s xAI wins permit for datacenter’s makeshift power plant despite backlash

Billionaire’s artificial intelligence company gets approval to run 41 methane gas turbines at its ‘Colossus 2’ in Mississippi

The Guardian
@didgebaba Folks are about to find out very quickly now what goes into making the cogs and glue that holds modern society together

@didgebaba

We should not consider all the buying taking place now to be panic buying but speculators, who are relying on being able to make a mint off of all this.

Even if hostilities ceased this moment, the damage to oil and natural gas fields, which is permanent in some cases, the damage to refining and port facilities will take months or years to repair.

Downstream of the Strait is the processing infrastructure that is tailored to specific kinds of crude. The US is one location for that.

@didgebaba helium is a lot bigger deal than this article infers.
It's used to cool MRI machines and in cryogenics.
It's used in welding
In crystal growth for silicon wafers
In scientific research in quantum dynamics and superconductors
And balloons
@Darkphoenix @didgebaba MRI machines keep their helium in closed cycle mostly. That one is much less of a short term problem.
@etchedpixels @didgebaba
Until we need to build more. Hopefully, we will have rebuilt a supply chain in time for that.

@didgebaba

There is no link to the original... but logical analysis.

@didgebaba The other fun side to this people don't talk about is the delivery pipeline is the same length after/if there is anything left when it's over. So even if it ends in a week, there will be several weeks of shortages on shipped product and that in itself delays restart of any dependent production plants which in turn means they are skewed even further forward in time, just as they've been able to keep operating after it started.

@didgebaba

Trump is a madman and his cronies are equally guilty to this political and economical terrorism. The megalomaniac with the largest military arsenal under his command is only interested in absolute power. The king bully of the world.

What could possibly go wrong.

His name should be erased from every official document and building when this is over, shame on him and on those enabling this madman.