As the war in the Middle East halts most of the oil and gas trade from the region, countries thousands of miles away are feeling the pain of their energy supplies suddenly vanishing. Some are feeling the loss more acutely than others.

Asian countries are the biggest buyers of Persian Gulf energy

  • Pakistan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    81%

    Total energy
    imports in 2024

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $17 bil.

  • Japan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    57%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $139 bil.

  • Thailand

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    56%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $43 bil.

  • South Korea

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    55%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $144 bil.

  • India

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    50%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $180 bil.

  • Maldives

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    42%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $774.1 mil.

  • Taiwan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    40%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $47 bil.

  • China

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    35%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $413 bil.

  • Sri Lanka

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    33%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

  • Malaysia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    29%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $44 bil.

  • Singapore

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    27%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $86 bil.

  • Philippines

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    26%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $16 bil.

  • Israel

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    19%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $3 bil.

  • Brunei

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    16%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Myanmar

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    16%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Indonesia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    15%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $35 bil.

  • Armenia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    10%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $535.9 mil.

  • Turkey

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    7%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $26 bil.

  • Hong Kong

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    5%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $12 bil.

  • Uzbekistan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Kazakhstan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $628 mil.

  • Yemen

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $23.5 mil.

  • Azerbaijan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Kyrgyzstan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Jordan

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $641 mil.

  • Cambodia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $3 bil.

  • Syria

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $131.2 mil.

  • Bangladesh

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $7 bil.

Note: Only countries with energy imports from Gulf countries are shown.

In 2024, nearly 21 million barrels of oil a day crossed through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow passageway connecting the Persian Gulf to the world. Four-fifths of that supply went to Asia.

China has long been the biggest purchaser of oil and gas from Persian Gulf nations. And with more than a third of its total supply coming from the region, the disruption is significant for Beijing. But other countries are almost entirely reliant on the region for their energy needs.

Pakistan has considered imposing a four-day workweek, and remote school and work, in order to preserve energy stockpiles. A state-led fund in Thailand, to subsidize the cost of fuel when prices surge, plunged into a deficit this month.

In India, where the economy depends on the Middle East for roughly 40 percent of the country’s oil imports and 80 percent of its gas, a shortage of cooking gas is squeezing households. And across Asia, fliers are being stranded because airlines running low on jet fuel have canceled thousands of flights.

Europe has been more insulated, sort of

  • Greece

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    36%

    Total energy
    imports in 2024

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $19 bil.

  • Lithuania

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    32%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $7 bil.

  • Poland

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    30%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $28 bil.

  • Serbia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    29%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Bulgaria

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    23%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Slovenia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    23%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

  • Italy

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    22%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $50 bil.

  • Albania

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    22%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $931.9 mil.

  • France

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    18%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $73 bil.

  • Ireland

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    14%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $6 bil.

  • Iceland

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    13%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • U.K.

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    11%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $62 bil.

  • Netherlands

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    10%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $105 bil.

  • Spain

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    9%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $53 bil.

  • Romania

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    8%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $8 bil.

  • Denmark

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    8%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $6 bil.

  • Ukraine

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    7%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $8 bil.

  • Austria

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    7%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $10 bil.

  • Germany

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    7%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $66 bil.

  • Norway

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    5%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Portugal

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    5%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $10 bil.

  • Moldova

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    4%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Cyprus

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    4%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $3 bil.

  • Belgium

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    4%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $47 bil.

  • Latvia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    3%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Sweden

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    3%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $18 bil.

  • Finland

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    3%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $10 bil.

  • Estonia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    2%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • North Macedonia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    2%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $902.7 mil.

  • Croatia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $6 bil.

  • Switzerland

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $8 bil.

  • Bosnia and Herzegovina

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Slovakia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

Note: Only countries with energy imports from Gulf countries are shown.

Europe has traditionally been less reliant on the Gulf than Asia has been. It used to get most of its natural gas from Russia, but in recent years it has relied more on the United States and Norway. But the continent has had to endure one energy crisis after another in recent years, including from Russia’s war with Ukraine and the Western sanctions that followed.

Russia is the world’s third-largest producer of oil and second-largest producer of gas, and the sales of its energy products have been significantly restricted while Moscow continues its invasion of Ukraine.

This current crisis comes as European countries, confronting lackluster economic output, try to rebuild their industrial bases and fend off competition from cheaper Chinese exports.

Confronted with soaring prices since its attack with Israel on Iran, the United States temporarily lifted sanctions on Russian oil that is currently at sea, hoping to ease the global supply and markets in the process. The European Union has not made similar moves.

