The optics of Donald Trump and Xi Jinping “seeing eye to eye” matter because the U.S. and China together still shape global trade, energy demand, manufacturing, technology supply chains, and financial confidence.
Right now, the world is watching three connected issues at once:
U.S.- China relations
The Iran/Strait of Hormuz crisis
Oil and shipping stability
1.0 POSSIBLE IMPACT ON THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
1.1 Short-Term Market Relief
If Trump and Xi manage to reduce tensions:
Markets may calm temporarily
Supply chains become more predictable
Manufacturing confidence could improve
Shipping insurance and freight costs may stabilize
This would especially help:
Electronics
Semiconductors
Automotive manufacturing
Commodities
Global shipping
Investors usually react positively when the world’s two largest economies appear cooperative rather than confrontational.
However, some analysts believe this is more of a “managed rivalry” than a true alliance. Deep issues like Taiwan, tariffs, AI competition, and technology restrictions remain unresolved.
1.2 Impact on ASEAN Economies
For ASEAN, this could be both positive and risky.
a. Positive Effects
Manufacturing/FDI could increase
ASEAN may continue benefiting from:
Supply chain diversification
Electronics assembly
Malaysia in particular could gain from:
Semiconductor packaging
Logistics and ports
If the U.S. and China manage to stabilize trade tensions, ASEAN becomes a “bridge economy” rather than a battleground.
b. Possible Negative Risks
If the Iran crisis worsens and oil spikes:
Inflation returns
Shipping costs surge
Food prices rise
Currencies weaken
Energy-importing ASEAN nations suffer
Countries highly dependent on imported fuel could face economic pressure.
Even Malaysia, despite being an oil producer, could still experience:
Higher transport costs
Increased subsidy burdens
Imported inflation
Currency volatility
2.0 OIL CRISIS SCENARIO
The key issue is the Strait of Hormuz.
Around one-fifth of global oil and LNG passes through that narrow route. Analysts warn that prolonged disruption there could create one of the largest modern energy shocks.
If the strait remains unstable:
Oil prices may stay above USD100/barrel
LNG prices may surge
Shipping insurance rises sharply
Airlines and manufacturing suffer
Global inflation returns
This is why even China, a major buyer of Iranian oil reportedly wants the strait reopened quickly.
3.0 WHAT COULD IRAN DO?
Iran still has several strategic tools despite sanctions and military pressure.
3.1 Likely Response
a. Pressure via shipping lanes
Iran may:
Threaten tanker traffic
Increase naval patrols
Use indirect pressure on shipping routes
Even limited disruption can shock oil markets because traders react to uncertainty immediately.
3.2 Strengthen ties with China and Russia
Iran may move closer to China and Russia especially in:
Oil trade
Alternative payment systems
Non-dollar settlements
Some analysts believe this accelerates a gradual move toward a more “multipolar” financial system.
3.3 Strategic patience instead of full escalation
Iran also understands:
Closing Hormuz completely could hurt China
China is one of its most important economic partners
A full regional war could damage Iran internally
So Iran may prefer:
Controlled pressure
Symbolic retaliation
Negotiation leverage instead of total escalation.
4.0 BIGGER LONG TERM PICTURE
The larger issue may not simply be oil. The real transformation could be:
A shift in global trade blocs
More regionalized supply chains
ASEAN becoming strategically more important
Countries like Malaysia may benefit if they remain:
Neutral
Stable
Investment-friendly
Technologically capable
In many ways, ASEAN is becoming the “middle ground” between the U.S. and China. That gives opportunities but also pressure to balance both sides carefully.
China absolutely can talk to Iran, and in fact it may be one of the few major powers that Iran still listens to seriously.
The relationship between China and Iran is based on:
Energy
Trade
Strategic diplomacy
Shared opposition to excessive Western pressure
China buys large amounts of Iranian oil and has maintained ties even during sanctions periods.
More importantly, China has already been actively communicating with Iran in recent weeks:
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi held talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Beijing.
China has publicly pushed for diplomacy, de-escalation, and reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
There are also reports that Iran recently allowed certain Chinese-linked vessels to pass through the Strait after Chinese diplomatic requests.
