Strait of Hormuz: A New Risk Point for the Semiconductor Supply Chain
How the Iran Conflict Could Reshape Global Chip Supply Dynamics
TechInsights
Join TechInsights for an urgent live briefing as our analysts go beyond the oil price headlines to decode the downstream materials and supply chain risks for the semiconductor industry.
The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, triggered by U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran, has severely disrupted one of the world’s most critical trade corridors. Maritime traffic is reported to have fallen sharply, with some estimates suggesting declines of up to 97 percent. While the energy market story is receiving broad coverage, TechInsights provides a semiconductor-specific view of the supply chain risks emerging from this disruption.
Qatar produces approximately 34 percent of global helium, a material used throughout chip fabrication with no viable at-scale substitute, including in lithography cooling, plasma processes, and cleanroom environments. Most fabricators carry less than three months of inventory. Gulf petrochemical supply chains are upstream of photoresist polymers, epoxy moulding compounds, fluoropolymers, and packaging materials used across the semiconductor ecosystem. Reports indicate containers of semiconductor-grade chemicals and equipment are currently stranded in the Gulf, while air freight cannot substitute for industrial gases or high-volume materials at any practical scale.
Session Overview
In this urgent live briefing, TechInsights analysts will examine:
- Baseline market tightness – how AI-driven demand has already constrained semiconductor supply chains, reducing buffer capacity across materials and logistics
- Industrial gas exposure – helium supply concentration, fab inventory buffers, and the timeline to a potential shortage
- Petrochemical feedstock risks – photoresists, epoxy compounds, fluoropolymers, and packaging materials tied to Gulf supply chains
- Logistics disruption – stranded containers, Cape of Good Hope rerouting costs, and the limits of air freight alternatives
- Spillover risks – bromine, chromium, sulfuric acid, and other semiconductor inputs from the broader region
- Energy context – how elevated electricity and LNG costs compound materials pressures on fabs, and how prolonged energy prices could influence AI-related chip demand
- Strategic responses – inventory strategies, sourcing diversification, and cross-ecosystem coordination
Whether you are tracking procurement risk, monitoring market dynamics, or advising clients on supply chain resilience, this briefing will provide the analysis you need.
Meet the Speakers
Dan Kim
Chief Strategy Officer
Mike Walden
VP of Critical Materials
Greg Lekich
Senior Analyst, Market Research





