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Iran says US, Israel hit South Pars gas facilities

  • Market: Crude oil, LPG, Natural gas
  • 18/03/26

Four gas treatment facilities in southern Iran were damaged in US and Israeli drone strikes, according to Iranian state media, the second time the country's downstream energy infrastructure has been hit since the war began on 28 February.

US and Israeli drones targeted gas treatment plants in Assaluyeh that process sour gas from phases 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the offshore South Pars gas field, state media said. The governor of Assaluyeh, Eskandar Pasalar, said the facilities have "been taken offline" to control and prevent the spread of fire.

This will have probably resulted also in a reduction in production from the offshore platforms linked to those facilities, but the authorities have not disclosed how much.

The Dutch TTF gas benchmark rose by 5pc in the hour following the news, as did the front-month Ice Brent crude contract.

South Pars, which Iran shares with Qatar, is the world's largest gas field with 24 development phases. It has been in production since 2002 and accounts for between 70pc and 75pc of Iranian gas production. The field also supplies a significant share of feedstock for Iran's petrochemical and gasoline production.

The Qatari portion of the field is known as the North Field. The Qatari foreign ministry called today's attacks "dangerous and irresponsible".

They are the second attacks by Israel and the US on Iranian downstream facilities since the start of the war.

Prior attacks have targeted oil storage depots in Karaj, Shahran, Aghdasieh and Shahr-e Rey ꟷ all areas in or around the capital Tehran.

State media said the 220,000 b/d state-owned Tehran refinery was also damaged as a result of those strikes, although the extent is unclear.

The onshore gas treatment facilities in Assaluyeh were also targeted during Iran's 12-day war with Israel in June. That time, the plant that processes sour gas from phase 14 was struck, causing a fire and disrupting production.

Iran resumed operations at the plant within two weeks of that strike.

Further strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure could threaten up to 3.4mn b/d of crude output and around 1.5mn b/d of exports.


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