Qatar Gas Plant Explosion Kills 13, Highlights Safety Concerns Amid Regional Tension
A technical accident at the country’s largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility in the Ras Laffan industrial zone on Sunday night resulted in at least 13 deaths and 66 injuries, local officials said.
The blast lit up the skies over Doha in a dramatic orange glow. Energy Minister Saad Sherida al‑Kaabi stated that the explosion would not affect the country’s LNG supply to overseas customers and clarified that the incident was not due to sabotage or hostile action.
Ras Laffan, known as the world’s largest artificial harbour, houses QatarEnergy’s flagship LNG export terminal. The plant had previously been shut for maintenance since December 2025 and only restarted two days before the incident, when workers were resuming operations that had halted in March.
The explosion rattled windows and was felt in central Doha, more than 70 km away, alarmingly close to the site’s perimeter and drawing residents to flee. An emergency response team was dispatched immediately and the fire is now under control.
Investigators are probing the cause of the “technical accident.” Official statements confirmed that all 13 fatalities were nationals of India and Pakistan. India’s embassy in Doha offered condolences and pledged support for the families of those affected.
The incident is taking place against a backdrop of heightened regional tensions. Earlier this year, the Ras Laffan Port suffered extensive damage from retaliatory attacks during the U.S.–Israel war with Iran. QatarEnergy warned that pending repairs could cut the facility’s output by 12.8 million tonnes for three to five years, potentially tightening global LNG supplies.
While energy officials deny any link to ongoing geopolitical hostilities, the blast underscores lasting concerns about industrial safety at high-volume energy hubs and the vulnerability of critical infrastructure amid regional instability.





















