Concern About Supply Shortage: Gas Price Increases by 30 Percent at Times After Attack on Gas Field
9 Articles
9 Articles
Oil and gas prices have risen significantly since the beginning of the Iran war. Now Tehran is shooting at a huge gas field in Qatar. As a result, the price of future contracts is shooting up. Meanwhile, US President Trump is threatening to attack the gas infrastructure.
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After attacks on gas facilities in the Gulf region, the Iran war is worsening dangerously. Trump orders the ally Israel to stop - and threatens Tehran at the same time. Oil prices continue to rise.
Trump warns Iran will blow up gas fields if it attacks innocent Qatar again. As Iran launches retaliatory strikes on Qatar's major gas facilities following Israel's initial strike on Iran's largest gas field, U.S. President Donald Trump warns that attacking Qatar's liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities again would set a precedent for Iran.
Production in this region had been temporarily halted since the start of the Iran War.
Concerns about supply shortages are growing: after attacks in the Middle East, the price of gas in Amsterdam has risen by more than 30 percent – and relaxation is not in sight.
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