Consider This from NPR - What's the war in Iran costing American consumers?
Episode Date: March 9, 2026Americans are paying more for gas than they were a week ago. On Sunday, the price of oil hit $118 a barrel. It's since come down from those highs, but remains up sharply from the pre-war price of $7...0.The price is being pushed up by disruption to oil supply out of the Persian Gulf – The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, typically handles around 20 million barrels of oil a day – close to a fifth of global oil consumption. But the war has brought tanker traffic in the Strait to basically a standstill. For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Mia Venkat.It was edited by Courtney Dorning, Kara Platoni and Luis Clemens.Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Americans are paying more for gas than they were a week ago.
On Sunday, the price of oil hit $118 a barrel.
It has since then come down from those highs,
but remains up sharply from the pre-war price of $70.
The price is being pushed up by disruption to oil supply out of the Persian Gulf.
The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman,
typically handles around 20 million barrels of oil a day,
close to a fifth of the global oil consumption.
But the war has brought tanker traffic.
in the strait to basically a standstill.
When analysts have looked at the things that could go wrong in global oil markets,
this is about as wrong as things could go at any single point of failure in the global system.
That's energy analyst Kevin Book, co-founder of Clearview Energy Partners,
an independent research firm.
He told NPR that the effective closure of the strait is the worst-case scenario.
Meanwhile, in a Monday interview on CNBC, Goldman Sachs co-head of commodities research, Samantha Dart,
said the escalation in the war over the weekend made matters worse.
So we saw news that some Iran oil facilities were getting hit.
So this number one does not de-escalate the situation.
And if you don't have the escalation, the market starts to price in,
not just your regular gradual adjustment that requires a little bit of higher prices,
but rather, hey, this massive shock might last longer than we think.
Consider this.
The average price for a gallon of gas has jumped up 50 cents in a week,
and a surge in energy prices ripples across the economy.
So what does the Iran War mean for affordability?
From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.
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It's consider this from NPR.
The Iran conflict has thrown global oil markets into an uproar.
The price of crude oil rose above $100 a barrel last night for the first time since Russia
launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
This has had huge implications for the global economy.
And joining us to talk about this is Rafael NAM, NPR's senior business editor,
as well as Camila Dominovsky, who covers the oil industry.
Hi to both of you.
Hey, hey.
Hey there.
We're going to start with you.
Why is it so significant that we passed $100 a barrel benchmark?
Yeah, I mean, look, it's psychological.
It's triple digits, right?
And the price actually got very close to $120 overnight,
which was a huge increase from around $70 a barrel before the U.S. and Israel had attacked.
Now, since then, prices have come down quite a bit.
I was looking right before we talked.
It's a little after 4 p.m. Eastern.
And they're around $90.
Now, I will say if the conflict does stretch on, a lot of analysts expect these prices to go up.
And if anything, it's surprising that prices weren't much higher than this much sooner.
The flow of traffic through the key waterway, the straight of her moves, that dried up more than a week ago.
Amunabacher is the head of Middle East Insights at Kepler, which is a trade intelligence group.
She spoke to me from Dubai, and she says that straight closure was catastrophic.
So not having oil prices react to that was quite a shock, to be honest, to me.
And she's far from the only analyst I have spoken with who thinks that, really, prices ought to be higher than they have been, given the scale of the crisis.
Interesting. Now, given that, Raphael, what has been the reaction in the financial markets?
You know, the reaction in stock markets has also not been as bad as people feared.
I mean, the main benchmark, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, actually rose today after falling as much as nearly 900 points in the morning.
But it's still down about 2% or over 2% since the war started.
So investors are nervous, definitely, but we're not seeing the level of panic we could have seen, given the economic stakes here.
Why do you think that is?
Well, there's a couple of reasons, Scott.
One is that despite all the negative factors in the market recently, there's the continued uncertainty behind tariffs, the uncertainty about AI.
investors are all and all still optimistic about the U.S. economy, which has held up better than many had expected.
