The headlines are full of oil prices and geopolitical posturing. But the Strait of Hormuz crisis deserves a different kind of reading — one that most executive search firms aren’t having with their clients yet.
This isn’t just a supply chain story. It’s a talent and leadership story.
When the physical flow of methanol, sulfur, aluminium, helium, and MEG gets disrupted at this scale, the organisations caught in the fallout don’t just need new logistics. They need different leaders — engineers who can redesign sourcing strategies on the fly, chemical procurement heads who understand alternative feedstock chemistries, plant managers who can maintain output under constrained inputs, and executives who can hold investor confidence while navigating genuine operational uncertainty.
APAC is ground zero for that pressure.
Who Gets Hit First
China is absorbing shocks on multiple fronts simultaneously. As the world’s largest methanol buyer, largest MEG consumer, and a dominant force in EV battery manufacturing, Beijing is watching feedstock constraints pile up across its industrial base. Port inventories for methanol are moving toward warning thresholds. Synthetic graphite — the anode material of choice in EV batteries — depends on petroleum coke from the Gulf refineries now sitting idle. Nickel and cobalt refining in Indonesia relies on sulfuric acid, which needs Gulf sulfur. The dependencies are layered and mutually reinforcing.
India isn’t insulated either. It imports nearly a fifth of the world’s urea from the Arabian Gulf. A sustained disruption doesn’t just raise fertilizer costs — it puts food production economics under pressure and forces agricultural policy conversations that circle back to industrial chemistry, logistics infrastructure, and sovereign procurement strategy. These are deeply technical leadership challenges dressed up as political ones.
Southeast Asia — Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, Pakistan — faces polyester and textile disruptions as MEG supplies tighten and buyers scramble for US alternatives at a price premium. Manufacturing competitiveness in these markets is already under pressure. This is another variable that CFOs and operations directors didn’t have in their models six months ago.
The Green Transition Takes a Hit It Didn’t Need
Here’s the part that should concern anyone building a Cleantech or Energy leadership team right now.
The Hormuz crisis doesn’t just disrupt fossil fuel flows. It runs directly through the supply chains that are supposed to replace them.
Sulfur is the feedstock for the sulfuric acid used in HPAL refining of nickel and cobalt — the critical minerals inside every EV battery. Petroleum coke, now being redirected to higher-value outputs as oil prices surge, is the primary input for synthetic graphite anodes. Helium — a third of the world’s supply comes out of Qatar — is essential for semiconductor fabrication and for keeping hospital MRI machines operational.
Green hydrogen projects, many of which were positioned in the Gulf itself, now face uncertainty around infrastructure timelines, shipping routes, and investor appetite. These projects needed experienced technical leaders to begin with. They need even more capable ones now.
The energy transition was never going to be clean or linear. But the current disruption is a sharp demonstration that the talent pipelines feeding it — project engineers, electrochemical specialists, procurement leaders with critical minerals expertise, sustainability executives who understand real industrial chemistry — are not yet deep enough.
What This Means for Hiring
The organisations that navigate this well will be the ones that had the foresight to build leadership capacity before the crisis, or the agility to move decisively during it.
Practically, we’re already seeing early signals in the kinds of roles that are becoming urgent across APAC:
- Chemicals and Specialty Chemicals: Procurement directors and technical commercial leads who can pivot sourcing strategies and renegotiate supplier relationships under market stress. Regional heads who understand feedstock substitution at a chemistry level — not just a commercial one.
- Manufacturing: Plant-level leadership capable of managing output quality and throughput when key input materials are constrained or substituted. Operations executives who’ve managed through commodity volatility before.
- Cleantech and Energy Transition: Project leaders who can hold complex, multi-stakeholder infrastructure programs together when the material inputs — sulfur, graphite, nickel, helium — are suddenly expensive, scarce, or routed differently. The sector cannot afford to lose momentum because leadership capacity wasn’t built ahead of time.
- Engineering and Industrial: Supply chain architects who can redesign procurement for resilience rather than efficiency alone. This is a different mindset from the cost-optimisation playbook of the last decade.
- Healthcare and MedTech: The helium situation rarely enters the executive talent conversation, but hospital administrators and procurement heads who manage MRI infrastructure are now sitting with a very real operational risk.
The Deeper Pattern
The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report for 2026 framed geoeconomic confrontation as a primary driver of industrial and economic policy. What we’re watching in the Strait of Hormuz is that thesis made visceral.
This isn’t a temporary disruption that passes when diplomats find a deal. It’s an accelerant. Every month this continues, more boards, more operations teams, and more governments conclude that supply chain resilience is a strategic imperative — not a procurement consideration.
For STEM executives watching from the sidelines: this is your moment to be heard. The leaders who come out of this crisis with their reputations intact will be those who anticipated the cascading dependencies, moved early on alternative sourcing and supplier relationships, and communicated with clarity to boards and investors under genuine uncertainty.
For hiring organisations: the window to attract that calibre of leader is open. It won’t stay that way. When disruptions of this scale resolve — or deepen — talent moves fast.
Stemgenic is an executive search firm operating across STEM verticals in APAC and global markets. We work with organisations navigating complex operating environments to identify and secure the leadership talent that matters.
References
Geldard, R. (2026, April 1). The Strait of Hormuz crisis affects more than just oil. Here are 9 other commodities. World Economic Forum. https://www.weforum.org
World Economic Forum. (2026). Global Risks Report 2026.









