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    Home » What the LNG Crisis Means for Asia and Europe?
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    What the LNG Crisis Means for Asia and Europe?

    Megan BurrowsBy Megan BurrowsApril 21, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    “Force majeure for up to five years” is one of those sentences that quietly sends energy traders to the kitchen for another cup of coffee. That statement carried the weight of something much bigger when QatarEnergy released it on March 24 in a measured press release that was only a few paragraphs long. Ras Laffan Industrial City, a vast, nearly futuristic complex with pipes sparkling in the Gulf sun on Qatar’s northeastern coast, had recently been deemed partially irreparable for years. One of the two Pearl GTL trains was also offline, and two of its fourteen LNG trains were either burning or damaged. The world had anticipated a disturbance. This was not exactly what it had anticipated.

    What the LNG Crisis Means for Asia and Europe
    What the LNG Crisis Means for Asia and Europe

    Qatar typically dominates the world gas market in a subtle way. About 20% of the world’s LNG is supplied by it, with over 80% of that going east to importers in South Korea, China, Japan, India, and Pakistan. The remainder goes to buyers in Europe, primarily in Belgium and Italy. Saad al-Kaabi, CEO of QatarEnergy, was not merely expressing personal shock when he sat down with Reuters and said, with audible fatigue, that he had “never in my wildest dreams” imagined Qatar being attacked by a fellow Muslim nation during Ramadan. He was indicating that the presumptions that had guided the LNG industry for twenty years would now be suspended, at least temporarily.

    The specificity of the numbers is brutal. Together, Trains 4 and 6 generated 12.8 million tonnes of LNG annually, or about 17% of Qatar’s total export capacity. ExxonMobil owns 34% of Train 4 and 30% of Train 6, two joint ventures. Train 4 provides Belgium’s EDFT and Italy’s Edison. KOGAS in South Korea and Shell’s book in China are fed by Train 6. Supply contracts that had been negotiated over years of careful diplomacy were rewritten by a single Iranian missile, or a coordinated barrage depending on whose version you believe. An estimated $20 billion is lost in revenue each year. The LNG trains will require three to five years to be repaired. Pearl GTL requires a minimum of one year.

    SubjectDetails
    EventQatarEnergy declares force majeure on long-term LNG contracts
    Date of Declaration24 March 2026
    TriggerIranian missile strikes on Ras Laffan Industrial City, 18–19 March
    Damaged FacilitiesLNG Trains 4 and 6, plus one Pearl GTL train (Shell-operated)
    Capacity Lost12.8 million tonnes per annum, ~17% of Qatar’s LNG export capacity
    Share of Global LNG SupplyQatar accounts for roughly 20% of global LNG exports
    Estimated Revenue LossAround $20 billion per year
    Repair Timeline3 to 5 years for LNG trains, at least 1 year for Pearl GTL
    Impacted Contract HoldersItaly (Edison), Belgium (EDFT), South Korea (KOGAS), China (Shell)
    Transit ChokepointStrait of Hormuz — shipping near-halted since late February 2026

    The story becomes truly uncomfortable downstream. Asian purchasers have started outbidding everyone within reach, particularly South Korean and Japanese utilities that do not produce much gas domestically. As the price signal from Asia becomes more compelling, European storage operators, who had comfortable reserves going into winter 2025–2026, are now witnessing Atlantic-origin cargoes divert eastward. As Asian spot premiums reached multi-year highs in late March, Euronews reported that Europe was “losing its grip” on LNG shipments. Due to insurers viewing any tanker close to the Strait of Hormuz as a war risk, shipping insurance rates also skyrocketed.

    The length of the repair timeline may be the most subtly concerning aspect of this episode. Three to five years is a structural change rather than a disruption. The frequency of coal retirements, the speed at which gas plants are being built, and the storage goals they had set for 2027 and 2028 are all being reconsidered by nations that had built their energy transition plans around a steady supply of Qatari LNG. While South Korea’s KOGAS is reportedly looking for more supplies from Australia and Mozambique, Italy and Belgium have already started talking to US exporters. These replacements are not inexpensive. None arrive swiftly.

    As this develops, there’s a feeling that the term “resilience” will be overused in boardrooms for the upcoming year. However, resilience in an LNG system is physical rather than rhetorical. More pipelines, tankers, liquefaction trains, and storage are all implied. It’s all slow and costly. It remains to be seen if this episode will leave Europe and Asia with a more varied energy map or just one that is more costly. For the time being, a single morning in Ras Laffan has served as a reminder to everyone that, despite its sophistication, the global gas market still depends on a small number of physical facilities that can be shut down in an afternoon.

    LNG Crisis
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    Megan Burrows
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    Political writer and commentator Megan Burrows is renowned for her keen insight, well-founded analysis, and talent for identifying the emotional undertones of British politics. Megan brings a unique combination of accuracy and compassion to her work, having worked in public affairs and policy research for ten years, with a background in strategic communications.

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