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 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

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.

@T2R @briankrebs

I hear you. But unlike an ICE powered car, the battery is the main thing. No transmission, etc. One thing to do is verify the mileage, which directly correlates to the max possible number of charge cycles. It's hard to do damage to a EV on just a few charge cycles

There are also ways to test the battery - charge to 80 pct and check to see how far off the range is from what other owners report in forums. But a $25-30k, one or two year old EV is a good buy if it's healthy.

@Ehay2k

There are commercial providers for EV Battery Health assessments, and even just Reading the OBD gives good insights.

Also, battery repair shops start spreading which just do work on broken cells (which is way more common than totally defective batteries).

I doubt this is technically impossible in the US.

HOWEVER, that „Your battery will Break and then you‘re broke“ Story Served huge audiences around here as well. mostly FUD, but effective FUD.

@T2R @briankrebs

@Saupreiss @Ehay2k @briankrebs Ya we're still at the cusp of having a lot of repair shops for EVs or even just ones that work on EVs. I know there is a site called recurrentauto.com but I'm also kinda hoping that solid state batteries will start to make it more mainstream here in the next year or two which is my buying window. Maybe I should just wait until our treasonous "president" is out of office and we get back to incentives before I make this kind of a purchase. IDK.