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Home Energy

Qatar’s Ras Laffan attacks removes 19% global LNG supply – Wood Mackenzie  

by Ben Eguzozie
March 23, 2026
in Energy
Qatar’s Ras Laffan attacks removes 19% global LNG supply – Wood Mackenzie  

 

  • Recovery timeline likely significantly extended
  • Long outage risks tightening global supply
  • Raising prices
  • Delaying capacity growth through 2028

Missile attacks on Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City which caused extensive damage including fires has fundamentally altered the global gas market outlook, according to Wood Mackenzie analysis. Initial expectations of a two-month disruption are now likely to be exceeded. 

 

The 18 March strike damaged the Pearl GTL facility, while the subsequent attack caused further damage to several of the LNG facilities. Further assessment will be needed to understand the full impact. 

 

Qatari LNG production has been halted since 2 March and declared force majeure from 4 March, removing approximately 80 million tonnes per annum (Mtpa), around 19 percent of global LNG supply from the market. The under-construction North Field East expansion, which would add 32 million tonnes per annum, was anticipated for November 2026 startup, but now faces potential delays that could reshape supply growth expectations through 2027-2028. 

 

Kristy Kramer, head of LNG strategy and market development at Wood Mackenzie, said, “Market expectations had been for a short disruption, with a controlled restart restoring supply to pre-conflict levels by mid-2026. That outlook now appears increasingly unlikely.  

 

Kramer added that “a more prolonged outage would further tighten the global supply and keep prices elevated for longer.” 

 

Before the attacks, Wood Mackenzie forecasted four to six weeks to ramp up Qatari LNG production to full capacity, based on a scenario of three days to restart upstream operations and a seven-day ramp-up per liquefaction train. The timeline is now expected to extend depending on the extent of damage and required repairs.

 

If disruption extends, global LNG supply growth is fundamentally at risk. Prior to the conflict in the Middle East, Wood Mackenzie expected global LNG supply to grow by 35 Mt in 2026. With Qatar producing an average of 6.7 Mt per month in 2025, a disruption lasting five to six months would push annual global supply into year-on-year decline. 

 

According to Daniel Toleman, research director, global LNG at Wood Mackenzie, “Even if supply were maintained at 2025 levels, the market would still face demand destruction in Asia, lower storage injections in Europe, and sustained upward pressure on gas and LNG prices”.

 

Toleman said “each additional month of disruption removes around 1.5% from annual global LNG availability.” 

 

The North Field East expansion project, expected to add 32 Mtpa of capacity, had already been delayed into 2027 prior to the attacks. Further delays would constrain supply growth into 2027–2028, limiting the market’s ability to rebalance. 

 

Asia most exposed as Europe turns to fuel switching 

In particular, Asia is most exposed as Europe turns to fuel switching. Asian buyers face the greatest exposure to Qatari LNG, having accounted for around 90 percent of cargoes in 2025. Several countries are particularly vulnerable: Bangladesh, with high exposure to spot prices with limited ability to absorb cost increases. India needs balancing rising energy costs against economic growth impacts; while Taiwan particularly has limited alternatives beyond increased reliance on coal. 

 

Asian LNG demand is now expected to contract. Wood Mackenzie’s pre-disruption growth forecasts of 10 Mt had already been reduced to 2 Mt under a two-month outage scenario; a prolonged disruption will push demand into decline.  

 

In Europe, lower LNG availability is expected to reduce storage injections and accelerate fuel switching. Gas-to-coal switching is likely to continue. European storage levels may only reach around 70 percent. For context, storage levels reached 76 percent in October 2021 when Gazprom disrupted Russian pipeline supply. 

 

Industry response likely to prioritise output over maintenance 

With supply tightening, LNG operators are expected to maximise output across existing facilities. Planned maintenance, estimated before the war at 5 Mt in Q2 2026, is likely to be deferred where possible as operators prioritise production. 

 

Kramer, Wood Mackenzie’s head of LNG strategy and market development, says, “Geopolitics continue shaping gas and LNG markets, and despite the industry’s large scale, it lacks flexibility to absorb major disruptions, creating market volatility,” adding that, “how the industry responds to this event will vary, but we expect buyers to prioritise LNG supply security with a renewed focus on diversity.” 

 

Wood Mackenzie said it expects several strategic shifts such as: cargoes and contracts from countries with low political and shipping risks become more attractive, pre-FID supply outside the Middle East gains appeal, M&A sellers with diversified assets will see potential price upside, the premium on contract flexibility increases, with the ability to call or cancel cargoes gaining value, portfolio supply becomes more valuable by reducing single-point disruption impact, and portfolio players with growth ambitions will diversify to manage concentration risk.

Ben Eguzozie
Ben Eguzozie
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