A notice about the proper use of medical supplies made me realize how deeply our lives depend on oil. From plastic containers to hospital materials, modern society is built on petroleum products. As tensions in the Middle East threaten supply chains, the question is no longer only about energy prices, but about how fragile our everyday world really is.
Yesterday, a mass email arrived, urging us to use medical supplies appropriately.
Of course, this was because of the shortage of petroleum-related products caused by the crisis in the Middle East.
The government says that there are reserves and that there is no need to worry.
But if that is true, why are prices rising, and why are some items becoming difficult to obtain?
Without a sufficient explanation, the anxiety of ordinary citizens like us only grows.
Brazil, Azerbaijan, and other oil-producing countries.
I find myself surprised, rather belatedly, to learn that there are so many oil-producing nations in the world.
Japan is now apparently rushing to import oil from countries we had not paid much attention to before.
Will that be in time before panic spreads at home?
No, it has to be in time. Otherwise, we will be in serious trouble.
Now that things have come this far, I realize once again that almost everything in front of us depends on that liquid called oil.
Even from the viewpoint of energy, coal is a solid, and uranium is difficult to handle.
As for everything else, there is hardly any need to say it.
Products related to pathology work will also be seriously affected.
Or rather, most of the containers in this world depend on naphtha, a petroleum-derived product.
When I think about it that way, I begin to imagine a world in which “containers” themselves may disappear.
That would mean not only medicine, but almost every industry in Japan coming to a halt.
Even if a ceasefire agreement were reached between the United States and Iran, and even if the Strait of Hormuz were reopened, that strait would no longer be what it once was.
It would remain a risk factor incomparable to anything we had imagined before.
Perhaps we will no longer be able to obtain cheap Middle Eastern crude oil as a matter of course.
There may have been something cartel-like about the oil-producing countries.
Even so, the world peace supported by oil — something we might call Pax Petroleum — may never return in the same form again.
People around the world are now facing a situation that cannot be solved simply by changing their own behavior.
How are we supposed to live from here?
Thinking about such things, I continue to live today, surrounded once again by containers made from oil.
We may have been living inside Pax Petroleum all along, without ever noticing its walls.
・・・
Vocabulary for Learners
mass email 一斉メール。職場や組織全体に送られるメール。
medical supplies 医療関連用品、医療材料。
petroleum-related products 石油関連製品。プラスチック、溶剤、容器などを含む広い表現。
ordinary citizens 一般国民、一般市民。少し社会的な文脈で使いやすい表現。
oil-producing countries 産油国。
belatedly 遅ればせながら、今さらながら。
naphtha ナフサ。石油化学製品の原料となる重要な物質。
petroleum-derived product 石油由来の製品。
come to a halt 停止する、滞る。
Strait of Hormuz ホルムズ海峡。中東の原油輸送における重要な海上交通路。
risk factor リスク因子、危険要因。
as a matter of course 当然のこととして、当たり前のように。
cartel-like カルテルじみた、カルテルのような。
Pax Petroleum 「石油による平和」という意味の造語的表現。Pax Romana などに似せた言い方。
without ever noticing its walls その壁に気づくこともなく。見えない構造の中で生きていた、という余韻を出す表現。
















