×

Macron reaffirms efforts to reopen Strait of Hormuz, as TotalEnergies warns of energy shortages

By Thomson Reuters Apr 25, 2026 | 7:40 AM

April 25 (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron reiterated on Saturday that he was focused on efforts to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a day after the head of TotalEnergies ​warned of global energy shortages if the Iran war ‌continues for months.

Macron, speaking at a news conference in Athens alongside Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, said panic caused by geopolitical uncertainty can in itself lead to shortages.

“Our goal is to achieve a full reopening in the coming days ‌and ​weeks, in accordance with international law, guaranteeing ⁠freedom of navigation without tolls ⁠on the Strait of Hormuz. Then things can gradually return to normal,” Macron said.

TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne pressed on Friday for the reopening of the strait, through which about a fifth of ​the globe’s oil and gas supply normally flows.

Movement through the strait, which is also a key transport route for goods including ⁠fertilisers and pharmaceuticals, has been choked ⁠due to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, as Iran ​has seized container ships and the United States has mounted a ​blockade on Iranian ports.

“If it lasts two, three months more, ‌we are entering in a world of scarcity of energy, which Asian countries have already suffered,” Pouyanne told the World Policy Conference in Chantilly, outside Paris. “You cannot have 20% of the oil and gas ⁠of the planet being stranded and not accessible without major consequences.”

More than a dozen countries have said they are willing to join an international ⁠mission led by ‌France and Britain to protect shipping in the ⁠strait when conditions permit, even as U.S. President ​Donald Trump ‌has said he does not need allies’ help.

“We’re ​all in ⁠the same boat, and it’s not a boat we chose, if I may say. We’re victims of geopolitics and we’re victims of this war that started several months ago,” Macron said on Saturday.

(Reporting by Makini Brice in Paris; additional reporting by Claude Chendjou in Paris; Editing ​by Susan Fenton)