And even more importantly, there's still hope Trump will eventually decide that the economic consequences of a continued war with Iran are just too high.
I talked to John Kahnavan, who's an analyst at Oxford Economics, and this is how he put it.
And there is that chance that this war could end at any moment if President Trump decides to end it.
And given that, I think market participants are hesitant to become overly bearish on the financial markets, only to have to turn on a dime if the war does end, if the Strait of Form moves does reopen, if things do calm down.
So basically, investors don't want to get too bearish, meaning too pessimistic about the markets, at least not yet.
Camilla, we've seen a lot of different kinds of attacks so far on this war, attacks on military bases.
there was this deadly strike on a school.
What kind of attacks are moving markets when it comes to oil prices?
Yeah, two specifically, attacks on ships and then attacks on oil facilities.
So these strikes on ships, that's what's been disrupting transit through the Strait of Hormuz,
that tremendously important waterway.
20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas typically passes through that bottleneck.
Barely any is getting through now because ship owners simply view the passage is too risky.
And the thing is that that is actually causing countries in the region to have to stop producing oil in some cases because they literally have nowhere to put it.
Here's I'm going to backer again.
Storage tanks are filling up and their export routes are blocked.
And they've had to cut production.
I'm talking specifically here about Iraq, Kuwait, and Bahrain.
And it can take some time to restart production after you close it down like that.
And second, there are these attacks on oil facilities specifically.
We have seen both sides in this conflict attacking oil facilities across the Gulf.
And if those kinds of facilities wind up being destroyed, it would be very difficult to restore production, even if a ceasefire is called.
This is such a big part of the oil production of the world, but it's a fluid market.
How quickly can the rest of the world compensate for this oil cut off?
Yeah, so some of it can be redirected.
Saudi Arabia has a pipeline to get oil out through the Red Sea, for instance.
There's some Russian crude production that the U.S. had put sanctions.
on that's been lifted so that India can buy that oil. The world also has billions of barrels of
oil in reserve. After the oil crisis in the 1970s, a lot of countries agreed to keep backup supplies around.
Some major economies called the G7 met today to discuss tapping those reserves. That could be one
thing that's helped oil markets stabilize. But they have not actually decided to release that oil.
And even if they do, if you add it all up, experts say there is still a gap. I asked Jim Burkhard,
the head of research for oil markets at S&P Global, how well the world can offset this shock.
Well, the quick answer is it can't because the scale of this disruption is so large.
And it gets harder the longer the conflict goes on.
Every analyst I have spoken to about oil says that nothing would stabilize markets like reopening the straight would.
There's just no substitute for peace.
Rafael, what are the implications here for the broader global economy?
It really all depends on when this conflict ends.
And the longer this goes on, the more people are going to start feeling really alarmed.
I mean, moments like this remind you of just how important oil remains to the global economy.
Now, analysts do say the U.S. economies is probably better able to absorb this cost
because it's more energy independent than it was in the 70s, given that there's far more domestic production.
But that doesn't mean the U.S. will be immune.
Higher oil prices are going to mean higher gas prices.
And if it remains that way for long, it means we could be seeing more inflation in the U.S.
And this at a time when Americans are so concerned about affordability already.
And the impact could be even more dire for the economies in Asia and Europe, which rely heavily on Middle Eastern oil and natural gas supplies.
Not only that, there are critical things like virtualizer and agricultural commodities that travel through the Strait of Hormuz,
and that's raising big concerns about food security.
Camilla, real quick, what is this done for gasoline prices at the pump?
They are up.
They're expected to increase even more, and diesel is up even higher.
That is NPR's Camilla Dominovsky, as well as Raphael NOM.
Thanks to both of you.
Thank you.
Thanks.
This episode was produced by Mia Venkat.
It was edited by Courtney Dorney, Kara Plotony, and Louise Clements.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow.
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