Oil prices spike as attacks on Middle East energy sites stoke fears
Oil prices have spiked as attacks on energy facilities in the Middle East have stepped up, heightening fears about major disruption to global supplies.
The price of Brent crude oil was rising by about 7% to cross 114 US dollars a barrel on Thursday morning.
This means it was closing in on the highest level since the conflict escalated at the end of February.
Prices were up sharply overnight after Qatar said on Thursday that Iranian missile attacks had hit its liquified natural gas field Ras Laffan, โcausing sizeable fires and extensive further damageโ.
This followed reports that Israel launched an attack against Iranโs South Pars gas field.
US President Donald Trump said he โknew nothingโ of Israelโs strike and that he did not want to authorise โthis level of violence and destructionโ.
But he also pledged to โmassively blow up the entiretyโ of Iranโs South Pars gas field if the nation attacks Qatarโs facilities again.
Qatarโs state-backed energy company Qatar Energy had halted production of liquefied natural gas at its sites at the beginning of the month because of attacks on its facilities.
European benchmark natural gas prices were also surging by about 20% on Thursday morning.
Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, said the escalation in the conflict was โspooking the marketโ and traders were predicting โhefty losses for stocksโ when stock markets open.
โThis war looks far from over, and the energy crisis is shifting from a shipping crisis to a supply crisis,โ she said.
โIf Iran is targeting energy assets in the region, then the conflict gets more serious and the repercussions for a long-term energy price shock also start to play out in financial markets.โ
She added that despite Mr Trumpโs calls for Israel and Iran to stop targeting energy sites, โit will take a lot of positive sentiment and news flow to calm energy prices todayโ.
