 Brent crude oil has settled above $103 — that's +$32 since the start of the year. The Iranian crisis is reshaping the global energy market faster than many expected. What is happening right now: • Diamondback Energy (the largest operator in the Permian Basin) is urgently ramping up drilling — American producers are manually turning on capacity in response to the rally. • Equinor has launched the forgotten Eirin field — Norwegian gas has flowed into Europe without much fanfare, but with a clear signal: the continent is preparing for a long separation from Russian pipeline gas. • 14 Democratic senators are demanding that Trump reinstate sanctions on Russian oil — the temporary easing amid the war in Iran is ending, and the return of restrictions would add another +$5-7 to the price. • Venezuelan oil is moving again, but this is not a recovery of the industry. It is a logistical repackaging — the petrodollar system is working, but production is not growing. The structural deficit in the market is no longer a hypothesis, but a reality. Brent above $100 is not a speculative bubble, but a new baseline. ASI Biont analyzes such shifts in seconds — without noise, without dashboards, just facts and conclusions.