War Profits, Burning Lives: The Ugly Truth Behind Rising Oil Prices
đ°Â Thereâs something deeply unsettling about watching corporate applause while the world burnsâliterally.
When oil prices rise during war, itâs not just a market reaction. Itâs a signal. A signal that somewhere, supply chains are broken, economies are shaken⌠and human lives are being lost.
Recent conflicts involving Iran have disrupted global oil supply routes like the Strait of Hormuz, pushing prices sharply upward and boosting profits for oil giants.
Companies like Shell have already reported significantly higher trading profits due to this chaos.
Based on reports from early April 2026, Shell Plc‘s oil trading operations experienced a surge in profits due to extreme volatility from the Iran-US conflict, with analysts estimating a potential combined windfall for Shell and BP of around ÂŁ5 billion ($6.3 billion). Shellâs oil trading results for Q1 2026 were “significantly higher” than the previous quarter despite suffering physical damages in Qatar.
Now pause for a second.
While cities face destruction and families lose everything, boardrooms celebrate âexceptional earnings.â That contrast isnât just uncomfortableâitâs morally explosive.
âď¸ The Business of Crisis
War creates volatility.
Volatility creates opportunity.
Opportunity creates profit.
Thatâs the cold, hard algorithm of the fossil fuel economy.
Oil prices surged dramaticallyâsome reports showing increases of over 50% during the conflict.
And when prices surge, profits donât trickleâthey flood.
But hereâs the uncomfortable question:
Is profit still âjust businessâ when it is fueled by destruction?
đ§ The Bigger Question Nobody Wants to Ask
Letâs be brutally honest.
Oil companies didnât start the war.
But they are undeniably benefiting from it.
And history shows this isnât new. Fossil fuel companies have long been entangled with geopolitical conflicts, supply control, and strategic power plays.
So the real issue isnât just about one war.
Itâs about a system where:
- Human suffering = market opportunity
- Scarcity = shareholder returns
- Crisis = quarterly growth
đ Who Actually Pays the Price?
Not the corporations.
Not the investors.
Itâs:
- Civilians in war zones
- Middle-class families paying higher fuel prices
- Farmers facing rising fertilizer costs
- Developing nations hit by inflation
In fact, disruptions in oil supply are already increasing global food prices and inflation risks.
So while profits rise in millionsâŚ
the real bill is paid by billions.
đĽ The Silent Hypocrisy
We talk about sustainability.
We post about climate change.
We debate electric vehicles.
But when oil profits explode due to warâŚ
markets celebrate.
No protests in stock exchanges.
No ethical alarms in earnings calls.
Just one message:
âHigher prices = good news.â
đ¨ Final Thought
If a business model thrives in times of destruction,
then maybe the problem isnât just the war.
Maybe itâs the system that rewards it.
Because the real tragedy isnât just that people are dyingâ
itâs that somewhere, someone is making record profits while it happens.



