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Major gas fields like the UAE's Shaw field are 'sour,' containing high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide (H2S). This makes them significant producers of sulfur, a byproduct converted into sulfuric acid for use in agriculture (fertilizer) and high-tech manufacturing (microchip etching).

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The massive electricity demand from AI data centers is creating an urgent need for reliable power. This has caused a surge in demand for natural gas turbines—a market considered dead just years ago—as renewables alone cannot meet the new load.

Today's high fertilizer prices are not from a single event. They are the result of a "three-legged stool" of shocks: China's ongoing export ban, sanctions on low-cost Russian supply, and now a Middle East chokepoint. This multi-front pressure explains the prolonged period of market instability.

Contrary to common assumptions, China's future natural gas demand growth will be led by the industrial sector, not power generation. Policy support for manufacturing and lower global LNG prices are expected to drive significant coal-to-gas switching in industrial processes, while gas in the power sector remains a secondary source to balance renewables.

Over 90% of the world's sulfur is a byproduct of oil refining. This sulfur is crucial for producing sulfuric acid, a key chemical in semiconductor manufacturing. Therefore, disruptions to oil shipping or refining create a hidden material supply chain risk for the tech industry, beyond just energy costs for power.

It is far more expensive to cryogenically chill and ship natural gas than to convert it into a solid, granular product like urea at the source. This supply chain logic explains why fertilizer plants are concentrated in regions with cheap gas, like the Middle East, rather than near end-user markets.

Contrary to the renewables-focused narrative, the massive, stable energy needs of AI data centers are increasing reliance on natural gas. Underinvestment in grid infrastructure makes gas a critical balancing fuel, now expected to meet a fifth of the world's new power demand (excluding China).

The disruption in the Persian Gulf affects not just the headline commodities of oil and gas, but also crucial dry bulk goods. Outbound fertilizers and aluminum, along with inbound raw materials for production, are significantly impacted, causing spikes in global markets for these specific goods.

The halt in oil refining cripples the supply of essential byproducts. This includes sulfur (needed for mining and batteries), liquefied natural gas (powering TSMC's chip fabs), and nitrogen fertilizer feedstock. This creates cascading civilizational-level risks far beyond the gas pump.

Unlike oil's strategic reserves, urea is produced and shipped immediately to avoid storage costs and price risk. This "just-in-time" model means there's no buffer to absorb supply shocks from events like the war in Iran, making the global agricultural system exceptionally vulnerable to disruption.

Political shifts in Venezuela could restart exports of heavy, sour crude. This is a direct benefit for specialized U.S. Gulf Coast refiners (like Valero and Marathon) built to process this specific type of oil, potentially lowering their input costs and boosting profit margins, creating a distinct set of winners in the energy sector.

Sour Gas Fields Directly Link Natural Gas to the Sulfuric Acid Market | RiffOn