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Asia braces for a second wave of energy shocks from the Iran war

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Asia braces for a second wave of energy shocks from the Iran war
News

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Asia braces for a second wave of energy shocks from the Iran war

2026-05-11 13:18 Last Updated At:14:58

BANGKOK (AP) — Asia’s first defenses against energy shocks from the Iran war are running short and a more consequential second wave of impacts is beginning to hit.

When the war started, governments scrambled to adapt to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for energy flowing to Asia. They made difficult trade-offs: saving power at the risk of slowing businesses, prioritizing gas for households at the risk of fertilizer production and dipping into energy stockpiles for temporary relief.

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FILE - An ANA jet flies above a gas station in Inglewood, Calif., on May 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

FILE - An ANA jet flies above a gas station in Inglewood, Calif., on May 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

FILE - A person carries gas cylinders on his bicycle in Kathmandu, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha, File)

FILE - A person carries gas cylinders on his bicycle in Kathmandu, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha, File)

FILE - Atul Lahkar, from the Assam region, chef lights a fire with wood and coal to prepare food for his restaurant following a regional gas shortage in Guwahati, India, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath, File)

FILE - Atul Lahkar, from the Assam region, chef lights a fire with wood and coal to prepare food for his restaurant following a regional gas shortage in Guwahati, India, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath, File)

FILE - Protesters hold slogans beside police during a rally by transport workers and activists protesting the rise in oil prices on March 27, 2026, near the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

FILE - Protesters hold slogans beside police during a rally by transport workers and activists protesting the rise in oil prices on March 27, 2026, near the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

FILE - Gasoline drops from the nozzle of a fuel pump as it fills a motorcycle as prices continue to rise at a gasoline station in Quezon City, Philippines on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

FILE - Gasoline drops from the nozzle of a fuel pump as it fills a motorcycle as prices continue to rise at a gasoline station in Quezon City, Philippines on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

But these measures were based on the war lasting only a short time, allowing a quick resumption of energy flows. That has not happened.

With no clear end in sight, the fuel crisis is now rippling across economies. Airfare costs, shipping rates and utility bills are climbing, jeopardizing economic growth. About 8.8 million people are in danger of being pushed into poverty and the conflict may cause $299 billion in economic losses to the Asia-Pacific region, according to the United Nations Development Program.

“The countries with the least resources to respond, or the consumers who can least afford to pay, are the ones who feel everything first,” said Samantha Gross of the U.S.-based think tank Brookings Institution.

Asian governments planned their budgets assuming the price of oil would average around $70 a barrel. Subsidies helped to keep fuel prices stable. But the war pushed the price of Brent crude to as high as about $120 a barrel.

Governments now face a stark choice between maintaining those costly subsidies, straining public finances, or cutting them to pass higher costs on to consumers, risking a public backlash, said Ahmad Rafdi Endut, a Kuala Lumpur-based independent energy analyst.

In India, early steps to redirect fuel supplies toward cooking gas for roughly 330 million households cut into supplies for fertilizer plants. The surging of fertilizer prices and meteorologists warning of weak rainfall in an El Niño year is a concern for the world’s largest rice exporter.

India has relied on subsidies to shield its 1.4 billion people until now, but on Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to buy locally and cut down on travel abroad to save dollars. He also encouraged people to work from home and use public transport to reduce fuel consumption, and asked farmers to halve fertilizer use.

The Philippines quickly shifted to a four-day work week to save fuel. It also rolled out targeted subsidies for poorer households. However, Fitch Ratings noted that most consumers are still paying higher energy costs, causing business activity to slow in major cities like Manila.

Thailand abandoned its diesel price cap less than a month after the conflict began, as its fuel subsidies ran out. It's now cutting other spending to manage higher oil prices while trying to keep its budget under control.

Vietnam extended a suspension of fuel taxes to ease pressure on domestic prices. Jet fuel shortages have led to flight cuts. Tourism makes up nearly 8% of Vietnam's gross domestic product — the nation's total output of goods and services — so that affects the entire economy.

“Business is not good right now," said Hanoi-based tour guide Nguyen Manh Thang. “There are already fewer tourists.”

Fuel shortages have pushed cash-strapped countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh to buy oil and gas at current market prices, which are often higher and more volatile than long-term contracts. This raises import costs and adds to pressure on their already limited foreign exchange reserves.

Governments can keep costly fuel subsidies by cutting spending from other priorities like welfare, or borrow more and risk higher inflation, said Endut in Kuala Lumpur. Alternatively, they can reduce subsidies and pass higher costs on to consumers, risking angering voters.

Once subsidies are exhausted and inflation starts to rise, countries could face what he called a “fiscal time bomb.”

The war's eventual end won't bring quick respite to Asia.

The global oil and gas trade will not bounce back right away, and it will take time to restart production, said Gross with the Brookings Institution. Repairing damaged infrastructure, restarting facilities and allowing for transport time from the Middle East to final markets will take weeks or even months.

Europe will feel a similar impact to Asia, but with about a four-week lag, experts say.

Americans are also feeling the pinch as gas prices spike across the U.S. But Southeast Asia is currently the “biggest pain point," said Henning Gloystein of the Eurasia Group consultancy firm.

“This fuel shortage situation is going to get worse,” he said.

In Africa, higher energy and import costs are similarly straining budgets, widening deficits and driving up inflation. The war is also taking a toll on Latin America and the Caribbean, where growth is projected to slow slightly.

The complex disruptions across global supply chains will continue to have broader impacts, warned Ted Krantz, CEO of supply chain risk firm Interos.ai.

