European natural gas prices plummeted by roughly 6% following the announcement of a landmark US-Iran framework agreement, with the breakthrough significantly easing market anxiety over prolonged energy disruptions.
The U.S. and Iran have reached a preliminary peace framework to end the war, with the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) scheduled to be signed on June 19, 2026, in Switzerland. Dutch TTF Natural Gas Futures were trading at €43.60/MWh on Monday, the lowest level in five weeks, while the pan-European STOXX 600 index soared to record highs.
Qatar relies entirely on the Strait of Hormuz to export its liquefied natural gas (LNG), with every tanker navigating this narrow maritime chokepoint to reach global buyers in Asia and Europe. The closure of Hormuz cut off about 20% of the world’s LNG supply, forcing Asian and European buyers into a fierce bidding war for alternative shipments from regions like the U.S. and Australia. The supply gap caused spot prices in Asia to briefly spike past $20/MMBtu shortly after the disruption began and pushed liquefaction capacity elsewhere to its limits.
However, energy analysts have noted that restarting idled LNG production trains and transit routing can take up to six weeks to reach normal operational capacity, Reuters reported.
Natural gas liquefaction requires super-cooling natural gas to approximately -162°C, and the equipment must be cooled at a slow pace to protect exchanger integrity. The extended timeline ensures cryogenic equipment safely cools down to avoid thermal shock, and allows for the sequential sequencing required across massive processing complexes like Ras Laffan. Further, clearing trapped tankers and restoring normal insurance and clearance approvals can significantly stretch the recovery timeline.
Despite the sharp downward trajectory, European energy prices still remain roughly 50% higher than pre-conflict levels.
Market volatility is expected to linger as details of the framework agreement are finalized and officially ratified. Furthermore, ongoing seasonal efforts by European nations to aggressively refill their winter storage reserves are expected to keep demand elevated in the near term.
=== Oilprice.com ===

