By Shadia Nasralla


Crude oil benchmarks rose about 8 per cent on Tuesday, soaring for a third session as the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran widens, disrupting fuel shipments and heightening fears of ​further Middle East oil and gas supply disruption.


Brent crude futures were up $6.05, ​or 7.8 per cent , at $83.79 a barrel by 1143 GMT after touching their highest since July 2024 at $85.12.


US West ‌Texas Intermediate crude gained $5.31, or 7.5 per cent , to $76.54 after hitting its highest since June at $77.53.


The US and Israeli air war against Iran has widened since Israel’s first attacks on Saturday, with Israel attacking Lebanon, and Iran responding with strikes against energy infrastructure in Gulf countries and tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas typically passes.

 


Tankers and container ships are avoiding the waterway after insurers cancelled coverage for vessels and global oil and gas shipping rates soared. Concerns increased after Iranian media reported on Monday that a senior Iranian Revolutionary Guards official said the Strait of Hormuz is closed, warning that Iran will fire on any ship trying to pass.


“While there are ‌concerns about oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a greater risk to the market would be Iran targeting additional energy infrastructure in the region. This could lead to more prolonged outages,” ING analysts said in a note.


United Arab Emirates authorities are dealing with a serious fire at Fujairah port, state media said on Tuesday. Iraq’s Kirkuk crude oil loadings at Turkey’s Ceyhan port stopped on Tuesday, a shipping source told Reuters.


Since the start of attacks across the region, oil and gas infrastructure in several countries has been shut down ​because of damage or as a precautionary measure. Qatar has stopped liquefied natural gas production, Israel has stopped production at ‌some gas fields, Saudi Arabia shut its biggest refinery and output in Iraqi Kurdistan has virtually ceased.


In gas markets, benchmark Dutch contracts, British gas prices and European and Asian LNG prices all jumped.


Analysts ​expect oil prices ‌to remain elevated over the coming days while markets focus on the impact of the escalating conflict.


Bernstein on Monday ‌raised its 2026 Brent oil price assumption to $80 a barrel from $65 but said that prices could reach $120-$150 in an extreme case of prolonged conflict.


Refined product futures are also gaining because Middle East processing facilities are ‌at ​risk.


U.S. ultra-low-sulfur diesel ​futures were up more than 11 per cent at $3.22 a gallon after reaching a two-year high on Monday. Gasoline futures were up 5 per cent at $2.49 a gallon.


European gasoil futures gained 13 per cent to $997.80 a metric ton ‌after jumping 18 per cent on ​Monday.



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