Parts of Africa will be hit hard

  • Seychelles

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    98%

    Total energy
    imports in 2024

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $308.6 mil.

  • Mauritania

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    76%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $973.5 mil.

  • Uganda

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    61%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Mauritius

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    56%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Kenya

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    55%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Egypt

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    45%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $16 bil.

  • Zambia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    45%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Namibia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    38%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Malawi

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    38%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $476.1 mil.

  • South Africa

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    33%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $18 bil.

  • Tanzania

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    30%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Morocco

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    29%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $8 bil.

  • Mozambique

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    24%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Madagascar

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    19%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $841.3 mil.

  • Zimbabwe

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    16%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Senegal

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    13%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

  • Nigeria

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    12%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $13 bil.

  • Benin

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    6%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $398.4 mil.

  • Angola

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    4%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Burkina Faso

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    4%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Tunisia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    2%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $3 bil.

  • Cote d’Ivoire

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    2%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

  • Central African Republic

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $196.7 mil.

  • Gambia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $206.6 mil.

  • Niger

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $113.6 mil.

  • Lesotho

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $214.4 mil.

  • Cameroon

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $424.4 mil.

  • Libya

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

Note: Only countries with energy imports from Gulf countries are shown.

African nations, like many other countries in the global south, could feel the disruption unevenly. Seychelles, the island nation off the east coast of Africa, imported almost all of its energy from Gulf states in 2024. Mauritius has had a similar reliance, while Nigeria, an oil-rich state and a member of the OPEC Plus oil cartel, has traditionally imported relatively few fossil fuels from the Middle East.

But as the war continues, the impact is being felt beyond the imports of oil and gas. The Persian Gulf is a dominant source of fertilizer, partly because the region’s abundance of energy has spurred the development of factories that make the raw materials for many types of agricultural chemicals.

A sustained rise in the cost of fertilizer could force governments in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa to subsidize the cost of growing crops or otherwise watch food prices climb. That could add to debt burdens afflicting many lower-income countries.

The Americas and elsewhere are feeling broader economic shocks

  • Argentina

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    16%

    Total energy
    imports in 2024

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $3 bil.

  • Brazil

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    13%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $28 bil.

  • United States

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    10%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $233 bil.

  • Paraguay

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    9%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Canada

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    5%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $31 bil.

  • Uruguay

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    4%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Australia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    2%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $37 bil.

  • Dominican Republic

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Guatemala

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $4 bil.

  • Chile

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $13 bil.

  • Fiji

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $888.1 mil.

  • Peru

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $9 bil.

  • Honduras

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Ecuador

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $5 bil.

  • Colombia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $6 bil.

  • El Salvador

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Costa Rica

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • New Zealand

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $6 bil.

  • Mexico

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $34 bil.

  • Belize

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $235.5 mil.

  • Bolivia

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $2 bil.

  • Nicaragua

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $1 bil.

  • Barbados

    Share of energy imports from Gulf Countries

    <1%

    Total energy imports in 2024

    $552.3 mil.

Note: Only countries with energy imports from Gulf countries are shown.

The United States is the world’s largest producer of oil and gas. That means the impact of halting the energy trade from the Middle East is much less severe.

But the United States and other countries in the region that do not import great quantities from the Gulf are still feeling economic strain. The jump in oil prices – to over $100 a barrel in recent weeks – has already weighed on other major economic factors.

The cost of gasoline has jumped by about a dollar a gallon nationally since the war began. American airlines have begun to cut flights because of fuel costs. Concerns about inflation have pushed mortgage rates to their highest level in three months, just weeks after they fell below 6 percent for the first time since 2022.

If the war drags on, or if oil and gas prices continue to rise, the damage will most likely grow, economists say. It is perhaps one reason why the White House has forcefully insisted that it does not need Middle Eastern oil — and is increasingly trying to use military force to stop Iran’s blockade of it.

Methodology

To calculate total energy imports for each country, The New York Times used 2024 international trade data from the Observatory for Economic Complexity and tallied the value of imports for a subset of energy-related goods. A share of imports from Gulf countries was then calculated from that subset.

The Gulf countries included are: Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Iran.

The categories used were: crude petroleum oils (HS 270900), bituminous petroleum distillates (HS 271000), liquefied natural gas (HS 271111), liquefied propane (HS 271112), liquefied butanes (HS 271113) and liquefied petroleum gases (HS 271119).

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