Iran War Pushes Up Global Energy Prices, Cayman Impact Unclear
- Iranian drone strikes on oil refineries in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait and on Qatar Energy’s Ras Laffan LNG complex, combined with Tehran’s announcement that it would close the Strait of Hormuz, sent shockwaves through global energy markets, pushing Brent crude briefly above $82 per barrel on March 2, 2026, and driving natural gas futures up about 40% in Europe and Asia. As a result of these global shocks, attention quickly turned to the implications for energy-dependent economies such as Cayman.
- The Cayman Islands is heavily exposed to products made from crude oil, such as petrol and diesel, because in addition to transport use, Cayman also generates most of its electricity from diesel oil, with a Caribbean Utilities Company (CUC) report noting “Our generators consumed approximately 40.6Mn gallons of diesel fuel and 109,833 gallons of lube oil in 2025 to meet electrical demand.”
- “CUC’s largest generating units operate on diesel, which means the company is closely tied to global fuel price movements,” said the company’s VP of Energy Operations Stephen Jay, who explained that although CUC does not source fuel directly from Middle Eastern producers, global crude market movements ultimately drive the cost of refined diesel and fuel prices in Cayman tend to move in step with broader international market trends.
- Beyond direct fuel costs, the global energy increases will also have less obvious impacts on Cayman, said Simon Cawdery, a director at HLX Management, noting that higher fuel costs raise shipping expenses and electricity costs, increasing company overheads and pushing up inflation, which “will be bad news for consumers in Cayman from a pure economics perspective”.
- Nevertheless, there are some silver linings for Cayman, as current market conditions for diesel show only a small increase, the islands are not heavy users of natural gas which insulates them from the most extreme price spikes, and the US, a net energy exporter whose key stock markets such as the S&P 500 rose slightly on Monday, has so far suffered little economic impact.
(Source: Cayman Compass)
