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regular-article-logo Thursday, 05 March 2026

Iran conflict's impact on energy temporary and a 'small price,' US energy secretary says

United States President Donald Trump has pledged to provide insurance and naval escorts for ships exporting energy from the region to contain soaring costs

Reuters Published 05.03.26, 09:49 AM
US Energy Secretary Chris Wright.

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright. Reuters picture.

The impact of the Iran conflict on energy markets will be temporary and a "small price" to pay for US military goals, US Energy Secretary Chris Wright told Fox News on Wednesday.

US and Israeli strikes on Iran and the subsequent response by Tehran have widened regional tensions and paralyzed shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting vital Middle East oil and gas flows and sending energy prices higher. Oil prices rose on Thursday in Asia amid growing concern over the prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

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"This will definitely be temporary," Wright told the "Ingraham Angle" program on Fox News.

"We have the world just massively well-supplied, abundant oil around the world, and American production at record highs. So we'll get through this, it'll be a bump on the road."

US President Donald Trump has pledged to provide insurance and naval escorts for ships exporting energy from the region to contain soaring costs.

Wright said the closure of the Strait of Hormuz was a temporary event, and that the US Navy would soon be escorting oil tankers through the waterway that typically carries about a fifth of the world's daily oil consumption.

"We'll do that as soon as we can. Right now, our navy, and of course, our military, is focused on other things, which is disarming this Iranian regime," Wright said, when asked if any commercial vessels had requested US Navy assistance.

Trump's decision to attack Iran in a campaign that has killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose government Trump has accused of developing a nuclear weapon, will likely ratchet up uncertainty for the US economy.

Although the US is more buffered from energy shocks than many other developed countries because of its domestic oil and gas production, the global impact on trade, prices and investment could spill back and undermine what had been a developing bullish outlook for 2026.

"Are we going to have a transient bump up as we've seen in gasoline prices? We do a little bit, but I think a very small price to pay to remove the nation that's killed more American soldiers in the last 20 years than any nation on earth," Wright said on Fox News.

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