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Home.forex news reportIran targets energy facilities across Gulf after Israel struck its key gas...

Iran targets energy facilities across Gulf after Israel struck its key gas installations

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By Jaidaa Taha, Yousef Saba, Jana Choukeir and Yomna Ehab

March 19 (Reuters) – European gas prices surged 25% and oil gained 10% on Thursday after Iran attacked energy infrastructure in the Middle East in retaliation against Israeli attacks on it gas facilities, marking the biggest escalation of the nearly three-week war.

The Iranian aerial attacks caused extensive damage to the world’s ‌largest gas plant in Qatar, targeted a refinery in Saudi Arabia, forced the United Arab Emirates to shut gas facilities and started fires at two Kuwaiti refineries.

The price of benchmark Brent crude ‌rose to above $119 a barrel on Thursday, while gas prices in Europe were double the level seen in late February before the U.S. and Israel launched their war on Iran.

“This latest escalation feels like a turning point for markets because the conflict is no ​longer just about military headlines or Strait of Hormuz closure,” said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo in Singapore.

“It is now hitting the plumbing of the global energy system. What is unsettling markets now is the growing stagflation risk,” she added.

EUROPEAN LEADERS SEEK QUICK FIXES

European leaders on Thursday will try to agree on quick fixes to mitigate surging prices caused by the tit-for-tat attacks on key facilities and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which some 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas supplies normally pass.

But some governments doubt that the EU – whose 27 member states have vastly different energy mixes and national taxes on energy – can realistically offset a ‌price spike.

The attacks on South Pars in Iran and Qatar’s Ras Laffan ⁠plant represent a sharp escalation, not just in the conflict itself but in its implications for energy markets, Rob McLeod, head of energy price risk solutions at Hartree Partners, said in a LinkedIn post.

Major infrastructure damage means facilities could take months or years, not weeks, to restart, he said.

South Pars is the Iranian sector of the ⁠world’s largest natural gas deposit, which Iran shares with Qatar, a close U.S. ally, across the Gulf. Qatar’s foreign ministry rebuked Israel for a “dangerous and irresponsible” attack on Iran’s South Pars facilities, and denounced Iran for what it called “a flagrant breach” of international law, expelling two senior Iranian diplomats.

On Thursday, a drone fell on the Aramco-Exxon refinery, SAMREF, the Saudi Arabian Defence Ministry said, adding damage was being assessed. It also intercepted a ballistic missile launched towards Yanbu, the Red ​Sea ​port city that is currently Saudi Arabia’s only outlet for crude exports and where the refinery is located.



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