Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
22MAY

Europe gas up 54%; Asian LNG surges 39%

3 min read
11:08UTC

European gas prices surged 45–54% within hours as the supply chain the EU spent four years building to replace Russian pipeline gas came under direct Iranian fire.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Europe's post-2022 energy diversification away from Russia succeeded in eliminating political-supply risk but inadvertently concentrated new physical-security risk in a single conflict theatre, and Monday's price moves are the market pricing that structural vulnerability for the first time.

European gas prices surged 45–54% within hours of QatarEnergy's shutdown announcement. Asian LNG spot prices rose 39%. Oil climbed 13% intraday, pushing Brent above $82 per barrel — up from the $73 level that prevailed before the first strikes and extending the rally that had already taken crude to $85–90 .

The European price spike has a specific structural cause. After Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine and the rupture of Nord Stream pipeline flows, the EU rebuilt its gas supply around Qatari LNG. Qatar and the United States became Europe's two largest LNG suppliers, replacing the pipeline volumes Moscow had weaponised. Monday's strikes revealed the diversification from Russian gas as a substitution of one geopolitical vulnerability for another — dependence on Russian goodwill replaced by exposure to Iranian military reach.

The compounding effect makes the market response rational. JP Morgan had already raised its recession probability to 35% with Hormuz as the primary variable, and both JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs projected $110–130 oil in a prolonged conflict . Monday added a third simultaneous disruption: Hormuz constrained transit, Ras Tanura reduced refining, and Qatar's shutdown eliminated production at source. Each alone would be absorbable; together, they strip redundancy from a system that had already lost its buffers.

Asian buyers face a separate emergency. Japan depends on LNG imports for virtually all its natural gas and holds roughly three weeks of strategic reserves. South Korea's position is comparable. The 39% Asian spot price increase reflects buyers scrambling for alternative cargoes from the United States, Australia, and Mozambique — none of which can replace Qatar's volume at short notice. For import-dependent Asian economies, the Qatar shutdown is a supply crisis, not a price event.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

After Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Europe scrambled to replace Russian pipeline gas — previously about 40% of supply — with LNG shipped by sea, much of it from Qatar. That transition broadly succeeded and European gas storage rebuilt to healthy levels. But it meant Europe became dependent on a supply chain running directly through the Gulf conflict zone. Monday's price surge reflects markets pricing in the possibility that this replacement supply could be disrupted for an extended period — and unlike Russian gas, which could theoretically be restored by a diplomatic agreement, physical damage to LNG liquefaction infrastructure takes years to repair, not months.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The 45–54% European gas price surge is not solely a supply-shock response — it reflects markets re-pricing the baseline risk on Gulf LNG infrastructure as a permanent military target class. This permanently widens the risk premium on Gulf energy assets until either the conflict ends or credible hardened air defence of energy infrastructure is demonstrated, with long-run implications for European energy investment planning and LNG contract pricing.

Root Causes

The EU's post-2022 LNG pivot traded one form of energy insecurity for another: Russian pipeline gas carried political-supply risk (vulnerable to Kremlin decisions) whilst seaborne LNG from Qatar carries physical-security risk (vulnerable to military action in a conflict zone). The structural fragility was latent in the architecture of the energy transition; Monday's strikes have made it kinetic rather than theoretical.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    LNG cargo diversion from Asian to European buyers will create a secondary energy squeeze on US-allied Asian economies — South Korea, Japan, Taiwan — complicating the geopolitical coalition managing the broader conflict.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    If prices are sustained above current levels for more than four weeks, eurozone industrial output contraction becomes probable, with recessionary implications concentrated in Germany's energy-intensive manufacturing sector.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Markets will henceforth price a permanent Gulf conflict risk premium into LNG contracts, raising the long-run cost of seaborne gas supply and accelerating the investment case for domestic renewable energy in Europe and Asia.

    Long term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    US LNG exporters and North American gas producers benefit from structural repricing of competing supply; Henry Hub futures are likely to rise on anticipated export demand and cargo reallocation.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #11 · Qatar's LNG dark; Trump eyes ground troops

Bloomberg· 2 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Europe gas up 54%; Asian LNG surges 39%
The price surges expose a structural flaw in European energy security: four years of replacing Russian pipeline gas with Qatari LNG created a new single point of failure now under direct military threat, while simultaneously triggering a supply emergency for LNG-dependent Asian economies.
Different Perspectives
Islamabad (Pakistan Armed Forces and Foreign Ministry)
Islamabad (Pakistan Armed Forces and Foreign Ministry)
Munir's cancellation reflects Islamabad's assessment that no bridging formula survives the collision of Khamenei's uranium directive, Rubio's Hormuz red line, and the sequencing gap simultaneously; Naqvi's relay role signals continued Pakistani engagement without a mandate to close any of the three gaps.
Lloyd's of London war-risk market
Lloyd's of London war-risk market
Published PGSA coordinates give underwriters the cartographic input to model tanker route exposure inside the claimed zone; OFAC's Sunday GL V ruling determines whether Hengli-Singapore dollar-clearing routes carry secondary-sanctions risk from Monday, adding a compliance layer to the existing kinetic war-risk premium.
Hengaw Human Rights Organisation
Hengaw Human Rights Organisation
Zaleh's trial lasted 'only a few minutes' before a conviction on PDKI membership charges at Naqadeh; the pattern of solitary detention, coerced confession, and minutes-long hearing is consistent with wartime political-charge architecture the organisation has documented across the Kurdish northwest.
Gulf Arab states (UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait)
Gulf Arab states (UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait)
The UAE has not published counter-coordinates to the PGSA's Hormuz zone map, leaving Emirati silence as the maritime-law response to Iran's charted boundary claim. Abu Dhabi's published position now defaults by omission toward implied acceptance of the zone's cartographic fact.
Beijing's Ministry of Commerce
Beijing's Ministry of Commerce
MOFCOM's blocking order covers Hengli and four other designated refineries on the mainland but does not extend to the dollar-clearing layer in Singapore, making Sunday's GL V expiry the first live test of whether Beijing's sanctions-defiance architecture reaches the place where dollars settle.
The White House
The White House
Trump's verbal track on Iran has produced no signed Iran-specific presidential instrument across 84 days; both financial-sector EOs signed on 19 May are unrelated to Hormuz or the IRGC. Rubio's public naming of the Hormuz toll architecture as a deal-killer is the administration's most concrete new position this week.