The POTUS' war on Iran is already bringing rationing of fuel and major disruptions in many countries, and it's going to get a lot worse soon as the final shipments that made it thru the Strait start to arrive this week, the NYT reports. I admire (but do not share) this story's optimism of the potential for the Iran war to hasten more global adoption of renewables.

"Sri Lanka and Myanmar are rationing fuel. The Philippines has instituted four-day workweeks to conserve gasoline and electricity. Bangladesh briefly closed its universities to reserve power for homes and businesses. Across India, families and restaurants are cooking over wood fires for want of gas. Airlines are canceling flights."

"As painful as the first phase of the energy crisis set off by the war with Iran has been, what comes next will be worse. This week, the final deliveries of oil and liquefied natural gas to Asia that passed through the Strait of Hormuz before it was closed are expected to arrive. The last tanker shipments to Europe should land by mid-April. After that, many countries’ reserves of gasoline, diesel, liquid petroleum gas and natural gas will dwindle. The price of oil could soar as high as $200 a barrel if the war drags on."

Meanwhile, China -- which leads the world in battery technology production -- stands to massively gain from all this oil shock.

"As the Philippines declared a national energy emergency on March 24, car shoppers in Manila were crowding into showrooms of the Chinese carmaker BYD and purchasing E.V.s ."

Of course, here in the US we've largely said that we're just gonna keep making gas guzzlers and forget about all those pledges we made to invest in electric vehicles. Consumers in the US would be flocking to those BYD cars too if import duties didn't make them prohibitively expensive. Most of the big car makers in the US are hopelessly focused on people who don't bat an eyelash spending $60,000 (base price) for a new car or truck.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/01/opinion/oil-crisis-iran-electric-solar.html

Opinion | Remember the Oil Shocks of the ’70s? This Is Going to Be Worse. Much Worse.

Higher oil prices and limited supply will accelerate a turn toward cleaner technologies, especially in Asia and Europe.

The New York Times
@briankrebs I am soooo glad I bought a hybrid last year. So glad!

@briankrebs It's interesting to see the repercussions of an idiot fixing a problem that did not exist.

That same idiot and his puppet masters will make even more billions from this and reduce even more lives and rights. I guess that's what you do when you shit on people all the way to the top.

It should help other nations move away from fossil, but that will take a long time. In the interim... the idiot gloats.

@retech @briankrebs "Interesting" in much the same way as the short period of time between falling off a precipice and hitting your final resting place is "interesting".
@briankrebs I am really glad that I have enough solar panels on the roof to keep me going for the summer months, if I’m careful (also that those summer months are just starting)
@briankrebs asked youngsters at work yesterday and they had never heard about this 😬

@briankrebs the silly part too is that most EVs in the US fit that price point you mentioned too.

There’s little in the way of Nissan leaf. Most EVs aren’t quite luxury designation, but absolutely not economy designation.

Either way full size trucks, suvs, and crossovers still completely dominate the market.

As an aside, it’s strange visiting Europe and not seeing loads of pickup trucks everywhere. Very much an americas (not just us!) thing.

@elebertus @briankrebs
RE
Strange not seeing big #SUV and #PickupTrucks in #EU

That's because (one reason) the #gasolineprices are from $9-11 (USD) a gallon (I read this on #Mastodon)

#NYT free gift isn't working, but this is
https://archive.md/DsEdk

@six_grandfathers_mountain I think also in part, at least in smaller Italian and Spanish towns the roads are just too narrow either way
@briankrebs Toyota has released the C-HR and the new BZ vehicles. Subaru released it's branded versions of those same cars, and they're $37K for the standard model C-HR and low 40s for the BZ. Kia has the EV3 coming to the US in 2027 which should also be fairly low cost too at 35K. And don't forget the recently redesigned Leaf at 29.9K based on the Ariya.

