Oil Hits $114, Europe Gas Spikes 30% After Qatar LNG Facilities Attacked

Oil and gas prices soared following missile attacks on Qatar's critical LNG export facilities at Ras Laffan Industrial City, causing extensive damage. Brent crude futures surged 6.3% to over $114 a barrel, while European natural gas prices spiked nearly 30% on fears of a major supply crunch. The conflict has escalated risks in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital oil transit chokepoint, potentially blocking 20% of global supplies. Energy advisors warn of an "apocalyptic" price scenario if the conflict expands to target energy infrastructure beyond the Persian Gulf region.

Key Points: Qatar LNG Attack Sends Oil to $114, Europe Gas Up 30%

  • Qatar LNG facilities hit in missile attacks
  • Brent crude jumps 6.3% to $114.13/barrel
  • European benchmark gas price surges nearly 30%
  • Strait of Hormuz tanker movement largely blocked
  • Risk of escalation to full-scale global supply shock
4 min read

Crude trades at 114 USD a barrel, Gas prices in Europe surge 30% after Qatar's LNG facilities targeted

Oil surges past $114 and European gas prices jump 30% after missile strikes damage Qatar's key LNG facilities, escalating West Asia conflict risks.

"That's when all bets are off and prices could go absolutely apocalyptic. - Tom Kloza"

London, March 19

As the West Asia conflict intensified with the Israel led strike on Iran's South Pars Gas field and retaliatory attacks by Iran on Qatar's LNG facilities, Oil and gas prices rose on Thursday over fears of a global supply crunch, reported CNBC.

Qatar Energy confirmed that Ras Laffan Industrial City was the subject of missile attacks late on Wednesday night. It also reported that In addition to the previous attack on Ras Laffan Industrial City that resulted in extensive damage to the Pearl GTL (Gas-to-Liquids) facility, several of its Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) facilities were the subject of missile attacks, causing sizeable fires and extensive further damage. The fires at the facility have since been contained.

According to CNBC, International benchmark Brent crude futures with May delivery rose 6.3% to USD 114.13 per barrel. Gas prices were also sharply higher. The front-month gas price at the Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF) hub, a European benchmark for natural gas trading, traded nearly 30% higher at 70.8 euros per megawatt-hour."

GB News reported that UK gas prices have also surged by more than 20 per cent on Thursday morning. GB News said that as of 7:54 am (UK Time), UK gas prices were sitting at 173p per therm, which is up more than 24 per cent from Wednesday.

The report further noted that Qatar had already suspended LNG production on March 2 after Iranian drone attacks on Ras Laffan and Mesaieed Industrial City. The country is the world's second-largest LNG exporter after the U.S., accounting for nearly a fifth of global shipments, according to Kpler.

Brent crude rose above the $110-$115 per barrel range, reflecting heightened geopolitical risk and uncertainty over production and transport routes, especially through the Strait of Hormuz, a key artery for global oil shipments. Tanker movement through the strait, which typically handles about 20% of global oil supplies, is now largely blocked, raising the risk of a deeper supply shock.

Gulf Oil's senior energy advisor Tom Kloza, warned that markets could enter an "all bets are off" scenario if the conflict expands beyond the Gulf and begins targeting energy infrastructure in other regions.

"Can you imagine the response in the world if [Iran] targeted something outside of the Persian Gulf, a refinery in Rotterdam or a facility somewhere in the United States? That's when all bets are off and prices could go absolutely apocalyptic," he told CNBC .

Such a shift, the report noted, would signal a transition from contained geopolitical risk to a full-scale global supply shock, where traditional pricing models and risk assumptions may no longer apply. In that environment, fears of widespread disruptions to refining and fuel distribution could trigger extreme volatility, with oil and gas prices surging sharply.

Echoing similar concerns, Dan Pickering, founder and CIO of Pickering Energy Partners, told CNBC, "We're moving from a supply chain problem to potentially a supply problem. There's a big difference. You fix supply chain problems quickly."

"If you start changing the ability to produce, whether it's LNG or oil, and all of a sudden you can't move the same amount of volumes because the volumes aren't there ... this is an escalation," he told CNBC.

Earlier, Iran's Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) took onus of attacks on what they dub are Oil facilities associated with the US in the Region. IRGC said the attacks were part of the 63rd wave of its ongoing retaliatory Operation True Promise 4 which was undertaken after the US-Israel strikes on Iran.Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said that said the US and Qatar were not aware of the attacks on Iran's South Pars Gas field and stated that Israel would not target the Gas Field unless Iran decides to attack Qatar again. He said that Washington would not be afraid of authorising destruction and violence on Tehran if Qatar's energy facilities are targeted again.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The global energy market is so interconnected. A conflict in West Asia disrupts Qatar's LNG, and suddenly gas prices in Europe spike 30%. It shows how fragile our energy security is. India needs to double down on its renewable targets and reduce this import dependency.
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Aditya G
The Strait of Hormuz being blocked is a nightmare scenario. A fifth of the world's oil goes through there. If this escalates further, we could be looking at $150+ oil. Time for our government to activate those strategic petroleum reserves wisely.
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Priyanka N
While the focus is on oil, let's not forget LNG. Qatar is a major supplier. This will impact fertilizer production and power plants that use gas, potentially increasing costs for farmers and electricity bills. A double whammy for the common man.
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Michael C
The analyst's comment about prices going "apocalyptic" if infrastructure outside the Gulf is targeted is chilling. It feels like the world is walking on a tightrope. Diplomacy needs to be the top priority right now, not more retaliatory strikes.
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Karthik V
Respectfully, the article could have included more on how this affects Asian markets specifically. We get a lot of our LNG from Qatar too. What's the projected impact on contracts with GAIL and other Indian companies? That's crucial info for us.
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