The Middle East conflict has become a structural force shaping how global supply chains operate.
In our recent webinar, Navigating the Middle East Conflict and Its Global Supply Chain Impact, Resilinc leaders and industry practitioners unpacked what this escalation means in practical terms and why supply chain leaders must rethink their assumptions around cost, capacity, and visibility.
A conflict years in the making
Shahzaib Khan, Associate VP of Product Management at Resilinc, opened by grounding the audience in context. This escalation did not appear overnight. Tensions between Iran, Israel, and the United States have been building since 2023 through proxy conflicts, trade strain, and failed negotiations. The February 2026 developments formalized what had already been emerging: a broader conflict with systemic trade implications.
The logistics impact is measurable:
- 170+ vessels idled at the Strait of Hormuz
- 10–14 days added to maritime lead times via Cape reroutes
- $1,500–$3,000 additional cost per container in bunker surcharges
- 40–60% air freight capacity constraints across affected carriers
Shahzaib described the current state as a “high-friction phase.” Operations continue, but at higher cost, longer lead times, and reduced flexibility.
Beyond oil to chemicals, metals, and critical materials
A key insight from the session was the breadth of exposure. Middle East risk is often framed through oil and LNG markets. In reality, Resilinc’s multi-tier mapping identified 3,666 HS codes exposed to conflict-related disruption.
These include:
- Petrochemical intermediates
- Industrial metals and alloys
- Semiconductor inputs
- Aerospace subassemblies
- Pharmaceutical materials
- Agricultural feedstocks
The systemic risk lies in how these materials propagate downstream. When feedstocks tighten or freight corridors shift, the disruption does not stop at energy. It moves through polymers, components, electronics, and finished goods, sometimes weeks later.
Without sub-tier visibility, organizations frequently discover exposure only when allocation begins or delivery dates slip.
Automotive: How sub-tier disruptions cascade to OEM production
Paul Rossi, Director of Automotive Expert Services at Resilinc, focused on how this strain unfolds in automotive supply chains.
Automotive manufacturers rely heavily on petrochemical derivatives, specialty metals, and energy-intensive materials. A disruption in synthetic rubber feedstock, aluminum rolling operations, or resin production does not halt assembly lines immediately; it cascades through tier-2 and tier-3 suppliers first.
Paul emphasized that the greatest vulnerability is timing.
“Most OEMs don’t feel the disruption when it happens. “They feel it when material allocation begins. By then, the mitigation window is much smaller.”
This lag effect makes sub-tier mapping critical. Without it, organizations are reacting to symptoms rather than managing root causes.
Life Sciences: Managing continuity of care during geopolitical disruption
In life sciences, the consequences are more direct.
For pharmaceutical manufacturers, these shifts introduce two risks:
- Cost compression in already regulated pricing environments
- Interruptions in continuity of care
Unlike consumer industries, life sciences organizations cannot simply delay production or adjust product mix. Drug availability is closely tied to patient treatment schedules and regulatory compliance obligations.
As Resilinc’s Adam Bartlett, Director of Health and Life Sciences Expert Services notes:
“The gap is really between needing to move fast operationally but being required to move carefully from a quality, regulatory, and continuity-of-care standpoint.”
The conflict has exposed how concentrated sourcing and limited sub-tier transparency amplify this risk.
Why supply chain visibility alone isn’t enough
Ranna Rose, Global Director of Supply Chain Risk Management at Olympus, brought the conversation into practical execution. Her central point was straightforward: visibility alone does not create resilience. What matters is how insight is translated into action.
At Olympus, that means institutionalizing response. As Ranna explained,
“For us, it was more of a disciplined approach… not to react in a broad way.”
To manage sustained geopolitical friction, her organization is focused on:
- Pre-modeling disruption scenarios so teams understand likely impact paths before events escalate
- Defining clear cross-functional escalation pathways that connect procurement, compliance, logistics, and executive leadership
- Maintaining structured supplier collaboration frameworks to enable rapid communication during emerging risk
- Embedding governance at the executive level, ensuring risk decisions are made quickly and with authority
Rather than treating geopolitical disruption as an isolated event, Olympus has incorporated it into its standard operating rhythm. The goal is to reduce decision latency when disruption signals appear.
What supply chain leaders should do in response to the middle east conflict
The Middle East conflict is accelerating pressures that were already building across global supply chains:
- Energy volatility
- Export controls and sanctions
- Limited visibility beyond tier 1
- Escalating regulatory demands
- Reconfigured logistics corridors
The result is a more constrained operating environment. Production may continue, but flexibility is thinner, response windows are shorter, and margin for error is smaller than pre-conflict norms.
As Ranna Rose explained during the session, the goal is to “move from alerts to impact.” Her team approached the first 72 hours with discipline, identifying the products and suppliers most critical to continuity, separating direct from indirect exposure, validating inventory and logistics assumptions, and establishing a cross-functional response team to ensure decisions were made quickly and consistently.
That mindset is increasingly essential.
Sustained geopolitical friction requires operating models built for instability. Resilience today is less about restoring normal and more about executing with clarity when conditions are anything but normal.