Speaker: Peter Zeihan
Date: April 17, 2026
Format: Video transcript
Source: Zeihan on Geopolitics (YouTube/Substack)
File ID: petrochemicals-us-zeihan-2026-04-17
Overview
Peter Zeihan explains how the Iran war (US-Israel strikes beginning February 28, 2026) is shattering global petrochemical supply chains, with the US emerging as the dominant low-cost producer due to its shale-driven natural gas advantage.
Key Mechanism: Two Petrochemical Pathways
Rest of World: Oil → Naphtha → Petrochemicals
- Start with crude oil → refine to naphtha → process into tens of thousands of products
- Naphtha is the global standard feedstock for petrochemicals
United States: Natural Gas → Ethylene → Petrochemicals
- Shale revolution created bottomless supply of natural gas
- ~1/3 of US natural gas is associated production (waste/byproduct of oil production)
- Result: natural gas is dramatically cheaper in the US vs. oil
- Rest of world price ratio (pre-war): Oil-to-gas ≈ 5:1
- US price ratio: Oil-to-gas ≈ 2:1
- US uses natural gas to produce what others must use naphtha for
Impact of the Iran War
The Shock
- Global oil shortage: ~10–12 million barrels/day due to the Iran conflict
- Non-US producers rely on oil-based naphtha for petrochemicals
- Rising oil prices + reduced oil availability = naphtha becomes unaffordable/unavailable
- East Asian rim manufacturers already impacted; Europe next
The Structural Problem
- Other countries lack sufficient natural gas to switch feedstock
- Even if they had the gas, they'd need to change their hardware (refinery/petrochemical equipment)
- Hardware conversion takes years and billions in capital
- Result: global petrochemical supply chains outside North America are functionally broken
What the US Controls
The US is now the only large-scale functional supplier of:
- Butadiene (used in synthetic rubber, plastics)
- Methyl groups (broad chemical building blocks)
- Particleboard
- Silicones
- Octane for gasoline
- Nitrogen fertilizers
- Melamine
- Plastics
The Competitive Asymmetry
| Factor | Rest of World | United States |
|---|---|---|
| Feedstock | Naphtha (from oil) | Natural gas / ethane |
| Oil-to-gas price ratio | ~5:1 | ~2:1 |
| Hardware dependency | Oil refining infrastructure | Gas crackers / ethane recovery |
| feedstock availability in current crisis | Severely constrained | Abundant |
| Ability to switch feedstocks | No — requires new hardware | Already configured |
The Production Shift
"We're looking at a shattering of the petrochemical supply chains on a global basis outside of North America, and that's going to have massive impacts downstream on pretty much every industrial sector."
The disruption isn't just about price — it's about quantity and quality shifting to North America:
- US not only retains price advantage but gains massive quantity advantage in product types
- 6 months to 2 years forward: global petrochemical supply chains shattered outside North America
- Every industrial sector that depends on petrochemical inputs will face supply constraints
Context: Iran War Background
- Conflict start: February 28, 2026 (US-Israel strikes on Iranian infrastructure)
- Strait of Hormuz: Effective closure (~20% of global oil supply, 22% of global LNG)
- April 7, 2026: Provisional ceasefire agreed
- Current state (as of transcript): Ceasefire in place but physical supply still disrupted
- The petrochemical disruption is a direct consequence of the oil supply destruction
Data Points
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Global oil shortage (Iran war) | 10–12 million barrels/day |
| Rest of world oil-to-gas price ratio (pre-war) | ~5:1 |
| US oil-to-gas price ratio | ~2:1 |
| Timeline for supply chain shattering | 6 months to 2 years |
| Geographic scope of disruption | Global outside North America |
Key Claims
- US cost advantage: Natural gas feedstocks make US petrochemical production significantly cheaper vs. naphtha-dependent competitors
- Hardware lock-in: Other countries cannot easily switch — requires new capital equipment and gas infrastructure
- Scale advantage: US now gaining not just price advantage but quantity advantage across product types
- Global supply chain shattering: 6 months to 2 years forward, petrochemical supply chains outside North America will be fundamentally broken
- Cross-sector impact: Every industrial sector depending on petrochemical inputs will be affected
About Peter Zeihan
Peter Zeihan is a geopolitical strategist focused on energy, demographics, and international relations. His channel "Zeihan on Geopolitics" covers global energy markets and strategic implications.
Tags
#petrochemicals #natural-gas #shale #naphtha #ethylene #iran-war #supply-chain #us-advantage #butadiene #methyl-groups #north-america #global-disruption #energy # feedstock