이란 갈등이 캐나다 화석연료 산업에 미치는 영향
Potential implications of the Iran conflict for Canada’s fossil fuel sector - Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA)
이란 분쟁으로 인해 단기적으로는 LNG 및 원유 가격이 상승할 수 있으나, 장기적으로는 재생 에너지 경쟁력 문제로 인해 캐나다 화석 연료 부문의 성장 전망이 불확실합니다. 따라서 단기적인 가격 상승 효과와 장기적인 성장 가능성의 불확실성이 혼재되어 있어 중립적인 입장을 취하는 것이 타당합니다.
핵심 요약
이란 갈등으로 인한 에너지 가격 상승이 캐나다 화석연료 산업에 단기적인 이익을 가져올 수 있지만, 장기적으로는 변동성과 재생에너지 경쟁이 위험 요인입니다.
핵심요약
- 글로벌 에너지 가격 상승이 캐나다의 LNG 및 원유 무역 흐름에 영향을 미칠 수 있습니다
- 지정학적 프리미엄에 의존한 장기 성장 전망은 변동성과 재생에너지 경쟁으로 인해 위험할 수 있습니다
- 이 갈등은 글로벌 수준에서 수입 연료 의존도를 줄이려는 움직임이 가속화될 가능성도 있습니다
도입
이란 갈등이 캐나다의 화석연료 산업에 미치는 영향은 투자자에게 중요한 정보를 제공합니다. 글로벌 에너지 가격의 변동성과 재생에너지 경쟁이 장기적인 성장 전망에 어떻게 영향을 미칠지 분석하는 것은 투자 결정에 필수적입니다.
본문 1: 단기적 시장 반응
이란 갈등으로 인한 글로벌 에너지 가격 상승은 캐나다의 LNG 및 원유 무역 흐름에 긍정적인 영향을 미칠 수 있습니다. 그러나 이 가격 상승이 지정학적 프리미엄에 기반한 것이기 때문에, 장기적인 성장 전망을 보장하기는 어렵습니다. 투자자들은 단기적인 시장 반응을 고려할 때, 변동성과 관련된 위험을 인지해야 합니다.
본문 2: 장기적 성장 전망
재생에너지 경쟁의 강화는 캐나다의 화석연료 산업에 장기적인 성장 전망을 제한할 수 있습니다. 특히, 글로벌 수준에서 수입 연료 의존도를 줄이려는 움직임이 가속화될 경우, 캐나다의 수출 시장에도 영향을 미칠 수 있습니다. 투자자들은 이러한 장기적 전망을 고려하여 포트폴리오를 조정해야 합니다.
결론
이란 갈등은 캐나다의 화석연료 산업에 단기적으로 긍정적인 영향을 미칠 수 있지만, 장기적으로는 변동성과 재생에너지 경쟁이 중요한 위험 요인입니다. 투자자들은 이러한 요인을 고려하여 신중한 결정이 필요합니다.
Original Article
Potential implications of the Iran conflict for Canada’s fossil fuel sector - Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA)
For Canada, a key question related to tensions in the Middle East is how the conflict and resulting market volatility could affect LNG and crude trade flows, investment decisions, and long-term exports.
Higher prices may boost investor sentiment towards oil and LNG assets, but translating a geopolitical premium into materially improved project returns is tricky—and risky.
An accelerated global shift from fossil fuels to renewables in response to the current energy crisis could end up limiting long-term growth prospects for oil and gas exporters, including Canada.
Elevated market conditions are threatened in the shorter term by a potential return to normalcy, the market glut waiting at the other end of the conflict, and the increasingly competitive economics of renewable energy.
Recent escalation of tensions in the Middle East has transformed a regional confrontation into a global energy shock. For Canada, a key question is how the conflict and resulting market volatility could affect liquified natural gas (LNG) and crude trade flows, investment decisions, and long-term exports. At first glance, this shock may appear to open up opportunities for the domestic energy sector. In the short term, higher global energy prices could benefit the Canadian fossil fuel sector and government coffers, as well as make Canadian LNG assets more attractive to investors. But these higher prices are tied to a geopolitical premium, not a structural trend—and increasing output and infrastructure buildouts in response could be risky in the longer term. Relying on price shocks related to geopolitical conflict is precarious, as these conditions are likely to remain volatile and unpredictable. While the conflict may enhance Canada’s appeal as a stable energy partner, the recorded disruptions, volatility, and market response may ultimately accelerate the global push to reduce dependence on imported fuels altogether.
Conflict-related disruptions have led to a sharp surge in global energy prices
The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz—a narrow shipping route that carries about 20% of global oil and LNG trade—along with strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan complex, the world’s largest LNG production facility, has knocked out roughly 20% of global LNG export capacity (around 125 billion cubic metres) and severely disrupted 20 million barrels of crude oil per day. In response, LNG prices in Asia, measured by the Japan Korea Marker (JKM), and in Europe, measured by the Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF), have risen by more than 50%. JKM climbed from about $11–$12 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) before the conflict to roughly $18/MMBtu, and TTF followed a similar path. Crude benchmarks have also soared . Western Canadian Select (WCS) rose from about $50 to more than $90 per barrel—an increase of nearly 80%—before easing in recent weeks. Likewise, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) prices increased from $64 to $103 per barrel, while Brent prices rose from $69 to a peak of $113. Freight rates also spiked with spot charter rates for LNG tankers surging over 600% and reaching peaks of $300,000 per day .
