Global energy markets buckled Thursday after Qatar reported extensive damage to the world’s largest liquefied natural gas facility, sending oil prices up 10 percent and European gas prices surging 35 percent in a single session.
Iranian forces struck Qatar’s Ras Laffan industrial complex in what officials described as two separate waves of attacks, triggering sizeable fires and widespread destruction across several LNG facilities. The assault came in response to an Israeli strike on Iran’s South Pars gas field, a move that has dramatically widened the scope of a conflict that began in late February.
Qatar is among the world’s top producers of liquefied natural gas, alongside the United States, Australia and Russia. Its Ras Laffan hub is the single largest LNG facility on the planet, making it a linchpin of global energy supply. Its repeated targeting has rattled commodity markets and raised alarms about the durability of the world’s energy infrastructure under sustained military pressure.
Qatar energy strikes mark a turning point
Analysts have drawn a sharp distinction between earlier attacks on storage depots and shipping routes and this week’s assault on active production facilities. The difference in scale and consequence, experts say, is substantial.
French President Emmanuel Macron captured that concern Thursday, warning of reckless escalation and cautioning that if production capacity in the Middle East is destroyed outright, the economic effects of this war will be felt for years rather than months. He called for direct negotiations between Washington and Tehran to prevent further strikes on energy infrastructure.
Energy prices had already been climbing steeply since the start of the conflict, driven largely by the near-shutdown of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway that under normal conditions carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and LNG supply. The latest strikes pushed that pressure to a new level entirely.
Drones also struck oil refineries in Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia reported attacks on energy infrastructure including a drone that hit a refinery in the industrial zone near the Red Sea port of Yanbu. Riyadh said it reserved the right to take military action if the assaults continued.
Trump warns of US response over Qatar attacks
President Donald Trump said the United States had no advance knowledge of the Israeli strike on South Pars and signaled that Israel would not carry out further attacks on the site under normal circumstances. But he made clear that if Iran continued targeting Qatar’s LNG facilities, Washington would move to destroy the South Pars field entirely.
Trump’s post struck an unusual tone, describing Israel’s attack on the gas hub as an act of anger, a characterization that analysts said highlighted a visible rift between Washington and Tel Aviv over the direction and structure of the campaign. Strategic clarity, observers noted, appears increasingly absent from an operation that lacks defined goals or a clear end state.
Gulf nations were sharply critical of the South Pars strike. Qatar called it dangerous and irresponsible. The United Arab Emirates, in a rare public rebuke, labeled it a dangerous escalation, warning that targeting energy infrastructure poses a direct threat to global energy security. In response to Iran’s retaliatory strike on Ras Laffan, Qatar expelled Iranian military and security personnel from the country.
A war showing no signs of resolution
In Tehran on Thursday, the Iranian capital appeared outwardly calm on the eve of Nowruz, the Persian New Year. Streets filled with traffic and vendors as usual, though a notably heavier security presence and additional armored vehicles signaled the underlying tension gripping the country.
Iran’s leadership has vowed retaliation following the deaths of several senior officials this week, including its national security chief and intelligence minister. A US-based rights organization reported more than 3,000 people killed in Iran since the start of hostilities, though that figure has not been independently verified.
Despite significant losses, Iran continues to launch missile and drone strikes across the region. US intelligence officials told Congress that the Iranian government remains intact, though largely degraded. With no diplomatic breakthrough in sight and energy infrastructure increasingly in the crosshairs, analysts warn the conflict is settling into a prolonged war of attrition with consequences that could reshape global energy markets for years to come.

