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Iran warned on Sunday it would attack U.S.-linked infrastructure

Oil prices are set to rise further as war in the Middle East escalates

Sun, Mar. 22, 2026
Oil prices
Oil prices

Oil prices look set to rise further on Monday, having closed before the weekend at their ​highest in nearly four ​years, after U.S. and ​Iranian threats to target energy facilities, analysts said on Sunday.

U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened to “obliterate” Iran’s power plants if Tehran did not fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, ⁠a ‌significant escalation barely a day after he talked about “winding ⁠down” the war, now in its fourth week.

Iran warned on Sunday it would attack U.S.-linked infrastructure, including energy and desalination facilities in the Gulf, if Trump carried out his threat.

On Friday, international benchmark Brent crude futures for May settled up 3.26% at $112.19 ‌a barrel, the highest since July 2022. U.S. crude oil gained 2.27%, or $2.18, to settle at $98.32 per barrel.

“President Trump’s threat has now placed a 48-hour ticking time bomb of elevated uncertainty over markets,” said IG market analyst ​Tony Sycamore. If the ultimatum is not walked back, oil prices will spike on Monday, he said.

“It clearly means more escalation, which means higher oil prices. Some are incorrectly thinking, however, that Iran may cave,” said Amrita Sen, founder of Energy Aspects. “Trump ⁠is trying to show he can out-escalate and that way ends in scorched earth for Gulf infrastructure.”

Iran has ‌attacked ports and refineries in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the UAE ‌and Qatar in retaliation for attacks on its infrastructure. The closure of Hormuz resulted in a loss of a full four days of global supply — or some 440 million barrels — during the 22 days ⁠of the war so far.

Tehran has so far refrained from attacking large desalination plants in ⁠Saudi and the UAE, which are responsible for the water supply for ⁠millions of people.