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Iran war energy shock puts ECB on alert — Lagarde says this is no repeat of 2022

President of European Central Bank Christine Lagarde addresses the media during a press conference after an ECB's governing council meeting in Frankfurt. 19 March 2026
President of European Central Bank Christine Lagarde addresses the media during a press conference after an ECB's governing council meeting in Frankfurt. 19 March 2026 Copyright  AP Photo/Michael Probst
Copyright AP Photo/Michael Probst
By Una Hajdari with AFP
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The Iran war has sent oil and gas prices surging and rate hike bets rising, but ECB chief Christine Lagarde says the eurozone is far better placed to absorb the shock than it was when Russia invaded Ukraine.

The European Central Bank will not be "paralysed by hesitation" in responding to the energy shock from the Middle East war, ECB chief Christine Lagarde said on Wednesday.

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The conflict, which began at the end of February with US-Israeli strikes on Iran, has sent oil and gas prices surging due to the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on Gulf energy targets.

Highlighting that the world was facing "profound uncertainty", Lagarde insisted the ECB was well positioned to deal with the turmoil, with inflation currently close to its two-percent target and the eurozone economy on a sound footing.

"We have a graduated set of options for responding," she said in a speech at the ECB headquarters in Frankfurt.

She stressed that policymakers "will not act before we have sufficient information on the size and persistence of the shock... our commitment to delivering two percent inflation over the medium term is unconditional".

At its most recent meeting last week, the ECB kept interest rates on hold, as expected, but warned of higher inflation and slower growth due to the war.

But analysts have raised their bets on the central bank hiking borrowing costs as soon as next month in a bid to keep a lid on an expected surge in consumer prices.

Higher global oil and gas costs have led to immediate petrol price hikes in the eurozone and rekindled memories of the energy shock that followed Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

At that time, the ECB faced fierce criticism for failing to hike borrowing costs quickly enough to tame runaway price increases.

But Lagarde sought to downplay the similarities with that period.

"The initial shock has so far still been smaller," she said, while adding that the backdrop now was more "benign".

When Russia throttled gas supplies to Europe after the start of the Ukraine war, inflation was already higher due to post-pandemic supply chain problems and pre-existing labour shortages, she said.

Now, Lagarde stressed, the eurozone economy is on a sounder footing, and inflation has been close to the ECB's target for some time.

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