As Oil
Prices Spiral, Damage to Infrastructure ‘Makes It Even Worse’
Attacks
on oil and natural gas facilities this week could make it much harder for
Persian Gulf countries to rebuild and restart production when the war
eventually ends.
Ivan Penn
By Ivan
Penn
March 19,
2026
Updated
2:49 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/19/business/energy-environment/iran-oil-natural-gas-attacks.html
Increasing
attacks on energy infrastructure in the Persian Gulf could significantly hurt
the already strained global supply of oil and natural gas, pushing fuel prices
much higher.
Important
energy sites were attacked this week across the region. The main state-owned
energy company in Qatar, the world’s third largest supplier of liquefied
natural gas, reported “sizable fires and extensive further damage” on Thursday
at its facilities after those areas were also struck on Wednesday.
The
escalating attacks will make it much harder for energy producers in the Gulf to
repair and restart their oil and gas operations when the war ultimately ends.
Asian countries, which are the biggest buyers of Persian Gulf energy, face the
greatest risk of fuel shortages, but the pain of higher oil and natural gas
prices will be felt across much of the globe.
“Prices
will march up whether there’s damage or not,” said Bob McNally, president of
Rapidan Energy Group, a research and consulting firm in Washington. “Damage
just makes it even worse.”
International
oil prices at one point on Thursday had jumped more than 10 percent, to around
$118 a barrel, before falling back to around $111 a barrel. Liquefied natural
gas prices were up about 12 percent in Europe.
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On
Wednesday, Iran and Qatar blamed Israel for striking Iran’s South Pars natural
gas field, which provides fuel that is used in power plants in that country.
Hours later, Qatar accused Iran of attacking its Ras Laffan Industrial City, a
large complex on the Persian Gulf. On Thursday, there were further strikes at
refineries and gas facilities in Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
The
attacks on energy installations fueled fresh uncertainty days after oil and gas
prices moderated last week after President Trump suggested that the war would
soon be over.
Oil and
gas flows from the Persian Gulf have slowed to a trickle because Iranian
attacks on ships have effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz on Iran’s
southern coast. About 20 percent of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas
passes through the strait. Energy companies also paused production at many
facilities, because they had nowhere to send the fuel and were running out of
storage space.
Restarting
plants and reopening the Strait of Hormuz could take weeks, causing a
relatively brief disruption. But repairing or rebuilding facilities could take
much long longer.
“A longer
outage caused by damage is a bigger deal than a short outage caused by a
shutdown,” said Kevin Book, managing director at ClearView Energy Partners, an
independent research firm in Washington. “If the market is pricing in a short
disruption that could be resolved in a cease-fire or the end of the war, it
would be weeks for full functional facilities to come back on line. If it is
damaged, it could be months.”
If
attacks on energy operations continue, some analysts warn that oil prices could
soar beyond $150 a barrel — contributing further to the steady upward march of
gasoline prices. The average price for a gallon of regular gasoline reached
$3.88 on Thursday in the United States, up from $2.92 a month earlier,
according to AAA.
Natural
gas, which is used to generate electricity, heat homes and in industrial
processes, could also become much more expensive, especially in countries that
do not have domestic sources of the fuel and buy liquefied natural gas from
places like Qatar, the United States and Australia.
Analysts
initially expected the gas disruption in Qatar to last about two months, but
the attacks on Ras Laffan have very likely pushed the recovery much further
into the future.
Qatar was
expected to expand production in an area called the North Field East starting
in November. But that seems less likely now, potentially limiting how much gas
supply will grow through 2028.
“Market
expectations had been for a short disruption, with a controlled restart
restoring supply to pre-conflict levels by mid-2026,” said Kristy Kramer, head
of L.N.G. strategy and market development at Wood MacKenzie, an energy research
firm. “That outlook now appears increasingly unlikely.”
To keep
energy prices from spiraling upward, the International Energy Agency last week
announced its member countries, which include the Britain, Japan and the United
States, would release a record 400 million barrels of oil from their reserve.
But oil
reserves offer only partial relief and cannot fully offset the loss of supply
from the Persian Gulf, according to an analysis by Wood MacKenzie. I.E.A.
members do not have enough oil in reserve to keep the world well supplied if
the war continues for weeks or months.
After
Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, strategic stock releases did little to prevent
global oil prices from reaching $125, and the supply gap from the Gulf shutdown
is significantly greater, the Wood MacKenzie analysis said.
If the
attacks on energy infrastructure escalate, oil and gas supplies could be so
disrupted that policymakers around the world would effectively lose all control
of fuel prices.
“There’s
concern now that there’s going to be tit-for-tat escalation,” said Mr. McNally,
who advised President George W. Bush on energy issues. “This would be deeply
unfortunate.”
Ivan Penn
is a reporter based in Los Angeles and covers the energy industry. His work has
included reporting on clean energy, failures in the electric grid and the
economics of utility services.

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