The catastrophe in the Persian Gulf is leaving traders on the stock exchanges strangely cold – for now. But there are warning signs. And the danger of stagnation and inflation at the same time.
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What energy experts have long warned about has now happened. The infrastructure for oil and especially gas is a target in Israel and the USA’s war against the Iran become. Iranian attacks have crippled 17 percent of Qatar’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capacity, QatarEnergy’s CEO told Reuters on Thursday. It will take years until the damage is repaired. This endangers the supply of Europe and Asia.
It was a counterstrike after the Israeli Air Force bombed the Iranian part of the South Pars gas field, a major gas field exploited by both Qatar and Iran. Natural gas facilities in the United Arab Emirates and refineries in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait were also hit by Iranian drones and missiles. In addition, the Strait of Hormuz, the strait in the Persian Gulfcontinues to be blocked by Iranian forces with a few exceptions. Until the conflict erupted, tankers transported up to a fifth of the oil delivered by sea every day through the logistical bottleneck. It’s a worst-case scenario for global energy markets. The prices on oil and gas then rose again.