Key takeaways
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- The war is no longer centered on military targets alone — it is now hitting core oil and gas infrastructure.
- Qatar’s Ras Laffan, Iran’s South Pars, Saudi export routes, and UAE bypass hubs have all been struck.
- Hormuz traffic has collapsed 96%, turning a regional conflict into a global supply-chain shock.
- The risk is no longer just higher prices — it is prolonged physical disruption to energy flows.
What Happened?
The article maps out how the conflict has spread across the Gulf’s most critical energy nodes.
Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gas field, one half of the giant field shared with Qatar. Iran then retaliated against Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, home to the world’s largest LNG plant, and also targeted or threatened infrastructure in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE.
This matters because the attacks are not random. They are hitting:
- Production fields
- Refineries
- Export terminals
- Pipeline bypass routes
- Commercial shipping lanes
That is a direct attack on the physical architecture of global energy supply.
Why It Matters
This is the clearest sign yet that the market is facing an infrastructure war, not just a shipping disruption.
Before, the main fear was Hormuz. Now the problem is much broader:
- South Pars matters for Iranian gas supply
- Ras Laffan matters for global LNG
- Yanbu matters because Saudi uses it to bypass Hormuz
- Fujairah matters because it is another alternative export route
- Kharg Island remains central to Iranian oil exports
When both the chokepoint and the workaround routes come under attack, the system starts losing resilience.
The most important figure in the piece is the 96% drop in Hormuz transits from March 1 to March 18 versus late February. That means this is no longer a theoretical threat. The physical movement of energy has already collapsed.
What’s Next?
The next question is whether outages remain temporary or become cumulative.
Investors should watch:
- Repair timelines at Ras Laffan and South Pars
- Whether Yanbu and Fujairah stay operational
- Any renewed attacks on Ras Tanura or other Saudi export infrastructure
- Whether tanker traffic through Hormuz recovers at all
The broader takeaway is simple: the Gulf energy network is being attacked at multiple points simultaneously. That shifts the story from “oil spike” to systemic energy-security crisis.