Figure 1: Historic oil shocks: Estimated share of global supply disrupted
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, IEA, World Bank, Investing.com
LNG markets face greater structural vulnerability than oil
Although both crude oil and LNG markets are affected by the conflict, LNG appears more structurally exposed to sustained supply disruptions for a couple reasons. First, LNG production is more highly concentrated. Qatar’s Ras Laffan facility—now shut down due to repeated direct military attacks—normally plays an outsized role in global supply. By contrast, oil production is geographically dispersed across thousands of oil wells, fields, and flow stations with multiple export routes and pipeline alternatives. Second, the LNG sector has a relatively limited buffer system. Crude oil markets may benefit from coordinated inventory buffers by organizations such as the IEA, whose members are legally required to hold 90 days of import cover, or a supply coordinating producer group like OPEC. However, such regulating mechanisms are absent from the global LNG sector. Gas is also more expensive to transport and store with many LNG buyers holding limited reserves in storage relative to crude oil.
Price spikes will boost producer and public finances in the near term, but may weigh on consumers and households
In the short term, higher global energy prices will likely provide some upside to Canada’s LNG and crude oil exports. Assuming output remains constant, this geopolitical premium will translate to increased producer revenues and, all things equal, stronger operating cash flow, improved profitability, and potentially higher distributions to shareholders . Companies with downstream operations, such as crude oil refineries, may also benefit further as the prices of petroleum products rise faster than crude input costs . LNG Canada may see a weaker boost in the immediate term, as LNG export revenues are typically tied to long-term contracts priced with formulas that may lag real-time spot prices. Government coffers stand to benefit fiscally as royalties, corporate taxes, and other revenue streams tied to commodity prices and producer revenues rise. At the macroeconomic level, higher-value exports are starting to reflect in terms of trade data, with Canada reporting a trade surplus in March —the first in six months.
The ability for Canadian energy producers to materially increase output in response to higher prices is constrained in the short term by infrastructure and market limitations. Restricted nameplate capacity as well as long lead times required to permit, finance, and construct additional export infrastructure limit the ability of LNG Canada or other proposed projects to rapidly commence or scale production. Similarly, increasing oil sands revenue through meaningful output growth requires advance planning, material capital investment, and execution of complex expansion programs often laid out over a 12-24 month development period .
Consumers and households are unlikely to share in the immediate upside due to emerging inflationary pressures. A temporary suspension of the federal fuel excise tax may provide limited relief , but is unlikely to fully offset overall increases in energy-driven costs for food, travel, and transportation. Should price increases begin to seep into the consumer price index (CPI), the Bank of Canada may eventually respond with tighter monetary policy or delayed easing. This could translate into relatively higher interest rates , increasing mortgage, debt service, and business borrowing costs.
Geopolitical price spikes may not translate to improved long-term project returns
Higher prices may boost investor sentiment towards oil and LNG assets. But translating a geopolitical premium into materially improved project returns is tricky—and risky. Large-scale energy infrastructure projects are typically assessed over multi-decade time horizons , with return projections heavily dependent on long-term discounted cash flow assumptions and the ability to recover upfront capital expenditure over extended payback periods. For price shocks to materially alter project returns, developers must assume these market conditions persist for extended periods of time, e.g., decades—not just a few quarters or even a few years. While this cannot be excluded, it is deemed unlikely. Energy markets have a long history of rebalancing and sharp price spikes have often triggered measurable demand destruction , efficiency measures and fuel switching—which act to weaken demand growth. The current crisis is just a few months old, but there are already indications that a similar dynamic is at play.
Figure 2: Net change in average monthly imports by region (March - May 2026)
Source: IEEFA calculations based on Kpler data
In Asia , where the impact of the crisis is being felt most acutely due to heavy dependence on the Middle East and limited storage, major importers such as India, Pakistan, China, and Japan have started taking action to reduce their vulnerability as seen in Table 1 below:
Table 1: Asian energy security responses to the 2026 Iran conflict*
Source: IEEFA, IEA, CREA, Carbon Brief *Several countries—notably Japan, South Korea, Thailand and Bangladesh—have reactivated existing coal capacity as a stop gap measure. This is expected to be temporary, and no new investments or commitments have been announced in response to the conflict. However, some experts in Japan argue that the crisis could lengthen the country’s embrace of coal.
A potential future scenario in which the hostilities cease, renormalizing transit through the Strait of Hormuz, would return significant stranded supply to the market, support production restarts, and enable repairs on damaged infrastructure. Combined with fuel switching and demand destruction already underway, the resulting increase in supply could trigger a mean reversion in price levels. The market also has to contend with a tidal wave of new LNG supply expected to come online which, though delayed by the conflict , is still expected to materialize in coming years. Transitory price spikes, by themselves, may be insufficient to materially alter project economics. Accelerating long-duration, capital-intensive export infrastructure in response to disruptions caused by an international conflict is difficult to justify.
The crisis may create a stability premium for Canadian energy exports—while eroding long-term demand
A range of competing factors are likely to shape long-term structural outcomes of the crisis. On one hand, repeated conflicts that expose the fragility of energy supply chains tied to unstable regions may push countries to rethink their entire supply architecture, with a focus on diversification and reliance on more geopolitically stable sources of energy. In this context, Canada may become relatively more attractive to energy markets due to its reserves and supply infrastructure largely insulated from conflict zones and removed from contested shipping lanes. This could provide tailwinds to proposed LNG projects looking to sign deals with off takers.