Key takeaways
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- Energy infrastructure is now a primary target, marking a dangerous escalation in the conflict.
- South Pars gas field and Qatar’s LNG hub were hit, both critical to global supply.
- Oil prices surged toward $110, with gas markets also reacting sharply.
- Up to 10%+ of global oil supply is at risk, creating a potential structural energy shock.
What Happened?
The conflict has entered a new phase as attacks shifted toward core energy infrastructure across the Gulf. Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gas field, the largest in the world, triggering retaliatory attacks by Iran on Qatar’s LNG facilities and missile strikes toward Saudi Arabia.
This follows earlier disruptions, including the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20% of global oil and LNG flows in normal conditions.
The latest strikes directly hit production and processing assets — not just symbolic or military targets — raising the risk of sustained supply damage.
Why It Matters
This is a structural escalation, not just a geopolitical headline.
Energy infrastructure is difficult to repair quickly. Damage to gas fields, LNG terminals, and refineries can take months — or longer — to restore. That means the market is no longer pricing just temporary disruption, but persistent supply loss.
JPMorgan estimates supply disruptions could reach ~12 million barrels per day, a significant share of global demand. In that scenario, the only way to rebalance markets is through demand destruction — higher prices forcing consumption down.
The conflict is also expanding geographically, pulling in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and potentially the UAE — turning a bilateral war into a regional energy crisis.
What’s Next?
The key variable is whether attacks continue to target production infrastructure. If escalation persists, markets will shift from volatility to sustained scarcity.
Investors should watch:
- Damage assessments and repair timelines for key facilities
- Whether LNG flows from Qatar remain stable
- Any reopening or continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz
- Strategic reserve releases or coordinated policy responses
The bigger picture is that the war has moved from military conflict to economic warfare through energy, with global inflation, growth, and market stability now directly tied to how far this escalation goes.














