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Home›Greater Bay›Hormuz effect reaches China’s coast: Energy volatility and Asian exposure

Hormuz effect reaches China’s coast: Energy volatility and Asian exposure

By Times Reporter
April 10, 2026
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[AP Photo]

ANALYSIS
The renewed instability around the Strait of Hormuz is doing what geopolitics does best – exposing the fine print in energy strategies that once looked airtight. For Asia, and particularly China, the issue is not just supply disruption, but price transmission. Even without a single tanker blocked, the shock is already moving through markets.

At the center of this is liquefied natural gas (LNG), the fuel that quietly became Asia’s balancing mechanism in the post-pandemic recovery and, more recently, Europe’s substitute for Russian pipeline gas. According to Reuters reporting this week, spot LNG prices in Asia have shown renewed volatility, with traders pricing in risk premiums tied directly to Middle East tensions.

Key Takeaways

Hormuz risk is a price shock
Even without disruption, tensions around the Strait of Hormuz are driving LNG price volatility, higher freight costs, and risk premiums across Asian energy markets.

LNG remains the weak link
Despite pipelines, coal fallback, and renewables, China still relies on LNG as a marginal fuel, leaving it exposed to global price swings and spot market instability.

GBA sits at the frontline of energy exposure
Coastal hubs like Shenzhen and Guangzhou depend heavily on imported gas, making the region a test case for balancing decarbonization goals with energy security.

Roughly 20% of global oil consumption passes through Hormuz daily, alongside about one-fifth of global LNG trade, much of it originating from Qatar. Any perceived threat – not necessarily an actual closure – tends to trigger immediate upward pressure on freight rates, insurance costs, and benchmark prices. For Asia, the exposure is structural. Japan and South Korea remain among the largest LNG importers globally, while China has steadily increased its share, becoming the world’s top LNG importer in recent years. Even marginal disruptions in the Gulf ripple quickly across benchmarks such as the Japan–Korea Marker.

Beijing has spent the past decade building what looks, on paper, like a diversified energy portfolio, combining pipeline gas from Central Asia and Russia, domestic coal as a fallback, expanding renewables capacity, and increasing LNG import infrastructure along the coast. Yet diversification is not insulation.

LNG remains the marginal supplier – the swing fuel that fills gaps when demand spikes or when other sources falter – making it the most price-sensitive component of the system. Reuters notes that Chinese buyers have recently shown more caution in spot LNG purchases, stepping back during price spikes and leaning on long-term contracts instead.

Nowhere is this dynamic more visible than in the Greater Bay Area. Cities like Shenzhen and Guangzhou sit at the frontline of China’s LNG infrastructure network, with major receiving terminals and gas-fired power plants supporting dense urban economies. The region’s cleaner energy mix, compared with inland coal-heavy provinces, comes with a trade-off: greater reliance on imported gas, heightened sensitivity to global price swings, and limited short-term substitution options.

Complicating matters is Europe’s continued presence in LNG markets. Since 2022, European buyers have competed aggressively for cargoes, often outbidding Asian importers. Although demand has stabilized, the structural shift remains.

Reuters highlights that Asian buyers are increasingly squeezed between Middle East risk and European competition, creating a dual pressure of supply uncertainty and price escalation.

Energy shocks extend beyond commodity prices. Shipping routes through Hormuz now carry higher insurance premiums, while tanker availability tightens during periods of uncertainty. These additional costs cascade into delivered LNG prices, amplifying volatility even if production remains unchanged.

For China, heavily reliant on maritime imports for LNG, these secondary effects can be as significant as the primary supply risk.

Beijing’s response has been pragmatic rather than dramatic. It is expanding strategic gas storage, increasing reliance on long-term LNG contracts, accelerating renewable deployment, and maintaining coal as a reliability backstop despite decarbonization goals. State-owned enterprises are also recalibrating procurement strategies, balancing cost discipline with supply security.

The Hormuz shock is not, at this stage, a supply crisis. It is something more subtle – and arguably more consequential. It underscores that in a globally interconnected energy system, vulnerability lies not only in dependence, but in interdependence. For China and the Greater Bay Area, the lesson is clear: diversification helps, but as long as LNG remains the marginal fuel, global volatility will always find a way in. Times Writer

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