Iran
Updated 2026-03-20 14:37 UTC
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Iran attacks cut 17% of Qatar’s LNG capacity for up to 5 years: QatarEnergy

Attacks attributed to Iran have damaged Qatar's liquefied natural gas facilities, reducing the country's LNG export capacity by 17% for an estimated 3-5 years according to QatarEnergy's CEO. European gas prices surged over 20% as traders scrambled to secure alternative supplies from U.S. providers. QatarEnergy may need to declare force majeure on long-term contracts due to the infrastructure damage.

Qatar operates the world's largest LNG plant and is a critical supplier to global energy markets, particularly Europe. Any disruption to Qatari gas exports has immediate ripple effects on global energy prices and supply chains. The multi-year timeline for repairs creates sustained uncertainty in an already volatile energy market.
Energy markets say

The attacks represent a significant supply shock that will reshape global LNG markets for years. With 17% of Qatar's capacity offline, buyers are facing higher prices and fierce competition for alternative supplies, forcing a fundamental restructuring of energy procurement strategies.

Regional observers say

The infrastructure attacks highlight the vulnerability of critical energy facilities in an increasingly unstable regional security environment. Iran's warning of 'zero restraint' if its own infrastructure is targeted suggests potential for further escalation that could affect additional energy supplies.