How Gulf states are co-operating to export fuel without using the Strait of Hormuz
The Strait of Hormuz crisis has underscored the danger of global energy supplies being so heavily dependent on a single maritime chokepoint. The massive disruption to global shipping in the key waterway has prompted countries in the region to restructure cargo routes and look for alternatives. Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman, are already revisiting costly plans for pipelines to bypass the strait, and continue to export oil and gas. What are the real costs and risks of this strategic restructuring? And how long could alternative routes take to build before a potential serious global economic crisis hits? Guests: Abdullah Baabood Former Director of the Gulf Studies Center at Qatar University Cornelia Meyer Energy Analyst Earl Carr CEO of CJPA Global Advisors LLC #StraitofHormuz #Gulf #theNewsmakers

4 Megaprojects Under Construction to Bypass the Strait of Hormuz

We were warned about the Strait of Hormuz | If You're Listening

This Is What Brexit Cost the World

The Future of Global Shipping: Back to the Sail 2.0? | FD Finance

Is it Game Over For MBS’s Trillion Dollar Dream in Saudi Arabia? | Foreign Correspondent

Gulf states pressure US to delay strikes on Iran

IRAN WAR: How Israel HIJACKED Trump & Lost the Middle East

How bad could the global economy get after the Hormuz crisis?

I Went To The Strait of Hormuz - It Didn't Go Well (#238)

Strait of Hormuz: The Narrow Sea That Powers the World’s Economy

Why The UAE Walked Away From OPEC

15 Facts About Nuclear Submarines

‘You Go Into Iran, You Don’t Ask’: Finland President Stubb Gives Shocking Reality Check To Trump

South Africa's Ruined Synthetic Oil Giant

AfD MEP: "Germany Is Going Bankrupt" in interview with Alexander Sell

Trump outflanked? How Iran is bypassing Strait of Hormuz blockade

The $60B Project to Completely Replace the Strait of Hormuz

How 110 Million Pounds of Ocean Plastic Are Removed & Recycled In Massive Factories

Iran's WORST FEAR Is Here: The Strait Of Hormuz No Longer Matters

