
PlanetOptimism
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🚨BREAKING: Israel strikes South Pars, Iran’s largest gas field

BREAKING: Iraq just lost power because Israel bombed Iran. South Pars phases 3 through 6 were taken offline after Israeli strikes to control the fires at Asaluyeh. Iran supplies roughly 30 to 40 percent of Iraq’s gas, which generates 4,000 to 4,500 megawatts of Iraqi electricity. That gas stopped flowing today. The Iraqi Electricity Ministry confirmed it. Baghdad faces nationwide blackout risk from a strike that landed 900 kilometres away on a gas field that Iraq does not own, did not attack, and cannot repair. One precision strike. Three countries damaged. Iran loses gas production at the source. Qatar condemns the strike because South Pars and North Field share the same geological reservoir and any sustained disruption risks pressure migration that threatens Qatar’s $130 billion LNG machine. Iraq loses a third of its electricity because it built its power grid on imported Iranian gas with no strategic reserve and no alternative supplier that can deliver at this volume on this timeline. The strike was targeted at Iran. The geology hit Qatar. The pipeline hit Iraq. Precision warfare does not have a precision blast radius when the target is connected to three countries through rock and pipe. This is the cascade that turns a gas-field strike into a regional blackout risk into a global energy repricing. Iraq was already under drone and rocket assault from IRGC-backed militias. Its C-RAM radar at the US embassy is blind. Its national air defenses are being upgraded but not yet operational. Its economy depends on oil exports that transit a strait its patron just closed. And now its grid is collapsing because the country that supplies its gas is the same country that the war is designed to destroy. The same Iraq that absorbs proxy fire for America. The same Iraq that hosts the forward bases enabling the strikes. The same Iraq whose Green Zone is the command centre for the regional operation. That Iraq just lost a third of its power because the operation it supports targeted the gas that keeps its lights on. Turkey is next in the transmission chain. Iran supplies gas via the Tabriz-Ankara pipeline. If South Pars stays offline, Turkish industrial and heating gas tightens. Europe, already refusing to send warships to Hormuz while paying war-premium prices for Russian gas, would face another LNG supply compression from the same conflict it declined to join. S&P Global says approximately one fifth of global LNG supply has been impaired by the Hormuz disruption. The South Pars strike does not add to the Hormuz blockade. It adds to the upstream production loss. The molecule that was already trapped behind the strait is now also not being produced at the wellhead. Two chokepoints on the same supply chain operating simultaneously: one at sea, one at source. Citi raised Brent to $110 to $120 base case. Bull case $150 to $200 if more infrastructure is targeted. The infrastructure was targeted today. Urea at $610 on CBOT. Corn acres falling. Soybean acres rising. The cattle herd at a 75-year low. The packaging supply chain under satellite threat. And now the lights in Baghdad are going out because the war that was supposed to make the region safer just made it darker. The gas field burns. The grid fails. The reservoir migrates. And the planting season does not run on electricity. It runs on nitrogen. Which is also not coming. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

BREAKING: They just hit the factory. Israeli strikes set fire to Phase 14 processing facilities at South Pars today. Iran’s oil ministry and Tasnim confirmed the blaze. Partial production suspension. An estimated 12 million cubic metres per day of gas output affected. South Pars is the largest gas field on Earth. It produces 70 to 80 percent of Iran’s total gas output. That gas is not just fuel. It is the hydrogen feedstock for the Haber-Bosch process that synthesises ammonia, which becomes urea, which becomes the nitrogen that half the planet’s agriculture depends on. South Pars gas feeds Iranian fertiliser production at its molecular root. The Hormuz permissioned chokepoint was already blocking the shipping route. Now the strikes are hitting the production source. The war is attacking the nitrogen supply chain at both ends simultaneously. This is the escalation that collapses every remaining optimistic scenario. The hopeful case for the global food system was always: the strait reopens, fertiliser flows resume, planting windows are partially salvaged. South Pars burning removes even that. If the strait reopened tomorrow morning and every provincial command stood down and every insurer reinstated cover by afternoon, the gas field that feeds the feedstock that feeds the ammonia that feeds the urea is on fire. The molecule cannot ship because the strait is blocked. The molecule cannot be produced because the factory is burning. Two chokepoints on the same supply chain. Both compromised on the same day of the same war. South Pars shares its geological reservoir with Qatar’s North Dome field. Qatar’s output is steady. Qatar’s fertiliser production is unaffected. But Qatar’s exports also transit through Hormuz. Qatar’s urea also requires passage through the permissioned chokepoint that the Mosaic Doctrine’s 31 provincial commands control via sealed packets and VHF radio. The world’s two largest producers of the gas that becomes the nitrogen that grows the food are now compromised at different points on the same chain: Iran at the source, Qatar at the route. Nineteen days. The Supreme Leader killed. The intelligence minister reportedly eliminated. The diplomatic negotiator and Basij commander dead. Over 2,000 targets. Missile production degraded 90 to 95 percent. Bushehr confirmed zero radiation by the IAEA. And now the gas field that anchors the nitrogen feedstock chain is burning. NOLA urea is $683. It will not go down. It may go up. Because the market just learned that the war is not only blocking the molecule from reaching the ship. It is destroying the facility that creates the molecule in the first place. The Mosaic provincial commands do not need South Pars to run the strait. They need radio handsets and sealed orders. But the world needed South Pars at full capacity for the day the strait eventually reopened. That day just became worth less. The post-war recovery that commodity desks were pricing as a sharp rebound now has a damaged gas field sitting between the ceasefire and the molecule. The strikes are justified. The nuclear programme that threatened ten bombs is gone. The military degradation is historic. But the same war that eliminated the nuclear threat is now eliminating the agricultural feedstock that the post-war world will need to recover. The molecule is trapped behind a doctrine at sea and burning on land. The soil waits for nitrogen. The nitrogen waits for gas. The gas field is on fire. And the strait is still closed. Full analysis: open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

















