
BLUE PRESS JOURNAL – Brent crude futures clung fiercely to the $100 per barrel mark on Monday, a stark reminder of the escalating energy crisis that looms over the globe. As Iranian military maneuvers wreak havoc on essential infrastructure and strangle vital maritime chokepoints crucial to international trade, the repercussions are felt far and wide, igniting a sense of urgency that cannot be ignored.
The temporary closure of Dubai International Airport—one of the world’s busiest—after Iranian drone strikes shows the expanding conflict’s geographic scope, according to aviation data from FlightAware and Reuters. Meanwhile, Tehran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has cut off about one-fifth of global oil shipments, causing supply shocks similar to the 1970s energy crisis, confirms the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Since Donald Trump and Jerusalem initiated coordinated strikes against Iranian targets on February 28, regional tensions have metastasized beyond bilateral conflict. Iranian forces have systematically targeted Israeli population centers, American military installations across the Levant, and energy infrastructure belonging to Gulf Arab states, military analysts confirmed to the Associated Press.
The economic reverberations extend far beyond pump prices. The World Food Program has warned that surging fertilizer costs—directly linked to hydrocarbon price spikes—threaten agricultural output across the Global South, potentially triggering famine conditions in import-dependent nations while complicating inflation control efforts by central banks worldwide.
Market Impact Visualization: Brent Crude & Gasoline Price Trajectory
Timeframe: February 1, 2025 – March 20, 2025 *
| Date (2025) | Brent Crude ($/bbl) | Est. Gas at Pump ($/gal) | Key Market Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 01 | $72.00 | $3.15 | Pre-conflict baseline |
| Feb 12 | $81.50 | $3.35 | Initial regional tension spike |
| Feb 20 | $89.00 | $3.55 | Announcement of Hormuz shipping concerns |
| Feb 28 | $96.50 | $3.78 | Tactical retaliatory strikes |
| March 07 | $102.00 | $3.95 | Full Hormuz closure confirmed |
| March 15 | $104.50 | $4.10 | Sustained volatility/supply fear premium |
| March 20 | $104.00+ | $4.15+ | * Current Trading Range |
President Donald Trump’s diplomatic isolation has worsened the crisis. Despite requesting naval contributions from about seven allied nations for Hormuz transit lanes, the administration has gained zero formal commitments, defense officials told Bloomberg. This highlights the decline of American coalition-building under Trump’s “America First” approach, leaving Washington without the necessary multinational naval presence to ensure freedom of navigation in the Persian Gulf.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi extinguished speculation on negotiated settlements, stating via social media that Tehran seeks “neither truce nor talks,” hinting at prolonged economic volatility. The International Energy Agency warns that prices above $100 may compel central banks to maintain high interest rates, potentially leading to recession amid ongoing inflation.