
Redefining Energy 221. LNG – Hormuz – “Apocalypse Now” - Mar26
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Mar 23, 2026 Ira Joseph, a leading global gas and LNG analyst at Columbia’s energy center, breaks down how the Middle East conflict has upended LNG markets. He explains benchmark pricing, regional exposure, and why supply, infrastructure damage, and trade flows are reshaping who wins and loses. Short-term fixes and longer-term shifts in investment and energy security are also explored.
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Qatar Outage Rewrites LNG Supply Dynamics
- The LNG market flipped from an anticipated 50% supply expansion to a sudden supply shock when Qatar went offline.
- Ira Joseph notes 77 million tpa of Qatari LNG disappeared, rewiring global flows and sending Europe/Asia prices sharply higher while US Henry Hub stayed near $3/MMBtu.
Three Benchmarks Drive Global LNG Prices
- Three regional benchmark prices shape LNG economics: Henry Hub (US), TTF (Europe) and JKM (Asia).
- Ira Joseph explains Henry Hub indexes US exports while TTF and JKM drive European and Asian import bids respectively.
Oil Indexation Still Prices Much LNG
- Many long-term LNG contracts remain oil-indexed using a Brent slope, not spot gas benchmarks.
- Ira Joseph details slopes (9–15%) convert $/barrel Brent into $/MMBtu and sometimes include a small constant adjustment.
