(By Oil & Gas 360) – Global energy markets are entering a new phase of disruption as attacks on critical infrastructure across the Middle East begin to translate into real supply losses, not just risk premiums.

Brent crude surged to multi-year highs, briefly touching around $119 per barrel, as traders reacted to widening outages across oil and gas systems. The move reflects a market increasingly focused on physical disruption rather than just geopolitical headlines.
At the center of the shock is a wave of coordinated strikes on energy infrastructure. Drone attacks have forced refinery shutdowns in multiple Gulf states, including Kuwait, while broader disruptions tied to the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran have hit production and export capacity across the region.
The scale is significant. Production cuts, damaged facilities, and halted exports are affecting several major producers simultaneously, something markets rarely experience.
In Iraq, output has been sharply reduced, while in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, key processing and export facilities have been impacted.
Perhaps the most consequential development has come in the global gas market.
An Iranian strike on Qatar’s Ras Laffan industrial complex, home to the world’s largest LNG export facility, has disrupted a critical supply hub that accounts for roughly 20% of global LNG trade.
The impact has been immediate; European gas prices have surged by as much as 35%, reflecting the region’s continued dependence on seaborne LNG following the loss of Russian pipeline flows.
This marks a notable escalation. Energy infrastructure, not just shipping lanes or tankers, is now a direct target, increasing the likelihood that disruptions could last longer and require more time to repair.
For oil markets, the result is a tightening supply picture layered on top of existing geopolitical risk. Prices have held near recent highs even after initial spikes, suggesting traders are reassessing baseline supply expectations rather than simply reacting to headlines.
The broader implication is clear: the market is moving from a “risk premium” phase to a “supply loss” phase. That distinction matters.
Risk premiums can fade quickly if tensions ease. Physical outages, especially across multiple countries and sectors, are harder to reverse and tend to sustain higher prices.
For now, energy markets are balancing uncertainty with emerging evidence of disruption. But with refining, production, and LNG export capacity all under pressure, the system is showing signs of strain.
In a market already operating with limited spare capacity, it may not take a full shutdown of supply routes to keep prices elevated, only continued disruption across the infrastructure that keeps energy flowing.
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Disclaimer
This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.
