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Iran Conflict 2026
13MAY

European gas nearly doubles in one week

4 min read
12:29UTC

Europe spent four years replacing Russian pipeline gas with Qatari LNG. That replacement fuel is now under direct military fire, and gas prices have nearly doubled to over €60/MWh.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The P&I insurance cancellation means energy prices have their own recovery timeline, independent of whether the military conflict ends — a market structural floor that diplomacy alone cannot dissolve.

Dutch TTF natural gas futures rose from the low €30s per megawatt-hour to over €60/MWh on Tuesday — nearly doubling in under a week. The surge follows Iran's drone strikes on Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG complex, which shut 20% of global LNG production , and the near-closure of the strait of Hormuz, where vessel traffic has fallen 80% below normal .

This is Europe's second energy shock in four years, and in structural terms it is worse than the first. The 2022 Russian gas cutoff disrupted pipeline supply and sent TTF to €340/MWh in August of that year. European governments responded by spending billions to replace Russian molecules with Liquefied Natural Gas — principally from Qatar. That replacement supply is now under direct military fire. Iran has degraded all three pillars of The Gulf's energy export architecture: production at Ras Laffan, refining at Saudi Aramco's Ras Tanura facility , and transit through Hormuz. The contingency plan has become the casualty.

EU gas storage stands at 30%, below last year's level at the same date. Bloomberg assessed that Europe can absorb current prices if the conflict ends within one month. Beyond that, the continent faces a genuine supply crisis heading into next winter's restocking season — the April-to-October period when utilities must refill underground storage to survive peak demand. The euro and yen fell against the dollar as currency markets priced the energy exposure of import-dependent economies against a United States that produces most of its own oil and gas. UK economists warned of depressed growth, higher inflation, and increased public debt if prices hold.

The disruption now operates on an institutional timeline independent of military or diplomatic developments. Three major Protection & Indemnity clubs — American Steamship Owners Mutual, London P&I Club, and Skuld — cancelled War risk coverage for the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman . Without P&I insurance, vessels cannot be financed or commercially operated by any major shipping line. Reinstatement requires full syndicated risk reassessment — a process that typically takes weeks after hostilities cease. Even a ceasefire tomorrow would not restart gas flows for weeks. European households and industries, still absorbing the cost of the 2022 shock through higher bills and industrial demand destruction, face a second round driven by the same underlying vulnerability: dependence on energy that transits contested waterways, carried in ships that require functioning insurance markets to sail.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Natural gas in Europe is bought and sold at a benchmark price called TTF. When it doubles in a week, energy companies that heat homes and generate electricity pay twice as much overnight, and those costs pass to consumers through utility bills within weeks to months. Europe had spent four years building ports to receive liquefied gas by tanker ship from the Gulf as its backup plan after Russia cut pipeline supplies. That backup plan has now been cut at both ends: the Gulf production facility is damaged and tanker ships cannot move through the blocked strait. With no short-term alternative supply source capable of filling the gap, prices reflect genuine scarcity rather than speculation.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The 2022 energy crisis drove Europe's strategic pivot to LNG as resilient infrastructure independent of Russian political decisions. This shock reveals that LNG supply chains carry their own geographic chokepoints — at production (Ras Laffan) and at transit (Hormuz) — that are as vulnerable to Middle East conflict as pipelines were to Russian political decisions. Europe's post-2022 energy resilience strategy has been structurally reset.

Root Causes

Europe's LNG diversification strategy was architecturally sound but geographically concentrated: Qatar's Ras Laffan alone accounts for roughly 20% of global LNG supply, meaning no true supply diversification existed at the source level. US LNG export capacity, operating near its maximum of approximately 105 million tonnes per annum, cannot substitute a 20% global supply loss. The 2022–2024 regasification infrastructure buildout expanded Europe's ability to receive LNG but not the number of genuinely independent supply origins — a shallow diversification that this disruption has exposed.

Escalation

Price pressure is likely to persist even on positive diplomatic news because the P&I insurance cancellations mean tankers cannot sail to European terminals even if the Strait of Hormuz reopens militarily, until syndicated risk reassessments complete. This creates a structural price floor that de-couples energy market recovery from any ceasefire announcement — a dynamic the body states as fact but does not draw the analytical conclusion from.

What could happen next?
1 meaning2 consequence2 risk
  • Meaning

    LNG — Europe's post-2022 strategic resilience asset — has proven to carry geographic concentration risk comparable to the pipeline supply it replaced, invalidating the core assumption behind Europe's energy security architecture.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Gas-intensive European industries including fertilisers, aluminium, and steel face production curtailment decisions within weeks, compressing EU manufacturing output across multiple sectors simultaneously.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    P&I insurance cancellation extends energy market disruption beyond any diplomatic resolution, creating a structural price floor independent of military or diplomatic developments.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    If the storage refill season (April–October) proceeds at elevated prices with constrained supply, Europe cannot achieve mandated 90% fill targets, risking a genuine supply crisis next winter.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    UK and EU governments face renewed pressure to expand energy subsidy programmes at a moment of already strained public finances, forcing difficult fiscal trade-offs between household protection and debt sustainability.

    Short term · Suggested
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