Australia’s economy runs on long supply lines. Most of our fuel arrives by ship, is refined overseas, and then moves through a tightly coordinated network of ports, depots, trucks, and regional distribution points before it ever reaches a service station or supermarket. Under normal conditions this system is remarkably reliable, which is why most people rarely think about it. But when global shipping routes are disrupted—particularly major energy corridors like the Strait of Hormuz—the question is not simply whether fuel exists somewhere in the world, but whether it can continue to arrive here smoothly and on time.
The Australia Fuel & Logistics Risk Watchboard is intended as a practical way to follow the early signals in that system: shipping flows, refinery activity, freight costs, and regional supply indicators. By watching these indicators together, it becomes easier to understand whether events overseas are simply creating price volatility, or whether the foundations of Australia’s supply chains are beginning to tighten.
This is generated using prompts in paid versions of ChatGPT and Claude (using both to cross reference data and minimise bias)
Monitoring signals for supply-chain stress (Hormuz scenario)
How to read it
Each indicator has three states:
🟢 Normal
🟡 Stress building
🔴 Disruption underway
You don’t need everything to turn red.
3–4 yellows at once usually means the system is tightening.
2–3 reds means disruption is already propagating.
Global Energy Flow Indicators
1. Tanker traffic through Hormuz
Why it matters: confirms whether the chokepoint is reopening.
🟢 20+ tankers/day
🟡 10–20 tankers/day
🔴 <10 tankers/day
Signal source:
- Kpler
- MarineTraffic
- Reuters shipping reports
2. VLCC tanker charter rates
Why it matters: reflects panic in tanker availability.
🟢 <$40k/day
🟡 $40–80k/day
🔴 >$80k/day
When tankers become scarce, delivery cadence collapses.
3. Brent oil price
🟢 <$95
🟡 $95–120
🔴 >$120
High prices indicate sustained supply stress.
Asian Refinery Indicators
4. Singapore diesel crack spread
Why it matters: the Asia-Pacific fuel price benchmark.
🟢 <$20/bbl
🟡 $20–35
🔴 >$35
High crack spreads mean diesel supply is tightening.
5. Asian refinery run rates
🟢 Normal
🟡 5–10% cuts
🔴 >15% cuts
Refinery cuts show crude deliveries are failing.
6. Singapore diesel inventories
🟢 stable
🟡 slow drawdown
🔴 rapid drawdown
Singapore is effectively the fuel warehouse of Asia.
Australian Fuel Supply Indicators
7. Wholesale diesel price (Australia)
🟢 < $2.10/L
🟡 $2.10–2.50
🔴 > $2.50
Sharp rises signal tightening imports.
8. Fuel terminal allocations
🟢 no allocation limits
🟡 voluntary reductions
🔴 mandatory allocation
Once terminals allocate fuel, the system is already strained.
9. Regional fuel shortages
🟢 none reported
🟡 isolated shortages
🔴 widespread shortages
Regional areas show problems weeks before cities.
Freight System Indicators
10. Truck freight fuel surcharge
🟢 <10%
🟡 10–20%
🔴 >20%
Freight operators adjust prices first.
11. Supermarket supply disruptions
🟢 normal shelves
🟡 substitutions increasing
🔴 noticeable gaps
Fresh produce is usually the earliest visible signal.
Behaviour Indicators
12. Panic buying
🟢 normal retail demand
🟡 fuel queues forming
🔴 rationing introduced
Behavioural shocks can accelerate shortages dramatically.
Infrastructure Resilience Indicators
13. AdBlue supply status
🟢 stable
🟡 supply warnings
🔴 trucking restrictions
AdBlue shortages can halt freight even with diesel available.
14. Mining output adjustments
🟢 normal production
🟡 precautionary cuts
🔴 major curtailments
Mining will reduce operations if diesel allocation begins.
Interpreting the System
Stable
Most indicators green.
Tightening
3–4 yellow signals.
Expect:
- rising fuel prices
- freight costs increasing
- some volatility.
Disruption beginning
2+ red signals.
Expect:
- regional fuel shortages
- freight constraints
- supermarket gaps.
Structural crisis
4+ red signals.
Expect:
- diesel allocation
- sector prioritisation
- economic contraction.
Signals I Would Personally Watch Most Closely
These 5 will tell you almost everything:
1️⃣ Tanker traffic through Hormuz
2️⃣ Singapore diesel inventories
3️⃣ Asian refinery run cuts
4️⃣ Australian diesel wholesale price
5️⃣ Regional fuel shortages
When 3 of those move together, the system is tightening.