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  • China’s new five-year plan doubles down on supply-side power

    China’s draft 15th Five-Year Plan is telegraphing a familiar choice, double down on the supply side, only this time with a sharper emphasis on frontier technology and the upstream inputs that make it possible. Beijing is pitching a new wave of industrial upgrading as the core route to growth, jobs and national security, even as it acknowledges that demand at home remains soft and the external environment is worsening.

    In practical terms, the plan is telling markets and foreign governments that China intends to stay a manufacturing superpower by climbing further up the value chain, not by pivoting decisively toward household-led consumption.

    March 6, 2026
  • Asia’s Hormuz exposure becomes a physical availability crisis, not a price premium

    Iran-centered conflict has shifted from being a market “risk premium” story to being a physical-availability story that Asia is uniquely exposed to. The reason is simple: Asia is the world’s demand sink for Gulf hydrocarbons, and the Strait of Hormuz is not a marginal corridor but the conduit that turns Middle East production into Asian energy security.

    Once insurers pull coverage, shipowners hesitate, and tankers queue or anchor, the economic shock reaches Asia even before there is a confirmed, long-lived production outage, because the disruption is in transport and deliverability rather than in geology.

    March 6, 2026
  • Iran conflict turns Gulf aluminium into logistics crisis, not just price risk

    The Iran war is forcing aluminum traders and industrial buyers to relearn something they had largely forgotten during the long years of surplus: the global market’s shock absorber has thinned out. A conflict that began as an oil-and-gas story has now tightened the supply of a metal that both the United States and the European Union treat as strategically important for manufacturing and the energy transition.

    In the space of days, the Gulf has gone from being a dependable export platform for primary metal to being a logistics and force-majeure risk zone, and the price reaction has been immediate: LME aluminum surged to around $3,418 a ton, a four-year high, after Qatalum started powering down and Aluminium Bahrain declared force majeure.

    March 6, 2026
  • Gulf food security model strains as Hormuz logistics choke tightens

    The Gulf’s wealthiest states are discovering that the food-security model they built after the 2007-08 food crisis is resilient against price spikes, but far less robust against a physical logistics shock that constricts their main import artery. The earlier strategy shift, away from expensive domestic grain schemes toward near-total reliance on imports, overseas farm investments, and larger strategic stocks, was designed for a world where shipping lanes stayed open and finance could always buy supply.

    The Iran war is testing the part that money cannot instantly fix: the ability to move containers and bulk cargo reliably through the Strait of Hormuz and into the handful of big Gulf ports that dominate regional distribution.

    March 6, 2026
  • Seven governments push back on EU marginal pricing overhaul

    Seven governments, including the Netherlands and Sweden, warned EU Energy Commissioner Dan Jørgensen that intervening in price formation would harm investment and competitiveness. The letter is a clear attempt by a bloc of northern and fiscally conservative EU governments to stop Brussels from “blaming the market design” for prices that they see as fundamentally driven by Europe’s fuel mix and import dependence.

    In their view, tinkering with marginal pricing, the rule that the last plant needed to meet demand sets the wholesale electricity price, would create regulatory uncertainty, raise the cost of capital for new generation and grid investment, and ultimately make bills higher rather than lower.

    March 6, 2026
  • LPG tankers make u-turn from Gulf, head for U.S. terminals

    The diversion of LPG tankers from Middle East load ports to the United States is an unusually clear, real-time signal that the Gulf shipping shock is now reshaping hydrocarbon trade flows well beyond crude and LNG.

    Vessels that had been positioned to load cargoes at key Gulf terminals abruptly changed course: Gas Bombax, originally signaling Qatar’s Ras Laffan, redirected while in the Gulf of Oman and began signaling the Marcus Hook terminal on the U.S. East Coast; BW Kizoku, previously headed for Kuwait’s Mina al-Ahmadi, also diverted and began signaling Houston; and Gas Capricorn turned back and was reported anchored in the Arabian Sea.

    March 6, 2026
  • Shell signs new oil and gas accords with Venezuela

    Shell’s new set of agreements with Venezuela is best understood as the commercial side of a fast-moving geopolitical realignment: Washington’s post-Maduro policy reset is reopening channels for Western majors to re-enter Venezuelan upstream, and Caracas is using that opening to convert long-stranded gas resources into export revenue and regional influence.

    Shell signed multiple agreements spanning offshore gas and onshore oil and gas opportunities, alongside technical and commercial arrangements with Venezuela’s engineering firm VEPICA and with KBR and Baker Hughes. The deals follow a visit by U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, one of two cabinet-level visits since January, and come after U.S. general licenses for Venezuelan oil and gas exploration were described by Shell as enabling progress on its flagship Dragon offshore gas project.

    March 6, 2026
  • U.S. weighs 200,000-chip threshold for toughest export conditions

    The Trump administration is weighing an AI-chip export regime that would treat access to large volumes of U.S. compute as a bargaining chip, not simply a security decision. U.S. officials are discussing a tiered system under which very large orders, on the order of 200,000 advanced AI chips or more, could be approved only if the recipient country provides “security guarantees” or commits to investments in U.S.-based AI data centers.

    The same draft suggests licensing and monitoring requirements could extend far down the scale, potentially reaching even relatively small installations, which would represent a significant tightening of compliance expectations for allies and partners compared with the approach the Biden administration used.

    March 6, 2026

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