When you stroll through any mid-sized German suburb today, you’ll see something that wasn’t there eighteen months ago: charging cables draped across driveways with the carefree permanence of garden hoses, extending from garage doors to the curb. Not everywhere, not yet, but enough to indicate that a change is occurring that would not have been possible with just a government incentive program. What years of emissions targets and electric vehicle subsidies only partially managed appears to be being done by the Iran conflict, which is now well past its third month.
Even before the Strait of Hormuz closed, petrol prices in Europe had been rising. The disturbance then became more severe in late February. Instead of taking the chance of passing through what had turned into one of the world’s riskiest shipping lanes, tanker operators started anchoring outside the strait. That small channel had been carrying about 20% of the world’s daily oil supply. Global markets responded instantly when it slowed to a crawl, and within days, European consumers felt the impact at the pump.
Those who began running the math soon found it uncomfortable. In terms of fuel cost exposure, the conflict was affecting gasoline drivers about five times more severely than EV owners, according to a March analysis from Transport & Environment. Filling a tank, which was now priced against a disrupted global oil market, was still significantly more expensive than charging from the grid, even an increasingly strained European grid. When the economic argument gets that direct, it’s difficult to ignore it.
The extent to which this moment exposes the structural vulnerability that Europe had covertly created for itself, however, is less evident. The EU continues to import more than 57% of its energy from outside sources, a statistic that appears differently in a crisis than it does in a policy document. For a while now, analysts at the Brussels-based think tank Bruegel have argued that the primary vulnerability is the reliance on fossil fuels, not Iranian oil or Russian gas specifically, but the dependency itself. That issue was not brought about by the conflict with Iran. It just made it more noticeable so that regular people who were waiting in line at gas stations could no longer ignore it.

The loss of Qatari LNG as a result of the drone attacks on Ras Laffan facilities further tightened the situation, with European gas storage starting this spring at less than 30% capacity, a five-year low. Early in March, gas benchmarks surged more than 50% in a single day, the biggest increase since the 2022 Russian invasion disrupted European energy markets. In a situation that no one wanted to be in, governments started planning for the refill season.
Observing all of this, it seems as though the EV transition is finally gaining something it has never had: tangible urgency. Manufacturer mandates, CO2 regulations, and climate targets all contributed to the slow-building pressure. However, a different kind of motivation is created when a gas pump displays prices that no one had budgeted for. People are often moved more quickly by it than by policy because it is immediate, intimate, and a little annoying.
To be clear, there hasn’t been a significant change yet. Before the start of the conflict, EV adoption rates in Europe were increasing, and it’s still unclear how much of any acceleration can be attributed to the crisis versus longer-term trends in vehicle pricing and model availability. In response to a three-month spike, most people don’t buy new cars. However, the tone of discussions taking place in dealerships in Germany, the Netherlands, and France is said to have shifted. Questions about charging infrastructure and range anxiety are still being raised, but they are now accompanied by concerns about what will happen to fuel prices if the Strait doesn’t fully reopen before winter.
Nobody wants to confidently respond to that final question. The disruption to Qatari LNG production could take months to fully reverse, even under optimistic conflict-resolution scenarios, according to estimates. Additionally, in order to comply with EU regulations, Europe must still inject nearly 60 billion cubic meters of gas into storage before December. There is very little room for error.
It will likely only be evident in retrospect whether the charging cables that are showing up in European driveways signify a long-term shift or a transient anxiety reaction. Currently, however, they appear to be more of a sensible hedge than a lifestyle choice. That’s a different kind of EV story; it’s more subdued, less hopeful, and likely more truthful about the reasons behind transitions.
