Map Pairing Cited together in 12 entries

Strait of hormuz × Lng supply

Strait of Hormuz and LNG supply pair through Qatar's transit dependence. Post 066 documents the persistent linkage: even with restart, Qatar ships through Hormuz.

Entries

12 citing both topics
05.25

Qatar Ras Laffan: 2 of 3 N1 Trains Restarted; Full Site Recovery Late August

QatarEnergy has restarted two of three trains at QatarEnergy LNG North 1, with full Ras Laffan restoration possible by late August if work proceeds as scheduled. Trains 4 and 6 - destroyed by Iranian missile strikes in March - remain on a 3-5 year rebuild horizon, constrained by global gas turbine equipment delivery lead times of 2-4 years.

05.25

India Rejects Sanctioned Russian LNG; Russia Pushes More Crude

India officially declined Russia's offer to sell LNG from US-sanctioned projects in May 2026, choosing not to escalate friction with Washington during ongoing US-India energy talks. Russia separately offered to expand crude and non-sanctioned LNG long-term as bilateral energy diplomacy intensifies.

05.25

The Order Book Hits the Tape

The AI power buildout has moved from forecast to order book. The richest companies in the world are prepared to spend almost without limit. They have discovered that money cannot manufacture time.

04.19

Qatar Ras Laffan LNG Restart Timeline

Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG complex faces a three-to-five-year recovery from Iranian strikes, with turbomachinery bottlenecks locking in structural supply shortages that will reshape global LNG markets through 2029-2031.

04.19

OPEC+ May 206k Hike & US LNG Expansion

OPEC+ sanctioned a second 206k barrel-per-day output increase for May as Venture Global reached FID on CP2 Phase 2, positioning the US as the world's largest LNG supplier by decade's end while Gulf producers await Strait of Hormuz reopening to ship their surplus.

04.19

Islamabad Talks Collapse and Blockade Begins

Islamabad peace talks between the US and Iran collapsed on April 12 after 21 hours of negotiation. Within 24 hours the US began a naval blockade of Iranian shipping, and Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation. The fragile four-day ceasefire is now fully fractured.

04.19

India and Japan: The Most Exposed Major Economies

India and Japan face simultaneous manufacturing and energy crises as Hormuz disruptions cut Middle East crude supplies. India scrambles for alternatives as Russian oil waivers expire, while Japan reverts to coal and deepens US energy partnerships.

04.19

Europe Jet Fuel: IEA Warns Six Weeks Left

Europe faces a fuel shortage countdown. The IEA warned on April 16 that jet fuel supplies could run out in six weeks, with Italian airport rationing spreading across eight facilities and disrupting flights to nine countries. Emergency reserve releases are now coordinated across six European nations.

04.19

AI Moves at the Speed of Steel

The ceasefire moved in days, oil moved in hours, and hyperscaler money moved in commitments. The physical system barely moved at all. Turbines, transformers, LNG trains, and grid connections were already the binding constraint; the blockade and the $630B hyperscaler pledge simply made that constraint visible to everyone at once.

04.09

Europe Fuel Crisis Materializes

Shell's April warning materialized as Italian airports began rationing jet fuel in response to Qatar's Ras Laffan facility going offline. European gas storage dropped below 25% while jet fuel prices surged 95% since conflict began.

04.05

Strait of Hormuz Crisis - April 2026 Update

Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz disrupts 20% of global crude supply, with Brent crude spiking to $126/barrel. The IEA calls it the largest supply disruption in oil market history, signaling April 2026 will worsen the crisis.

← Map
Map Pairing 12 entries

Strait of hormuz × Lng supply

Strait of Hormuz and LNG supply pair through Qatar's transit dependence. Post 066 documents the persistent linkage: even with restart, Qatar ships through Hormuz.

05.25

Qatar Ras Laffan: 2 of 3 N1 Trains Restarted; Full Site Recovery Late August

QatarEnergy has restarted two of three trains at QatarEnergy LNG North 1, with full Ras Laffan restoration possible by late August if work proceeds as scheduled. Trains 4 and 6 - destroyed by Iranian missile strikes in March - remain on a 3-5 year rebuild horizon, constrained by global gas turbine equipment delivery lead times of 2-4 years.

05.25

India Rejects Sanctioned Russian LNG; Russia Pushes More Crude

India officially declined Russia's offer to sell LNG from US-sanctioned projects in May 2026, choosing not to escalate friction with Washington during ongoing US-India energy talks. Russia separately offered to expand crude and non-sanctioned LNG long-term as bilateral energy diplomacy intensifies.

05.25

Europe Jet Fuel Hits Goldman 23-Day Threshold in June; KLM Cancels 150+ Flights

Goldman Sachs projected on May 6 that European commercial jet fuel inventories will dip below the IEA's critical 23-day shortage threshold in June. KLM cancelled 150+ flights; the UK is identified as most at risk for rationing. TTF gas prices rebounded from $542 to $620/tcm during the week of May 16.

05.25

The Order Book Hits the Tape

The AI power buildout has moved from forecast to order book. The richest companies in the world are prepared to spend almost without limit. They have discovered that money cannot manufacture time.

04.19

Qatar Ras Laffan LNG Restart Timeline

Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG complex faces a three-to-five-year recovery from Iranian strikes, with turbomachinery bottlenecks locking in structural supply shortages that will reshape global LNG markets through 2029-2031.

04.19

OPEC+ May 206k Hike & US LNG Expansion

OPEC+ sanctioned a second 206k barrel-per-day output increase for May as Venture Global reached FID on CP2 Phase 2, positioning the US as the world's largest LNG supplier by decade's end while Gulf producers await Strait of Hormuz reopening to ship their surplus.

04.19

Islamabad Talks Collapse and Blockade Begins

Islamabad peace talks between the US and Iran collapsed on April 12 after 21 hours of negotiation. Within 24 hours the US began a naval blockade of Iranian shipping, and Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation. The fragile four-day ceasefire is now fully fractured.

04.19

India and Japan: The Most Exposed Major Economies

India and Japan face simultaneous manufacturing and energy crises as Hormuz disruptions cut Middle East crude supplies. India scrambles for alternatives as Russian oil waivers expire, while Japan reverts to coal and deepens US energy partnerships.

04.19

Europe Jet Fuel: IEA Warns Six Weeks Left

Europe faces a fuel shortage countdown. The IEA warned on April 16 that jet fuel supplies could run out in six weeks, with Italian airport rationing spreading across eight facilities and disrupting flights to nine countries. Emergency reserve releases are now coordinated across six European nations.

04.19

AI Moves at the Speed of Steel

The ceasefire moved in days, oil moved in hours, and hyperscaler money moved in commitments. The physical system barely moved at all. Turbines, transformers, LNG trains, and grid connections were already the binding constraint; the blockade and the $630B hyperscaler pledge simply made that constraint visible to everyone at once.

04.09

Europe Fuel Crisis Materializes

Shell's April warning materialized as Italian airports began rationing jet fuel in response to Qatar's Ras Laffan facility going offline. European gas storage dropped below 25% while jet fuel prices surged 95% since conflict began.

04.05

Strait of Hormuz Crisis - April 2026 Update

Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz disrupts 20% of global crude supply, with Brent crude spiking to $126/barrel. The IEA calls it the largest supply disruption in oil market history, signaling April 2026 will worsen the crisis.