On Monday, March 2, 2026, the global liquefied natural gas (LNG) market was thrown into turmoil as daily charter rates for LNG tankers in the Atlantic Basin skyrocketed to over $200,000.
The surge, representing a 3x increase from last week’s average of ~$61,500, follows the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz and a sudden halt in production from Qatar, the world’s leading LNG exporter.
The “Dual Shock”: Supply and Logistics
The market is currently reeling from two simultaneous disruptions that have created a “bidding war” for the remaining available vessels and cargoes.
| Event | Market Impact |
| Strait of Hormuz Closure | Effectively strands 20% of global LNG supply (primarily from Qatar and the UAE). |
| Qatari Production Halt | QatarEnergy suspended production at its Ras Laffan facilities on March 2 following drone attacks, removing 77 million tons of annual capacity from the market. |
| Insurance Withdrawal | Major maritime insurers have cancelled “war-risk” coverage, forcing ships to anchor or reroute around the Cape of Good Hope. |
The Asia-Europe “Cargo War”
Because the Strait of Hormuz is the primary artery for Qatari LNG destined for Asia, the closure has forced Asian buyers (Japan, South Korea, China, and India) to look toward the Atlantic and U.S. markets for replacement fuel.
- Atlantic Basin Premia: With Asian buyers now competing directly with Europe for U.S. and West African cargoes, freight rates in the Atlantic have surged past $200,000/day.
- Storage Vulnerability: Europe is particularly exposed because it began 2026 with gas storage levels 10% lower than in 2025 due to a cold January.
- Price Spikes: On March 2, European benchmark gas (TTF) jumped 41% to €45/MWh, while UK gas prices rose by 40%.
Impact on Global Shipping Routes
The redirection of tankers is creating a massive “ton-mile” problem. A voyage from the U.S. Gulf Coast to East Asia via the Cape of Good Hope takes roughly 10–14 days longer than via traditional routes, effectively locking up the world’s tanker fleet for longer periods and further driving up daily hire rates.
“Disruptions to LNG flows will reignite competition between Asia and Europe for available cargoes… the market will remain tight well beyond the resumption of trade.” — Wood Mackenzie Analysis
Regional Casualties
The energy shock is also spreading to neighboring producers:
- Israel: Production at the Leviathan and Karish offshore gas fields has been “precautionarily” curtailed, halting exports to Egypt and Jordan.
- Iraq: The Kormor gas field in Iraqi Kurdistan halted production as a safety measure, further tightening regional energy balances.
