How the Strait of Hormuz Closure Is Silently Killing the Global Chip Supply Chain

Category: Semiconductors | Supply Chain | Iran War 2026 Date: April 2, 2026 | 7 min read


Most people watching the Iran war think of it as an energy crisis. They are wrong — or at least, dangerously incomplete. The Strait of Hormuz closure is not just blocking oil tankers. It is systematically dismantling the physical input chain for every advanced semiconductor on earth. The AI boom, the smartphone in your pocket, the GPU inside every data center Iran has been threatening — all of it depends on materials that flow through 21 miles of contested water between Iran and Oman.

The closure of the strait has been described as the largest disruption to the energy supply since the 1970s energy crisis. Other commodity markets to suffer price increases from the crisis include aluminum, fertilizer, and helium. Wikipedia Helium is not a headline commodity. But it is an existential one for chipmakers.

The Helium Crisis Nobody Saw Coming

The disruption has triggered a critical shortage of helium, a resource where Qatar typically accounts for one-third of global shipments. As a byproduct of natural gas production, helium is indispensable for manufacturing the semiconductor wafers used in everything from smartphones and vehicles to data centres. The crisis intensified after Iranian missile and drone strikes forced the closure of Qatar’s massive Ras Laffan production plant. With the Qatari government estimating that repairs could take three to five years, the long-term outlook for global supply is increasingly grim. Procurement Magazine

Qatar produces approximately 34 percent of global helium, a material used throughout chip fabrication with no viable at-scale substitute, including in lithography cooling, plasma processes, and cleanroom environments. Most fabricators carry less than three months of inventory. TechInsights

The Full Chain of Materials at Risk

What has actually been exposed is how much of modern compute infrastructure depends on a small set of process gases, specialty chemicals, and critical minerals that mostly sit off the balance sheet. Helium, bromine, sulphur-derived acids, and aluminium were background infrastructure until Iranian missile strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City knocked offline roughly 30% of global semiconductor-grade helium supply in a matter of days, triggering force majeure declarations and a spot price surge of 40–100%. Tim Harper

MaterialGulf Share of Global SupplySemiconductor UseCurrent Status
Helium~34% (Qatar)Lithography cooling, plasma processesRas Laffan offline — 40–100% price spike
LNG~20% global seabornePowers fab electricity in AsiaStrait blocked — Asian energy crisis
Aluminium~9% of global smeltingChip packaging, fab infrastructureExports suspended
Sulphur / Sulphuric acidMajor Gulf exporterCritical metal refining for chipsPrices surging
BromineGulf concentrationFlame retardants in chip packagingSupply tightening

Taiwan’s Specific Vulnerability

Taiwan imports about 97% of its energy needs, with roughly one third of its liquefied natural gas linked to Middle Eastern suppliers. LNG is critical because semiconductor fabrication plants require uninterrupted power to maintain production yields. Taiwan has only 11 days of LNG reserves in an emergency scenario. INDmoney

South Korea is particularly exposed by the effective shutdown of oil shipments through the strategic strait. The country imports roughly 70% of its crude oil from the Middle East. Samsung and SK Hynix, both based in South Korea, together control approximately 80% of global HBM production and some 70% of the DRAM market. Both Samsung and SK Hynix watched their stock valuations plummet more than 20% at the start of the conflict. Sourceability

Three Reasons This Crisis Outlasts the War

  1. Physical infrastructure damage is multi-year. The Ras Laffan complex repairs are estimated at three to five years — meaning global helium supply constraints will persist long after any ceasefire.
  2. No substitute exists at scale. Helium has no viable at-scale substitute in lithography cooling and plasma processes. TechInsights Unlike oil, you cannot simply switch to another source.
  3. Fab production cycles cannot stop and restart cleanly. Semiconductor fabs run 24/7 by necessity. Power disruptions and material shortages cause yield losses that are non-recoverable for that production run.

Chips routinely cross dozens of borders from raw material to finished device, which means a conflict centred on the Strait of Hormuz can disrupt memory fabs in Korea, logic fabs in Taiwan, and AI data centres in Virginia simultaneously. Tim Harper

The Iran war semiconductor supply shock is structural, not cyclical. Every AI company, cloud provider, and consumer electronics brand on earth is operating with a shrinking buffer — and most of their risk teams have not yet caught up to that reality.

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Tags: Strait of Hormuz Semiconductor · Helium Supply Crisis · TSMC Taiwan LNG · Samsung SK Hynix · Iran War Chip Supply · Ras Laffan Qatar · GPU Shortage 2026 · Semiconductor Supply Chain Risk

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