Iran War Conflict Could Create Systemic Gas Demand Destruction, Says Top Sector Official
04.22.2026 By Tank Terminals - NEWS

April 22, 2026 [Reuters]- The natural gas ​demand destruction currently resulting from the Iran war as governments implement measures to mitigate the ‌crisis risks becoming structural if the conflict persists, the head of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum said on Wednesday.

 

Since the Middle East crisis began at the end of February, more than 500 million barrels of crude and condensate have been ​knocked out of the global market, according to Kpler data – the largest energy supply disruption in ​modern history.

Countries dependent upon Gulf supplies have reacted by switching to burning ⁠coal and accelerating the switch to renewables.

Speaking at the Invest in African Energy conference in ​Paris, Philip Mshelbila – secretary general of the body representing a dozen countries holding 70% of the world’s ​proven natural gas reserves – said such measures are currently a short-term response to the crisis.

“If the conflict ended today, the world would recover in six months to a year. But if it lasts six months, those knee-jerk changes we ​are seeing could become structural,” he said.

He said that 2026 had been meant to be a ​pivotal year for the sector, with a tight global gas market flipping into oversupply.

“Clearly this conflict has done something ‌to that, ⁠and it’s not yet clear whether it’s just a delay, or whether in fact that glut will ever come,” Mshelbila said.

GULF CRISIS A MISSED OPPORTUNITY FOR AFRICA

Addressing an audience including African energy ministers, Mshelbila said African gas producers were missing an opportunity to step in and fill the supply ​gap caused by Middle ​East outages and restricted ⁠shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

“Sadly while some African countries have excess capacity in both LNG and pipeline gas, the majority of them if not ​all are not producing at full capacity,” he said.

“If you look at ​the export pipelines ⁠to Europe, from Algeria or from Libya, not one of them is full.”

As a result, North American producers are instead capturing the European and Asian gas markets, Mshelbila said.

“Normally in a situation of crisis ⁠this is ​an opportunity: Fill it up! Seize the market! Unfortunately we ​are missing out, because we don’t have the upstream molecules to fill the infrastructure,” he said. “The reserves are there, but they ​are still in the ground.”

 

TankTerminals.com is a market research platform with not only manager-level contact details but also logistical, operational, infrastructural and shipping data of more than +10,100 tank terminals and +6,200 production facilities worldwide.

 

Access data. Decide better. See how.

Stanlow Terminals transforms into low-carbon energy and fuels hub
06.05.2026 - NEWS
26th May 2026 [ Storageterminalsmag ]- Stanlow Terminals is advancing its transformation from a ... Read More
ECA LNG Phase 1 Achieves First LNG Production
06.05.2026 - NEWS
June 05, 2026 [PR Newswire]- Sempra Infrastructure, a subsidiary of Sempra (NYSE: SRE), announc... Read More
Dangote Breaks Ground on 700,000-Bpd Second Crude Processing Unit
06.05.2026 - NEWS
June 05, 2026 [Oil Price]- Nigeria’s Dangote refinery has started work on a second crude pr... Read More
TotalEnergies Wins Approval to Exit 10% Arctic LNG 2 Stake
06.05.2026 - NEWS
June 05, 2026 [Yahoo Finance]- TotalEnergies (NYSE:TTE) could be getting a rare exit route from... Read More