…On March 2, QatarEnergy — the state-owned energy giant responsible for all of the country’s liquefied natural gas exports — announced a complete halt to LNG production…their shutdown effectively removes roughly 20% of the world’s LNG export capacity from the market in one hit…This goes beyond sentiment and sits squarely in the let’s-affect-fundamentals territory…This episode will embed a geopolitical risk premium far deeper into LNG pricing than existed even at the height of the Russia-Ukraine crisis…The long-term impact could be structural and include reconfigured trade flows, geopolitical risk premiums baked into contracts, changes in investment strategies, and a renewed urgency for diversification of supplies.

  • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
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    1 day ago

    These aren’t minor processing units.

    These are the heart of Qatar’s LNG infrastructure, and their shutdown effectively removes roughly 20% of the world’s LNG export capacity from the market in one hit.

    This is a supply disruption at a scale rarely seen outside of war, siege, or widespread industrial disaster. And it’s happening not because of maintenance or economic shifts, but because of geopolitical conflict. The consequences and potential knock-on effects are massive.

    wat?

    Who could have possibly predicted this?