5.0 CHINA MATTERS TO IRAN
Iran needs China because:
China is one of its biggest economic lifelines
China purchases oil that others avoid
China offers diplomatic cover at the UN
China provides access to alternative financial systems outside the U.S. dollar system
At the same time, China needs Iran because:
China depends heavily on Middle East energy
Stability in Hormuz is critical for China’s economy
A major oil shock hurts Chinese manufacturing and exports
So both countries need each other but not equally.
Iran still acts independently based on:
Revolutionary ideology
Domestic politics
National security concerns
Regional influence
China can:
Persuade
Deeper economical discussion
Offer incentives
Mediate quietly
China probably can definitely play a role on Iran as China’s main goals are:
Prevent a regional war
Keep oil flowing
Avoid collapse of global trade
Protect Chinese economic growth
Avoid direct military involvement
China generally prefers:
Quiet diplomacy
Back-channel negotiations
Economic leverage
Mediation
rather than open military confrontation.
That would increase China’s geopolitical influence significantly, especially across:
The Middle East
BRICS
ASEAN trade networks
Global energy markets
For ASEAN countries like Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam, this matters because regional stability and oil prices directly affect:
Inflation
Fuel costs
Food prices
Shipping
Investment flows
Currency strength
A calmer U.S.- China - Iran triangle would generally help ASEAN economies breathe easier.
6.0 PALESTINE
The situation is extremely complicated, and different sides tell very different stories. But many critics around the world argue that:
further military action worsens instability in Palestine,
civilians suffer the most,
and the U.S. applies different standards in different conflicts.
A major source of heightened emotions internationally is that even when there are temporary truces involving Iran or Lebanon, Palestinians in Gaza and other areas still face insecurity, humanitarian hardship, displacement, and ongoing violence. Many people ask why peace efforts appear uneven or incomplete. A truce in one area does not automatically stop fighting in another.
Another issue is political trust. Negotiations involving:
Israel,
Hamas,
the Palestinian Authority,
Iran,
the U.S.,
Egypt,
Qatar,
and other regional actors
often break down because each side fears the other will use a ceasefire to regroup strategically.
There is also a humanitarian dimension. International organizations and many governments continue calling for:
protection of civilians,
stable humanitarian aid corridors,
hostage and prisoner negotiations,
and a longer-term political solution for Palestinians and Israelis.
Without a broader political settlement, temporary ceasefires tend to remain fragile.
From an economic perspective, prolonged instability affects not only the Middle East but also ASEAN through:
higher oil prices,
shipping disruptions,
inflation,
weaker investor confidence,
and food and fuel cost increases.
That is why countries including China, Gulf states, Turki, and many ASEAN governments generally prefer deescalation and stable trade routes rather than a prolonged regional war.
7.0 ALTERNATIVE ENERGY
Alternative energy sources can reduce the world’s vulnerability to oil and gas crises especially conflicts involving the Middle East, the Strait of Hormuz, or major oil-producing countries.
Right now, much of the global economy still depends heavily on:
oil for transport,
gas for electricity and industry,
and fossil fuels for manufacturing.
When war or instability disrupts supply, the effects spread everywhere:
fuel prices rise,
shipping becomes expensive,
inflation increases,
food costs climb,
and currencies weaken.
That is why many countries are accelerating renewable and alternative energy development.
7.1 How Different Energy Sources Help?
a. Solar Energy
Solar helps because:
sunlight is free,
systems can be decentralized,
and countries reduce fuel imports.
Benefits:
Lower long-term electricity cost
Reduced dependence on imported oil/gas
Useful for homes, factories, and data centres
Fast deployment compared to large power plants
Challenges:
Weather dependency
Battery storage needed at night
Large land area for utility-scale farms
Countries like China have massively expanded solar manufacturing, lowering global costs dramatically.
Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam all have strong solar potential because of year-round sunlight.
b. Hydropower
Hydro is one of the oldest renewable energy sources.
Benefits:
Stable electricity generation
Low emissions
Can support national grids continuously
Reservoirs can assist water management
Challenges:
Environmental impact
Flooding and ecosystem disruption
Expensive construction
Drought vulnerability
Countries like Norway and Laos rely heavily on hydropower.
