Hormuz Shipping Disruptions Raise Risks for Energy, Fertilizers and Vulnerable Economies: UNCTAD
Chennai:
Port Wings News Network:
UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has released a rapid analysis – Strait of Hormuz Disruptions – Implications for Global Trade and Development – examining the implications of recent disruptions to maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical trade corridors.
The Strait carries around one quarter of global seaborne oil trade, as well as significant volumes of liquefied natural gas and fertilizers.
Military escalation in the region has disrupted shipping flows through this narrow passage, raising concerns about ripple effects across energy markets, maritime transport and global supply chains.
Key findings from the analysis:
Energy markets reacted immediately, with Brent crude rising above US$90 per barrel.
Freight rates for oil tankers and war risk insurance premiums are surging, while marine fuel costs are also rising, increasing shipping costs across supply chains.
Around one-third of global seaborne fertilizer trade (about 16 million tonnes) passes through the Strait, raising concerns about fertilizer access for some of the poorest countries.
Developing economies may be particularly exposed, as high debt burdens and rising borrowing costs limit their ability to absorb new price shocks.
Past crises – including COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine – showed how disruptions to energy, transport and agricultural inputs can quickly spread across interconnected markets.
UNCTAD is the UN’s leading body on trade and development. Founded in 1964, it supports 195 member states with expert analysis, technical assistance, and serves as a platform for intergovernmental dialogue.
Read the full 18-page analysis here.









