Resolution Is Not Recovery: Why Construction Costs Outlast the Headlines
The Middle East conflict dominates financial headlines, but for construction owners and developers the story arrives through different channels. It is material quotes, freight surcharges, and lead time notices. Energy prices are not background noise. They are embedded in the petrochemical feedstocks that become piping, insulation, roofing membrane, and sealants. When crude prices spike, construction budgets feel it but not immediately, and not all at once. They are felt with a persistence that outlasts the headlines. The critical question for owners and developers is not whether this conflict affects their projects. It does. The question is how much and for how long. That depends almost entirely on how the conflict resolves. Before we examine the implications, three historical episodes offer important context: the Gulf War of 1990-1991, Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Figures 1, 2, and 3 track crude petroleum, diesel fuel, and plast...