@T2R @briankrebs
RE
2027 which should also be fairly low cost too at 35K

Yea I think there will be mid priced #EVs (or we hope so)
Driving a 2019 (2nd gen) #NISSANLEAF bought bew for $35k still works great and you know what the best 2 features are?
1. Passing by gas stations
2. Running the AC on when waiting in a hot parking lot, not a problem even for 2+ hours, really!

#NYT free gift not working, but this is https://archive.md/DsEdk

The US has shown us how risky reliance on oil and gas is

@T2R @briankrebs

Also, used EVs, even those just one year old, are a bargain right now.

(Our household sure picked a good time to go electric and solar!)

@Ehay2k @briankrebs I don’t know if I can buy a used electric car. I don’t know what has been done to the battery. Whether it’s been through the wringer at superchargers or what. I tend to buy new and keep forever. Aka my 19yr old Honda that just won’t die.
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@briankrebs I was there and I remember.

@briankrebs Fortunately, I bought a hybrid some 13 years ago to hedge against surges in gasoline prices, not to mention a low total cost of ownership. Last year, I picked up a small electric scooter, based on a Chinese design, from a Canadian company for a whopping $375 or so. It cut my car insurance by $200 per year (price break). Low powered, short range, but I can store it in coat check at a theater & under a seat on a train. (more)

https://dynamicscooter.com/product/model-b/

Dynamic Scooter Model B

Our Compact and Lightweight Electronic Scooter Model B is the perfect travel companion – easy to transport, powerful electric motor, reliable brakes.

Dynamic Scooter
@briankrebs The scooter I mentioned could not be designed in the U.S. It is not the ability of our engineers, but rather a mindset - bigger is more profitable whereas housing in China on the average is smaller than in the U.S. so a design that saves space is really useful.

@briankrebs

So... odd/even gas days?

I remember that a Lot of kids got rich pulling wagons with boxes of coffee along the gas lines and selling cups of joe for a buck or two each.

@briankrebs
In the 70's when gas was going to over a dollar per gallon, the gas pumps could only handle up to 99.9 cents. They want to do a simple modification to charge per quart but the public stupidly believed they were being cheated. So all the pumps had to be replaced at considerable expense.
Also some gas stations started limiting the amount of gas (rather than requiring a minimum purchase) causing repeated refills of just a few gallons, aggravating the waiting lines for gas.
@briankrebs I stand by my assertion that China is country that MAGA will make great again.
@briankrebs Uranium is more common in the earth's crust than tin, and thorium is three times more plentiful than that. 10 5 gigawatt nuclear power plants could power all of california.
@commander555 @briankrebs it's much cheaper, easier on the environment (ever been to former nuclear power sites?) to start properly using wind power (for instance, Denmark gets 60% of its electricity needs from wind power).
I don't see why, say, Lake Michigan is not covered with wind turbines (well, other than the lack of political will).
@commander555 @briankrebs That many nuclear plants, at current construction costs, would be 500 billion dollars. California is wealthy, but not *that* wealthy. We'll continue with much cheaper solar, wind, and battery power.
@briankrebs Maybe it is a wake up call for all of us to wean ourselves off fossil fuels.
@briankrebs The oil shock will look like a walk in the park when the food shock hits. The closing of the straight of Hormuz has interrupted the flow of fertilizer precisely at a time when they are needed. Even if the war ends a few months from now with a total victory over Iran, it will be too late to plant what needs planting today. A global famine is coming.
Mapped: Where China Gets Its Oil

This graphic maps China's crude and condensate imports, which are largely concentrated in the Middle East, leaving it particularly exposed to trade shocks in the Strait of Hormuz.

Visual Capitalist
@briankrebs I honestly don't understand the argument of "hasten more global adoption of renewables.". factories producing renewable products (solar panels ...etc) and related services (shipping/handling/distribution) are all running on fossil fuel, which is in short supply ATM. this means less production and shipping, which means less adoption in general even if more people want to. the current crisis might be good for the environment, due to less oil consumption.