Oil prices climbed more than 1% to their highest level in two weeks after a drone struck the Barakah nuclear power plant in the United Arab Emirates. The attack hit an electrical generator outside the facility’s inner perimeter, sparking a fire but causing no injuries and leaving radiological safety levels unaffected.
What happened at Barakah
The drone strike targeted the Barakah plant, located in the UAE’s Al Dhafra region. The fire was contained to an electrical generator positioned outside the plant’s core security perimeter, meaning the nuclear facility itself was never directly compromised.
Authorities confirmed that no one was hurt and that radiation levels remained normal. The UAE had not confirmed the origin of the drone at the time of the initial reports.
Why oil markets cared immediately
Crude prices jumped more than 1% on the news, reaching a two-week high. The UAE is one of the world’s largest crude exporters and a key OPEC member. Any security incident on Emirati soil forces traders to recalculate the geopolitical risk premium baked into every barrel of oil.
Barakah’s role in the UAE’s energy strategy
The Barakah nuclear power plant is the UAE’s flagship nuclear energy project and the first operational nuclear power plant in the Arab world. The plant’s location in Al Dhafra puts it in a region close to significant oil and gas infrastructure in the western part of Abu Dhabi emirate.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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