# [WARNING] Bolivia Unrest Hits Fuel, FX; Risk to Gas and Metals Flows

*Monday, May 18, 2026 at 1:42 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-18T13:42:11.787Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, metals, LatinAmerica, sovereign-risk
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7200.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Bolivia faces escalating protests, road blockades and clashes amid acute shortages of fuel and US dollars. While immediate effects are domestic, prolonged disruption could impair exports of natural gas and key minerals, nudging regional energy and metals markets.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Reports describe Bolivia entering a period of “maximum tension,” with widespread protests, road blockades and confrontations driven by a deepening economic and political crisis. Demonstrators, including mining, union and peasant sectors, are mobilizing against the government over lack of fuel and scarcity of US dollars. These are not routine protests but a broad‑based movement rooted in core macro shortages.

2) Supply/demand impact:
Bolivia is a mid‑tier but systemically relevant supplier of:
- Natural gas to Brazil and Argentina (historically ~20–30 mcm/d, though volumes have declined).
- Zinc, tin, silver and increasingly lithium (through brines and pilot projects).

Blockades and fuel shortages can disrupt internal logistics, mine operations, and pipeline and export terminal staffing. At this stage, there is no explicit confirmation of export curtailments, but risk of:
- Intermittent gas supply unreliability to Brazil/Argentina if internal fuel shortages impede operations or protesters target energy infrastructure.
- Slower mineral shipments from highland mining regions due to roadblocks and diesel constraints.

Quantitatively, even a temporary 20–30% curtailment of Bolivian gas flows would have limited spot price impact in today’s relatively well‑supplied South American gas market (LNG backfill available), but it would lift regional basis and potentially support Brazilian power prices and localized LNG demand. For zinc/tin, Bolivia contributes mid‑single‑digit shares of global mine supply; any export delays tend to tighten nearby spreads.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Regional natural gas and power in Brazil/Argentina: Slightly bullish risk skew if disruptions materialize.
- Zinc, tin, silver futures: Mild bullish risk premium on potential supply chain disruptions.
- USD/BOB and Bolivian sovereign/quasi‑sovereign credit: Bearish, with rising default/devaluation concerns if dollar scarcity persists.

4) Historical precedent:
Bolivia has seen repeated protest‑linked blockades (e.g., 2003, 2019) that temporarily disrupted fuel distribution and logistics, occasionally affecting gas exports. Market impact has typically been localized and short‑lived unless the political crisis persists.

5) Duration of impact:
Near‑term market effect is mostly risk‑premium rather than realized export loss. If unrest and shortages persist for weeks to months, watch for formal gas supply notices to Brazil/Argentina and evidence of mining curtailments; that would shift impact from transient to moderately structural for selected metals and regional gas.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brazil natural gas hub prices, Brazilian power prices, Zinc futures, Tin futures, Silver futures, USD/BOB, Bolivian sovereign bonds
