Guangzhou, June 5, 2026 — Against the backdrop of a deadlocked U.S.-Iran negotiation and escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, the aromatherapy industry in Guangzhou, a key manufacturing*** supply chain shocks. As a globally significant production base for scented candles and essential oils, Guangzhou has long capitalized on the massive cargo throughput of Nansha Port to export its "olfactory economy" worldwide. However, the recent intensification of Middle Eastern geopolitical risks is directly impacting the city’s fragrance trade through three interlinked channels: shipping logistics, raw material supply, and order distribution.
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For aromatherapy products, which are highly sensitive to value-added costs, surging maritime shipping expenses have emerged as an immediate challenge. Containers bound for the Middle East now face either exorbitant war risk surcharges or mandatory diversions around the Cape of Good Hope. Such diversions extend voyage durations by 10–14 days and, compounded by skyrocketing fuel costs, directly erode the industry’s already narrow profit margins.
Data from the Guangzhou Shipping Exchange indicates that even the relatively stable near-sea routes to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have experienced a ~9% increase in freight rate indices by the end of May, driven by the capacity-siphoning effect of long-haul routes. This suggests that cost pressures in logistics are being fully transmitted, even as exporters pivot toward Southeast Asian markets.
The aromatherapy industry is inherently tied to the petroleum sector: both the paraffin wax base of candles and the solvents used in essential oil extraction are derived from crude oil.
Against the backdrop of geopolitical conflicts pushing international oil prices above $100 per barrel, manufacturing costs for Guangzhou-based enterprises have surged abruptly. Industry analysts argue that if high oil prices persist, the long-standing "low-cost manufacturing" advantage of Guangzhou’s aromatherapy sector will face structural reconfiguration, forcing firms to transition toward high-value-added products and eco-friendly materials.
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In response to uncertainty in the Middle East market, Guangzhou’s foreign trade enterprises are subtly adjusting their order strategies. Inquiries from the ASEAN market have seen a marked uptick over the past two weeks. Data shows that ASEAN, buoyed by a growing middle class and rising demand for home fragrance products, is emerging as a new growth engine following Europe and North America.
The aromatherapy industry is a typical "high-sensitivity" consumer goods sector, vulnerable to both global energy price fluctuations (on the cost side) and changes in household disposable income (on the demand side). Amid escalating global stagflation risks, Guangzhou’s aromatherapy enterprises face dual pressures.
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