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European Energy Markets
12MAY

Qatar force majeure hits EU buyers

3 min read
10:23UTC

Strike damage at Ras Laffan knocked 17% of global LNG export capacity offline, and QatarEnergy has told Belgium, Italy, and Poland it cannot deliver.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ras Laffan damage removed 17% of global LNG export capacity with repairs estimated at five years.

QatarEnergy declared force majeure to buyers in Belgium, Italy, and Poland after strikes in early March damaged the Ras Laffan LNG complex. The facility handles 77 million tonnes per annum, roughly 17% of global LNG export capacity. Repairs are estimated at up to five years. 1

The direct EU exposure to Qatari gas is modest: Bruegel puts it at only 4% of total EU gas imports, below one in ten of LNG. But direct exposure understates the mechanism. Qatar's absence tightens the global LNG spot market, where Asian and European buyers compete for the same flexible cargoes. Kpler estimates the monthly supply shortfall from the Qatar and UAE disruption at nearly 6 million tonnes, with alternative sources covering under 2 million tonnes.

Bruegel distinguishes this shock from the Russia crisis. There is no equivalent of the Russian pipeline cut, no bilateral supply relationship severed. The transmission is indirect: global spot market tightening via Asian competition for Atlantic cargoes. Policy tools that worked against a single-supplier disruption (demand reduction mandates, solidarity mechanisms) are less effective because the constraint is global competition, not a bilateral decision.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Qatar is one of the world's largest exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG), which is natural gas chilled to liquid form so it can be shipped by tanker. The Ras Laffan industrial complex in Qatar is where most of this gas is processed and loaded onto ships. In March, that facility was damaged in military strikes. Qatar's state energy company, QatarEnergy, has told its customers in Belgium, Italy, and Poland that it cannot fulfil its delivery commitments, a legal declaration called 'force majeure.' This means those countries must find replacement gas supplies elsewhere, at whatever the market price currently is.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Ras Laffan's concentration of 77 million tonnes per annum of LNG capacity in a single geographic complex reflects QatarEnergy's deliberate strategy of capital efficiency through co-location.

The North Field expansion project, which is adding a further 49 million tonnes per annum of capacity through 2030, uses the same concentrated onshore processing architecture. This maximises output per dollar invested but creates a single-site vulnerability that no insurance or contract structure can fully hedge.

The force majeure to European buyers specifically (Belgium, Italy, Poland) rather than globally reflects the contractual structure: European buyers purchased under delivered ex-ship terms with destination clauses, giving QatarEnergy discretion over which buyers receive cargo when overall volume is constrained.

Asian buyers under the same Ras Laffan source often have FOB (free on board) contracts, meaning they bear the shipping risk and QatarEnergy's obligation is fulfilled at the Qatari loading terminal.

Escalation

Force majeure duration is the pivotal variable. Ras Laffan repair estimates of up to five years (if structural damage is severe) would make this a multi-year supply disruption rather than a one-season event. Independent engineering assessments of the damage have not been published; current market pricing implies traders expect a six to eighteen month disruption.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Ras Laffan repairs extend beyond 12 months, European LNG contract structures will face systematic repricing at renewal, eliminating the Brent-indexed cost advantage that European buyers have relied on since 2015.

  • Consequence

    European buyers receiving force majeure declarations face spot replacement premiums of EUR 300-500 million per cargo at current spread, materially affecting national gas company balance sheets in Belgium, Italy, and Poland.

First Reported In

Update #1 · Europe's thinnest gas cushion since 2018

Kpler· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Qatar force majeure hits EU buyers
The force majeure removes the single largest source of flexible LNG from the global market at the start of the European injection season, when competition for cargoes is most intense.
Different Perspectives
Hungarian and Slovak gas buyers and regulators
Hungarian and Slovak gas buyers and regulators
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Norwegian upstream producers (Equinor, ORLEN Upstream Norway)
Norwegian upstream producers (Equinor, ORLEN Upstream Norway)
Equinor started the Eirin field on 5 May (27.6 mmboe via Gassled) and signed NOK 17bn of Q1 drilling contracts on USD 9.77bn adjusted operating income. These are long-horizon defences against the Sodir-confirmed Norwegian production decline, not molecules deliverable inside the 2026 injection window.
European Commission (DG Energy)
European Commission (DG Energy)
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Major LNG buyers (Japanese and Korean utilities)
Major LNG buyers (Japanese and Korean utilities)
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Industrial gas consumers (BASF, Yara, Cefic members)
Industrial gas consumers (BASF, Yara, Cefic members)
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National energy regulators (BNetzA, CRE, ACER)
National energy regulators (BNetzA, CRE, ACER)
ACER's 6 May TurkStream derogation opinions put seven NRAs on notice that the 5 August EC ruling window is live; the concurrent Hungary EUR 123/MWh single-market premium compounds the political pressure on the Commission to either grant or formally deny the derogations before the code application date.