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Taiwan avoided a recent energy crisis because China's increased use of domestic coal plants caused a crash in natural gas demand. This freed up excess LNG cargoes on the global spot market, which Taiwan could then purchase to meet its needs.
Despite energy shocks, global oil prices have been partly contained because China has significantly reduced its imports. By drawing from its large, previously amassed stockpiles, China is inadvertently acting as a stabilizing force, absorbing some of the market pressure.
Taiwan's entire economy, particularly its critical semiconductor industry, runs on imported Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) with less than three weeks of reserves. A naval blockade lasting longer than that would shut down the island and its fabs, an act with twice the economic impact of the Great Depression.
The primary reason oil prices didn't surge into the triple digits was China's remarkable ability to adapt. By massively reducing crude imports and switching to other sources like coal while accelerating EV adoption, China single-handedly absorbed a significant portion of the global supply shock.
With only 11 days of LNG reserves and sea lanes controllable by China's navy, Taiwan's extreme energy import dependency is an existential threat. A naval blockade could strangle its economy and shut down its power grid without a single shot being fired.
Asia's resilience to the recent energy shock was surprisingly robust. A key, non-obvious factor was China's 45% reduction in gas imports, which freed up supply for the rest of the region, which is highly dependent on Middle Eastern gas, and helped avoid severe shortages.
As a direct response to soaring natural gas prices, countries may pivot back to coal for energy security. The IEA anticipates an uptick in coal use, not just in China and India, but potentially in the US and Europe, as a pragmatic, if environmentally damaging, short-term solution.
While Asia holds 65-70 days of crude oil reserves, its Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) buffer is measured in days, not months. With 40% of its LNG sourced from the Middle East, any disruption presents a more immediate and critical threat to power generation and industrial output than an oil shock.
China is insulated from the worst effects of an oil shock due to its state-controlled supply chain. It can activate coal gasification facilities when crude prices exceed $100 and toggle its power grid between gas, surplus coal, and solar, minimizing the impact on economic growth.
The global LNG system operates near full capacity. When a major supplier (representing 17% of the market) goes offline, there are no significant alternative suppliers. The only mechanism for the market to rebalance is through high prices forcing demand destruction in importing nations.
Unlike the 2022 energy crisis where coal stocks were low, current high inventories (7-8 times higher in China) provide a readily available and cheaper substitute for natural gas. This high substitutability is capping gas price increases despite major supply disruptions from the Middle East.