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Oil prices have spiked as attacks on energy facilities in the Middle East have stepped up. Alamy/PA

Oil prices surge after Iran and Israel trade attacks on gasfields

The attacks have reignited fears over global supplies and inflation.

ENERGY PRICES SOARED and stocks sank today as Iran stepped up attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure, reigniting fears over global supplies and inflation.

Brent crude topped $115 per barrel as Tehran threatened to target regional installations in retaliation for an Israeli strike on a site serving its massive South Pars field, which it shares with Qatar.

Iranian missiles struck Qatar’s Ras Laffan, the world’s largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) hub, causing “extensive damage”.

Drones struck a Saudi oil refinery on the Red Sea and caused fires at two others in Kuwait in the latest attacks.

World oil prices jumped and European gas rose as much as 35 percent on fresh concerns about the impact on energy supplies of the nearly three-week-old Middle East war.

International benchmark Brent surged six percent, after climbing more than 10 percent earlier, while the main US oil contract WTI was up 0.3 percent.

“The prospect of a longer, more drawn-out conflict is in sharp focus, as both sides ratchet up attacks on energy infrastructure,” said Susannah Streeter, chief investment strategist at Wealth Club.

“Downbeat sentiment is spreading fast… as investors assess the repercussions for the global economy,” she added.

The Frankfurt and London stock markets both shed around two percent, while Paris was down 1.7 percent.

In Asia, Tokyo tanked more than three percent, while Hong Kong and Shanghai were also down.

Markets have been hammered since the start of the war, with Tehran hitting sites across the Gulf and effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global oil and gas flows.

The surge in energy costs has fanned fears of a spike in inflation and the spectre of higher interest rates.

Central banks are in a “state of limbo while they wait to see if the Middle East crisis will trigger a long-lasting inflation shock,” said Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell.

The Bank of England and the European Central Bank are both set to hold interest rates today, after the US Federal Reserve also kept its borrowing costs unchanged.

Concerns were compounded yesterday with data showing US wholesale inflation rose more than expected in February, before the war started and oil prices soared by more than 40 percent.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said he expected higher energy costs to boost price rises in the near term but added that little was clear at this point.

“We’re right at the beginning of this,” he said, “you just don’t know how big this will be and how long it lasts,” he said.

– © AFP2025

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