Qatar’s outage will span years. Repairs to damage at Qatar’s massive Ras Laffan complex will take three to five years to complete, according to QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi, cited by Reuters, turning what markets initially treated as a wartime disruption into a lengthy structural supply loss.
About 17% of Qatar’s LNG export capacity is now effectively sidelined for years to come.
Up until now, traders were focused on the timing. When flows might resume, when the Strait of Hormuz might reopen, when force majeures would be lifted. This update shifts the likely assumptions from weeks or even months to years. It is the most significant LNG production disruption in years.
Markets reacted accordingly. European gas prices surged as much as 35% on the news, briefly doubling pre-war levels, and the forward curve has repriced higher across the board. This isn’t just about near-term scarcity. It’s about a multi-year hole in supply from the world’s largest LNG exporter.
Qatar had halted exports earlier this month after initial strikes and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. At one point, nearly 20% of global LNG flows were sidelined. Now the damage is physical, not just logistical, and far harder to reverse.
Asia is first in line to feel it. Long-term buyers in Japan, South Korea, and China depend heavily on Qatari volumes. Europe, already running low on storage after winter, will be forced to compete harder for spot cargoes just to rebuild inventories ahead of next winter. That’s a familiar—and expensive—dynamic.
The bigger shift is with expectations. The LNG market was supposed to loosen this year, with new U.S. supply coming online. That narrative is now gone. A chunk of global capacity has effectively been erased for several years, tightening balances just as demand remains stubbornly resilient.
Seventeen percent doesn’t sound catastrophic—until you realize there’s no easy replacement.





















































