Tankers and cargo vessels navigate waterways crucial to global oil supply as geopolitical tension in the Middle East rises.
Source: Reuters
Energy prices have become a policy problem, not just a market headline. Even after Washington temporarily lifted sanctions on some Iranian oil to release an estimated 140 million barrels, the broader shock is still running hotter: analysts cited by Investopedia say oil has climbed above $100 a barrel and European gas prices have doubled as the Iran war drags on. That mismatch matters. Extra crude on paper does not fully solve the real fear gripping markets, which is disruption to shipping, refining and regional energy infrastructure.
In Europe, the strain is already filtering into official forecasts and emergency planning. Greece’s central bank cut its 2026 growth forecast to 1.9 percent from 2.1 percent and raised its inflation outlook to 3.1 percent from 2.1 percent, based on assumptions for higher oil and gas prices. Greece’s government is also signaling additional support measures, with Development Minister Takis Theodorikakos warning that diesel costs are a particular threat because they feed directly into transport and consumer prices. In practice, that is the political bind across Europe: shield households from another energy shock without locking in bigger fiscal costs or encouraging shortages.
The local response shows how quickly an external oil shock becomes a domestic inflation fight. Athens has already imposed caps on profit margins for fuels and food, and officials say more steps are likely if the conflict persists. Theodorikakos told Greek media that additional measures are certain to be taken as fuel costs and inflation build. That may soften the blow for consumers, but it also underlines the bigger risk: if governments keep treating this as a short-lived spike and the conflict proves longer, relief packages could multiply just as growth slows.
What markets are really pricing now is duration. Investopedia’s source set frames the danger as a supply shock that could spread beyond crude into fertiliser, chemicals and manufacturing inputs if disruption in the Gulf lasts, while Greek officials are already acting as if the pain is landing in household budgets today. That leaves oil traders, central banks and finance ministries watching the same question: whether temporary barrels and price caps can bridge the gap before a geopolitical crisis hardens into a broader inflation and growth problem.