Festive music from the band Sweet Crude blared at a party minutes after President Donald Trump’s former defense secretary warned that ending the war now would cede ownership of the narrow Strait of Hormuz—the world’s most critical choke point—to Iran.
“We’re in a tough spot, ladies and gentlemen,” said retired Gen. Jim Mattis at the CERAWeek by S&P Global conference in Houston. “I can’t identify a lot of options.”
The dichotomy of the celebratory, yet nerve-wracking vibes dominated the unofficial “Davos of energy” event this week that still attracted a record of over 11,000 attendees from 90 countries—a veritable who’s who of the energy sector around the world—not counting the fossil fuel protestors outside.
The mood was meant to be triumphant. There’s ongoing crude oil and gas growth, but most prominent is the unprecedented wave of electricity demand from AI, triggering an infrastructure boom for pipelines, export hubs, and power, including gas-fired generation, renewables, nuclear, and more—truly an all-of-the-above energy renaissance that could still suffer from geopolitical turmoil.
So, the extension of the unexpected Iran war overshadows everything. The industry still cannot come to grips with the previously unfathomable scenario of the strait staying shuttered for a prolonged period of time. The Strait of Hormuz is the narrow, precarious waterway between Iran and the Musandam Peninsula through which flows roughly 20% of the world’s oil and natural gas, fertilizer for agriculture, helium for semiconductors, and petrochemicals that go into almost everything. Much of the world, especially in developing Asia, is already suffering the consequences and the ripple effects will continue to spread the longer the war draws out.
“There’s a lot of somber talk,” said Arjun Murti, energy macro and policy partner at the Veriten research and investment firm. “The strait does need to open in some fashion pretty soon. It’s not good for anybody.”
Even if American oil, gas, and chemicals producers rake in higher profit margins for now, they’ll suffer from the volatility and longer-term demand destruction later, especially if a global recession—or worse—takes hold.
Iran dominated the news so much that Venezuela seems like old news. The in-person appearance at CERAWeek of Venezuelan opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado was almost an afterthought. The four-hour-long security lines at Houston’s airports were a much more prominent topic of conversation.
Key members of the Trump administration trekked to Houston, including Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, attempting to assuage the concerns of industry leaders and encourage them to produce more oil and gas.
This occurred as President Trump declared the war won—while sending more troops to the Persian Gulf for a potential escalation—and said oil prices would quickly fall again, which doesn’t exactly motivate more oil production.
“Markets do what markets do,” said Wright, a former oil and gas CEO, arguing that “prices have not risen enough yet to drive meaningful demand destruction.”
“It’s short-term disruption right now, but to end a multi-decadal problem and lead to a world that’s much more peaceful, can be much more prosperous, and much more securely energized,” Wright told the CERAWeek audience.
The next day, Wright, who remained in Houston most of the week, said investors are wrong when they pigeonhole energy as a single sector.
“Energy is not one sector. Energy is the enabler of absolutely everything we do,” Wright said. “Energy is life.”
That sentiment is exactly what makes everyone so nervous about the continuation of the Iran war—one started by the U.S. and Israel—and the greatest energy supply shock in history.
Some sent recorded video messages instead. Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, the CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), accused Iran of “choking the throat” of the “global economy.”
“Weaponizing the Strait of Hormuz is not an act of aggression against one nation. It’s economic terrorism against every nation,” Al Jaber said. “And no country should be allowed to hold Hormuz hostage. Not now, not ever.”
Kuwait Petroleum CEO Sheikh Nawaf al-Sabah said he is “outraged” by Iran’s unprovoked counterattacks against its Gulf neighbors. Kuwait and Iraq have already shut off most of their oil production, while Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have implemented major cutbacks as well.
“It’s a domino effect,” al-Sabah said. “The costs of this war don’t stay within geographical lines in this region. They extend all the way through the supply chain.”
The unknowns are really what’s scariest, said Veriten founder and CEO Maynard Holt.
“You have this confluence of factors—an administration keeping a very tight circle to maintain the element of surprise, the Europeans taking a limited role, energy players and various other Middle East actors deciding not to speculate in public, all with a backdrop of a potentially calamitous extended blockage of Hormuz,” Holt told Fortune.
“That whole stew just raises the overall anxiety while also limiting the public discussion.”



