Bin bag panic grips South Korea as huge Iran war crisis budget agreed
South Korea is experiencing economic and social disruption due to the ongoing war in Iran and the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz. In Seoul, residents are panic-buying plastic bin bags due to fears of a shortage, as they are required for household waste disposal and made from petroleum derivatives.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedSouth Korea is experiencing economic and social disruption due to the ongoing war in Iran and the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz. In Seoul, residents are panic-buying plastic bin bags due to fears of a shortage, as they are required for household waste disposal and made from petroleum derivatives. The country, heavily reliant on Middle Eastern oil imports, has seen its currency, the won, plummet to a 17-year low, and its stock market has experienced significant losses. The economic instability has led the OECD to reduce South Korea's 2026 growth forecast. The situation highlights South Korea's vulnerability to disruptions in global oil supplies.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe main benchmark Kospi index experienced its worst single-day drop in history, plummeting by more than 12 per cent.
South Korea imports almost all of its oil, more than two-thirds of it from countries in the Persian Gulf.
Nearly 2.7 million of Seoul’s mandatory “pay-as-you-throw” bags were sold each day, almost five times the normal volume.
The won has tumbled to its lowest level since the global financial crisis of 2008-09.
South Koreans were stripping shop shelves of plastic bin bags due to fears of scarcity.