ACCC Uses New Emergency Powers for First Time Amid Middle East Supply Chain Disruptions
For months the world's attention has drifted toward the Strait of Hormuz with the uneasy awareness reserved for places that are both geographically small and economically immense. The waterway has always been more than a shipping route. It is a pressure point. When conflict interrupts traffic there, the consequences do not remain in the Gulf for long. They surface weeks later in warehouses, procurement meetings and production schedules half a world away, where businesses discover that the shortest distance between a geopolitical crisis and an empty shelf is often a container ship that never arrived.
