Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi says energy prices for everyone will rise if the Iran war continues.

RIYADH: Qatar’s temporary halt in liquefied natural gas output has become the most immediate energy-market shock from the US–Iran war, tightening global supply expectations and…

Global oil and gas prices have spiked as the conflict in the Middle East halts energy exports from the region. Nosheen Iqbal speaks to John Collingridge, the Guardian’s head of…

Ministro energia: tutto il Golfo dovrà fermarsi “causa forza maggiore”

Il ministro dell'energia del Qatar Saad al-Kaabi ha avvertito che la guerra in Medio Oriente potrebbe costringere i paesi del Golfo Persico a interrompere le spedizioni di energia…

Il ministro dell'energia del Qatar Saad al-Kaabi ha avvertito che la guerra in Medio Oriente potrebbe costringere i paesi del Golfo Persico a interrompere le spedizioni di energia…

RIYADH: Gulf oil producers could halt exports within weeks due to the ongoing Middle East war, sending crude prices to $150 a barrel, according to Qatar’s energy minister. In an…

Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi says energy prices for everyone will rise if the Iran war continues.

Global economies will be affected if the war on Iran continues for weeks, according to Qatar's energy minister.

I futures sul Brent per la scadenza di maggio hanno superato la soglia psicologica dei 90 dollari, attestandosi a 91,49 dollari al barile con un incremento del 7,07%

Il ministro dell'Energia del Qatar ha avvertito che la guerra in Medio Oriente potrebbe «far crollare le economie mondiali», prevedendo che tutti i Paesi esportatori di...

Doha Is Warning That Deliveries of Oil and Gas From the Gulf Will Be Severely Disrupted Due to the Conflict, Driving Up Global Energy Prices

Warnings issued that oil and gas production in the Gulf could be halted entirely in the coming days, as commodity prices and stock markets are being hammered

Brent oil prices could spike above $100 per barrel if the Gulf Arab countries run out of storage space and shut down production, according to JPMorgan.

Gulf Arab oil producers are cutting production as they run out of storage space because they can't export through the Strait of Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas typically passes, is virtually shut.