The current febrile state of global energy markets as a result of the war on Iran has brought to a wider public the specialist and often arcane language of theThe current febrile state of global energy markets as a result of the war on Iran has brought to a wider public the specialist and often arcane language of the

The new energy lexicon of the Hormuz era

2026/05/15 17:50
5 min read
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The current febrile state of global energy markets as a result of the war on Iran has brought to a wider public the specialist and often arcane language of the oil trading room.

Like many professionals, oil traders develop their own micro-language to describe complex and often confusing events in a fast-moving world. They use this terminology as a kind of short-hand to convey meaning between themselves, but also as a set of euphemisms to keep the true meaning hidden from the world at large.

So, for those of you who wouldn’t know a VLCC from an Aframax, here is a layman’s guide to some of the more common items from the lexicon of energy at war.

1. Demand destruction

This is thrown around with a sense of clinical detachment, as if it were a natural, organic lifecycle event – much like an expiry date on a supermarket milk carton.

In reality, there is nothing passive about it. It simply means a product has become so cripplingly expensive or physically unavailable that consumers have been forced to stop buying it altogether. They are turning off the heating, grounding jets or switching irreversibly to renewables – or coal. Essentially, it is pricing yourself, or being priced by someone, into obsolesence.

2. Contango

Always used in a pairing with its opposite, backwardation, these terms are used to give a gigantic commodities gamble the veneer of exact science. They refer to the upward or downward slopes of the futures market, but trying to explain the difference to an outsider is nearly impossible – which is precisely why traders love using them.

They ensure nobody can easily question why a trading desk has just lost millions on the front-month spread. Stripped of the textbook definitions, it is the trading floor equivalent of a frantic punter standing at a roulette table and putting all their money on both black AND red at the same time.

3. Stranded assets

This conjures a rather tragic, romantic image. One visualises a noble, lonely oil rig marooned on a desert island, patiently waiting for a ship that will never arrive. The accounting reality is far more brutal: it means a multi-billion-dollar corporate miscalculation, or an existential error in national economic strategy.

It refers to incredibly expensive oil and gas fields discovered at massive capital expense that can now never be extracted because the economics have permanently shifted. It is the energy equivalent of owning the best horse and trap in town on the dawn of the age of the internal combustion engine.

4. Floating storage

This sounds remarkably serene, organised, and convenient – perhaps a state-of-the-art logistics strategy designed to keep precious crude oil perfectly fresh, aerated, and ready for seamless delivery.

In truth, it is the maritime equivalent of being hopelessly stuck in a bank holiday traffic jam with a broken engine. It means millions of barrels of oil trapped on a massive tanker sitting idly at sea the wrong side of the Strait of Hormuz, with no physical hope of navigating current regional shipping corridors or finding a buyer willing to absorb the astronomical insurance premiums. It isn’t a clever inventory strategy – it’s a maritime holding pen with nowhere else to go.

Further reading:

  • Epic fury is right: the Saudi economy didn’t need this
  • World short nearly a billion barrels of oil, says Shell boss
  • How the Iran war rewrote the Gulf dictionary

5. The Black Fleet

This evokes a thrilling image of high-tech naval stealth – the maritime equivalent of a radar-invisible B-2 bomber cutting through the dark ocean on a highly sensitive mission.

The physical reality is far less Hollywood and far more hazardous. It is a ramshackle, rogue flotilla of ageing, rusting, unflagged and entirely uninsured rust-buckets chugging through global choke points with their transponders switched off.

They aren’t avoiding radar because they are high-tech; they are avoiding it because they are carrying sanctioned crude and are one hidden reef away from causing an environmental disaster for which no corporate entity will ever claim financial responsibility.

6. Energy dominance

A highly polished, patriotic concept popularised in Washington over recent years. It is routinely framed as a strategic masterclass in exploiting the unmatched technological ingenuity, capital efficiency and operational prowess of US energy capitalism.

But strip away the corporate hype, and the translation is straightforward: “We will use our military, navy and sanctions apparatus to systematically obliterate our rivals’ markets so we can aggressively grab their share of the global industry.”

From Venezuela to the Arabian Gulf, it is the raw execution of geopolitical muscle dressed up as an economic theory.

Frank Kane is Editor-at-Large of AGBI and an award-winning business journalist. He acts as a consultant to the Ministry of Energy of Saudi Arabia

Frank Kane’s Diary
  • Champagne and binoculars on the Suez passage
  • Dubai is missing its tourists – so am I
  • Malbec and missiles in Marinagrad: A week of war in Dubai
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