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Energy SecurityMENA

Geopolitical pressure points shaping energy security in the Middle East

A briefing on how regional alignments, chokepoints, and supply-route exposure are reshaping near-term energy risk for public and private stakeholders.

Energy security in the Middle East remains tightly linked to political alignments, maritime chokepoints, and the reliability of critical infrastructure.

For decision-makers, the practical question is not only whether prices will move, but which corridors, contracts, and operating assumptions break first under stress. Monitoring should combine political signaling, security incidents near logistics nodes, and the secondary effects on insurance, shipping, and regional investment appetite.

This insight outlines a framework for tracking those pressure points and translating them into actionable organizational risk briefings.