Will Iran war trigger a bigger shock than 1973?

RASHMEE ROSHAN LALL March 16, 2026

Understanding the transformative energy of that oil embargo. And Hilary Mantel in Saudi

Image by Gino Crescoli from Pixabay

This Week Those Books is chock-full of crucial context — from fiction and non-fiction — to the shouty, doomscroll news cycle. 

Go to this link for a quick read

The Big Story:

The war on Iran enters its third week, having created one of the largest oil shocks in history and higher prices for petrol, food, electricity and cooking gas. Is this a potentially transformative moment for the world, as in 1973?

Could the current situation spark a big shift for the global energy landscape, simultaneously to clean renewable sources and to coal?

  • After all, rising petrol prices will be felt less keenly in China because one-third of all new cars sold there are electric.
  • And Thailand is now running domestic coal plants at full capacity, while Taiwan ponders whether to restart a shuttered coal plant.

As our first book explains, 1973 was a milestone, with oil-producing countries actually pushing the decolonisation process:

“…the reason 1973 is remembered to this day…is that the shock questioned the growth model of industrialized countries, altered North-South relations, and made the management of the bipolar order far more complex and uncertain…”

This Week’s Books:

  • empire The 1973 oil shock’s place in history.
  • A novel about cultural misunderstandings between Islam and the West.

Click to read on about the books and the back story

Originally published at https://medium.com 

Related Posts