Malaysia already uses hydro significantly.
c. Geothermal Energy
Geothermal uses underground heat from the Earth.
Benefits:
Continuous power 24/7
Very low emissions
Less land use compared to solar
Challenges:
Limited to suitable geological areas
High exploration cost
Complex drilling
Indonesia and the Philippines are among the world’s strongest geothermal regions because of volcanic activity.
d. Waste-to-Energy (WTE)
Waste-to-energy converts:
municipal waste,
biomass,
landfill gas,
or industrial waste into usable electricity or fuel.
Benefits:
Reduces landfill burden
Generates electricity
Helps urban waste management
Can produce biogas
Challenges:
Emission concerns
Public opposition
Requires strict environmental controls
This is becoming increasingly important for growing ASEAN cities.
e. Electric Transportation
Electric vehicles reduce oil demand directly. If electricity increasingly comes from renewables:
dependence on oil drops,
energy security improves,
and transport becomes cleaner.
But EV growth also creates new dependencies:
lithium,
rare earths,
nickel,
battery supply chains,
and power grid stability.
ASEAN countries like Indonesia and Malaysia are positioning themselves in the EV supply chain economy.
7.2 Why It Matters Now?
If countries depend less on imported oil:
they become harder to economically pressure,
inflation shocks become smaller,
shipping disruptions matter less,
and energy security improves.
For example:
A solar-powered home is less affected by oil tankers being blocked.
An EV fleet reduces national fuel imports.
Hydropower reduces gas-fired generation needs.
This is why energy transition is now viewed not only as an environmental issue, but also:
a national security issue,
an economic resilience issue,
and a geopolitical strategy.
8.0 THE REALITY : FOSSIL FUELS WILL STILL MATTER
Even with rapid renewable growth:
oil,
gas,
petrochemicals,
aviation fuel,
shipping fuel,
and heavy industry
still rely heavily on fossil fuels. The transition will likely take decades.
So the future is probably a mixed system:
renewables,
batteries,
nuclear in some countries,
gas as transition fuel,
hydrogen,
and smarter energy grids.
9.0 ASEAN’s OPPORTUNITY
ASEAN countries could benefit greatly because the region has:
abundant sunlight,
rivers,
geothermal zones,
biomass resources,
growing manufacturing,
and strategic shipping routes.
Countries that successfully combine:
renewable energy,
industrial policy,
grid modernization,
and political stability
may become future energy and manufacturing hubs.
10.0 CONCLUSION
The current global landscape is increasingly defined by the interaction between geopolitical tension and energy security. The relationship between the United States and China, while often described as a managed rivalry, remains the central stabilizing or destabilizing force for global trade, technology flows, and investor confidence. At the same time, instability in the Middle East, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, continues to expose how vulnerable the global economy remains to disruptions in oil and LNG supply chains.
In this environment, countries such as China and Iran play pivotal but asymmetric roles, China as a major economic stabilizer and energy importer, and Iran as a strategic actor capable of influencing global energy routes. Their interactions, alongside U.S. policy directions, will continue to shape short-term market stability and long-term geopolitical alignment.
For ASEAN, the evolving situation presents both opportunity and risk. As global supply chains diversify away from concentrated hubs, the region through countries like ASEAN members such as Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam stands to benefit as a “middle-ground economy” attracting investment, manufacturing relocation, and digital infrastructure expansion. However, this advantage is fragile and highly sensitive to oil price volatility, shipping disruptions, and external shocks.
Looking further ahead, the global energy transition adds another layer of transformation. While fossil fuels will remain dominant for decades, the acceleration of solar, hydro, geothermal, waste-to-energy systems, and electrified transport signals a gradual shift toward a more distributed and resilient energy architecture. This transition is no longer purely environmental it is becoming a core pillar of national security and economic sovereignty.
Ultimately, the world is moving toward a more multipolar system where economic power, energy security, and geopolitical influence are increasingly interconnected. The key question is not whether instability will occur, but how effectively nations especially in ASEAN can position themselves to remain stable, neutral, and competitive amid shifting global fault lines.
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