Iran war energy shock revives Asean’s power grid plans: ‘it’s the way to go’
Oil is up, coal is back and so are fuel queues. As the Middle East burns, Southeast Asia dusts off an old plan to rewire its future

A month on, with oil well above US$100 a barrel, long queues for fuel forming at petrol stations across the region and Thailand restarting coal plants it had mothballed years ago, the reassurances have worn thin.
Against this backdrop, an old question has resurfaced with fresh urgency: why does a region rich in sun, rivers and geothermal heat still depend on a strait it cannot control for the energy that powers its economies?

The war that erupted on February 28, when US and Israeli strikes on Tehran triggered Iran’s near-total blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, has exposed just how precarious that foundation always was.