# [FLASH] Iran names specific Gulf oil and LNG targets on TV

*Friday, April 24, 2026 at 5:54 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-24T17:54:25.639Z (12d ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, Geopolitics, MiddleEast, Oil, LNG, RiskPremium
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4608.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Iranian state TV published a detailed list of Gulf oil and LNG facilities it says will be targeted when war resumes, including Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq, Safaniya and Khurais, Kuwait’s Burgan field, Qatar’s Ras Laffan/RasGas, and UAE’s Das and Zirku Islands. This explicit targeting guidance sharply raises perceived risk to a large share of globally exportable crude and LNG, supporting a higher geopolitical risk premium in energy benchmarks.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Iran’s state TV has broadcast a list of specific energy facilities it claims will be targeted when hostilities resume: RasGas and Ras Laffan LNG in Qatar; Das and Zirku Islands in the UAE (offshore oil/gas hubs); Abqaiq, Safaniya, and Khurais in Saudi Arabia; and the Burgan oil field in Kuwait. These assets are among the most critical nodes in the global oil and LNG system.

2) Supply impact:
While this is a threat, not an attack, the facilities named collectively underpin a very large share of globally tradable crude and LNG:
- Abqaiq is Saudi Aramco’s key stabilization and processing hub; prior attacks (2019) temporarily disrupted ~5.7 mb/d.
- Safaniya is the world’s largest offshore oil field; Khurais is another large upstream hub.
- Burgan is Kuwait’s giant onshore field, central to its export capacity (~2.5–3.0 mb/d pre‑war context).
- Ras Laffan/RasGas form the core of Qatar’s LNG export complex (tens of mtpa) and associated condensate exports.
- Das and Zirku Islands handle significant volumes of UAE offshore crude and gas liquids.
Even without immediate kinetic action, operators, insurers, and shippers will re‑assess physical security, war‑risk premiums, and redundancy options. This credibly threatens incremental losses or interruptions on top of the already‑reported large Gulf production outages, and it severely complicates forward supply planning for refiners and LNG buyers.

3) Affected assets and directional bias:
- Brent, WTI: Higher risk premium; skew is sharply to the upside, with >3–5% intraday moves possible on any follow‑on incident or confirmation of deployment near these assets.
- Dubai/Oman benchmarks and Middle East crude differentials: Widening risk spreads versus Atlantic basin crudes; Asian refiners may bid more aggressively for West African/North Sea barrels.
- LNG spot benchmarks (TTF, JKM): Upward pressure from heightened tail‑risk of Qatari supply disruption; European and Asian utilities likely to seek additional term and spot cover.
- Tanker/LNG shipping: War‑risk insurance premia and freight rates for Gulf loadings likely to rise further.

4) Historical precedent:
The September 2019 drone/missile attacks on Abqaiq/Khuraïs triggered a ~15–20% spike in Brent intraday. Merely naming the same assets as future targets, in the context of an ongoing war and already reduced Gulf output, is enough to sustain a significant geopolitical premium.

5) Duration:
Impact is medium‑ to long‑lived as long as Iranian leadership and state media continue to frame these facilities as legitimate wartime targets and no credible de‑escalation or hardening arrangement is reached. Expect structurally higher volatility and option skew in oil and LNG over the coming weeks.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Dubai Crude, Oman Crude, Gasoil futures, JKM LNG, TTF gas, Middle East tanker rates, Qatar LNG-linked equities, Saudi Aramco equity, Qatar riyal forwards, GCC sovereign credit spreads