The crisis also highlights the fragility of Asia’s growing middle class, said Maria Monica Wihardja of the Singapore-based ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, with many people at risk of slipping back into poverty.

The energy shock will reshape Southeast Asia’s economies over time, she said, including shifts in job markets and how countries plan for future energy crises.

Countries are already debating and implementing longer-term solutions, like diversifying fossil fuel suppliers, developing nuclear energy and renewables like solar.

The war is making geopolitical risk central to the economic outlook of Southeast Asia and directly slowing regional growth, said Albert Park of the Asian Development Bank.

"The longer it lasts, the larger those negative effects would be,” he said

Ghosal reported from Hanoi, Vietnam.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

FILE - An ANA jet flies above a gas station in Inglewood, Calif., on May 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

FILE - An ANA jet flies above a gas station in Inglewood, Calif., on May 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

FILE - A person carries gas cylinders on his bicycle in Kathmandu, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha, File)

FILE - A person carries gas cylinders on his bicycle in Kathmandu, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha, File)

FILE - Atul Lahkar, from the Assam region, chef lights a fire with wood and coal to prepare food for his restaurant following a regional gas shortage in Guwahati, India, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath, File)

FILE - Atul Lahkar, from the Assam region, chef lights a fire with wood and coal to prepare food for his restaurant following a regional gas shortage in Guwahati, India, on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath, File)

FILE - Protesters hold slogans beside police during a rally by transport workers and activists protesting the rise in oil prices on March 27, 2026, near the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

FILE - Protesters hold slogans beside police during a rally by transport workers and activists protesting the rise in oil prices on March 27, 2026, near the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

FILE - Gasoline drops from the nozzle of a fuel pump as it fills a motorcycle as prices continue to rise at a gasoline station in Quezon City, Philippines on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

FILE - Gasoline drops from the nozzle of a fuel pump as it fills a motorcycle as prices continue to rise at a gasoline station in Quezon City, Philippines on March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila, File)

LITTLETON, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 11, 2026--

Proton therapy is entering the LINAC vault. At ESTRO 2026, Mevion Medical Systems will introduce the MEVION S250-FIT Proton Therapy System to the European radiation oncology community, the first proton therapy system designed for installation in a standard radiation therapy vault.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260507172087/en/

Now both U.S. FDA-cleared and CE-marked under Regulation (EU) 2017/745, the S250-FIT creates a new pathway for cancer centers to bring proton therapy into existing LINAC-based treatment environments, aligning advanced proton capability with the infrastructure, workflows, and capital planning of modern radiation oncology.

Stanford Medicine: First S250-FIT Installation

On April 7, 2026, Stanford Medicine unveiled the world’s first S250-FIT installation, developed in collaboration with Leo Cancer Care. The system was fully installed within a standard 110 m² (1,200 sq ft) LINAC vault inside the existing Stanford Medicine Cancer Center in Palo Alto, without constructing a new building.

“With FIT , proton therapy is no longer limited by infrastructure,” said Tina Yu, Ph.D., CEO and President of Mevion Medical Systems. “For the first time, it can be deployed within the same clinical and operational framework as conventional radiotherapy. For European health systems that have long recognized the benefits of proton therapy but faced significant infrastructure and financial barriers, this changes the question from whether to build a separate proton facility to how to integrate proton therapy into the radiotherapy programs they already operate.”

Advanced Capability in a Compact Footprint

The S250-FIT delivers Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy via Mevion's HYPERSCAN® pencil beam scanning with the Adaptive Aperture® proton multi-leaf collimator and is designed to support DirectARC™ proton arc therapy. The system supports advanced image-guided and adaptive workflows and is FLASH research-ready.* The system is paired with Leo Cancer Care’s Marie® Upright Patient Positioning and CT Imaging System, the first commercial upright treatment platform with an integrated diagnostic CT, offering potential benefits in patient comfort and supporting organ motion management during treatment.

Built on Decades of U.S. and European Clinical Experience

The S250-FIT shares its core technology lineage with the MEVION S250i®, in clinical operation at Siteman Cancer Center at Washington University School of Medicine in the U.S. and at ZON-PTC at Maastro Clinic in the Netherlands, giving Mevion more than a decade of combined U.S. and European clinical experience with compact, single-room proton therapy. Mevion has now signed contracts with nine leading institutions globally for the S250-FIT, including Stanford Health Care, Loma Linda University Health, UNC Health, BayCare Health System, Atlantic Health System, and University of Nebraska Medical Center.

Meet Mevion at ESTRO 2026

Visit Mevion at Booth #C08:89 to engage with the Mevion team and discuss site planning, clinical workflows, and integration pathways with our clinical and engineering leadership.

*The FLASH Research Kit is not currently available for commercial sale or for human clinical use.

About Mevion Medical Systems

Mevion Medical Systems is the leading provider of compact proton therapy systems for cancer care. Dedicated to advancing the design and accessibility of proton therapy worldwide, Mevion pioneered the single-room platform and continues to further the science and application of proton therapy. Since 2013, Mevion’s compact proton therapy single-room systems have been used by leading cancer centers for treating patients. Mevion’s series of products, including the flagship MEVION S250i and MEVION S250-FIT™ with HYPERSCAN pencil beam scanning, represent the world’s most compact proton therapy systems that eliminate the obstacles of size, complexity, and cost. Mevion is headquartered in Littleton, Massachusetts, with a presence in Europe and Asia. For more information, please visit www.mevion.com.

The MEVION S250-FIT™ Proton Therapy System

The MEVION S250-FIT™ Proton Therapy System

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