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Qatar’s LNG outage threatens to break the global gas balance
The shutdown and damage at Qatar’s Ras Laffan complex has turned the Iran war from an oil shock into something potentially more destabilizing: a structural LNG shock. Iranian attacks have knocked out about 17% of Qatar’s LNG export capacity, or 12.8 million metric tons a year, after damage to two trains and related infrastructure, with QatarEnergy warning that some contract disruption could persist for years.
That matters because Qatar is not just another supplier. It is one of the anchors of the global LNG system, especially for Asian buyers, and Ras Laffan has long been treated as one of the most reliable nodes in world energy trade. Once that assumption breaks, the consequences travel far beyond the Gulf.
March 20, 2026 -
China’s silver surge shows who now sets the physical market
China’s silver market is showing how a country can become the center of gravity in a commodity without necessarily dominating its mine supply. The latest customs figures indicate that China imported more than 790 metric tons of silver in January and February, including nearly 470 tons in February alone, the strongest February on record and the highest start to a year in eight years.
That surge suggests that demand inside China has remained strong even after silver’s wild price swings at the start of 2026, and that local buyers have been willing to pull in substantial metal from abroad to satisfy both industrial and investment appetite.
March 20, 2026 -
Iran conflict gas shock reaches India’s auto supply chain
India’s auto industry is discovering how an external energy shock can reach factory floors faster than many expected. The Iran conflict has begun choking gas availability for parts suppliers and manufacturers tied to carmakers such as Maruti Suzuki, Tata Motors and Mahindra, creating the risk of production slowdowns just as India’s passenger-vehicle market is on track for a record year with sales expected to exceed 4.5 million units by the end of March.
Because inventories are lean and demand is strong, the system has little slack. That means even localized fuel shortages can quickly turn into assembly-line stress. The background is that India is one of the major economies most exposed to a West Asia energy disruption.
March 20, 2026 -
Panama Canal rerouting shows how Iran conflict is redrawing oil trade
The rerouting of U.S. Gulf Coast crude to Asia through the Panama Canal is a vivid sign of how deeply the Iran war is reshaping oil trade flows. Asian refiners are now chartering medium-sized Aframax and partially loaded Suezmax tankers to move U.S. crude through Panama to South Korea and Japan, even though this is usually a more expensive option per barrel than the standard very large crude carrier route around the Cape of Good Hope.
The willingness to pay those higher transport costs and canal fees shows that speed and security of delivery have suddenly become more important than transport efficiency. The immediate background is the collapse of normal Middle East supply patterns. The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has severely disrupted flows through the Strait of Hormuz, the route for roughly a fifth of global oil and LNG.
March 20, 2026 -
U.S.-Japan alliance shifts from diplomacy to industrial security
The U.S.-Japan summit shows how much the alliance is being re-engineered around industrial security rather than just traditional diplomacy or defense. The two sides announced expanded cooperation including up to $73 billion in Japanese investment in U.S. energy projects, a joint action plan on critical minerals and rare earths, and a new working group on deep-sea mineral resource development.
Taken together, these moves show that Washington and Tokyo are treating energy capacity, mineral access and upstream resource control as core pillars of alliance strategy. The energy component is especially notable because it combines short-term power needs with longer-term industrial planning.
March 20, 2026 -
EU tries to cushion energy pain without rewriting the market
The European Union is responding to the Iran war’s energy shock with a familiar but difficult formula: temporary relief now, structural transition later. EU leaders on Thursday called for short-term measures to soften the impact of surging imported fuel and power prices, with electricity tax cuts, lower grid fees and state support all under discussion.
The European Council’s summit conclusions also asked for a toolbox of targeted temporary measures to address the recent price spike and for concrete actions to lower electricity prices while preserving fair competition and investment incentives.
March 20, 2026 -
China’s economy looks stronger in factories than in dollar GDP
China’s economy today presents a striking contradiction. In trade and industrial terms, the country looks more formidable than ever. It has amassed an enormous merchandise surplus, dominates a widening range of strategic industries, and continues to outperform most advanced economies in real growth terms. Yet when measured in current U.S. dollars, its relative weight in the global economy has been slipping.
IMF data show China’s nominal GDP was about $20.65 trillion in 2025 versus $31.82 trillion for the United States, leaving China at a bit under two-thirds the size of the U.S. economy in dollar terms. The same IMF data put China at roughly 16.7% of world output in 2025, down from around 18.4% in 2021.
March 20, 2026 -
China’s oil production push has reached its strategic limit
China’s campaign to raise domestic oil production has achieved what it was designed to do, but it is now running into hard geological and economic limits. China lifted crude output to a record 4.32 million barrels a day last year after a seven-year push driven by aggressive drilling in mature fields, rapid offshore expansion and the early commercialisation of shale oil.
Yet Beijing’s new 2026-2030 plan no longer points to further meaningful growth. Instead, it sets a target of maintaining output at around 4 million barrels a day, suggesting that policymakers and the industry now see domestic production less as a source of rising supply than as a floor to be defended for strategic reasons.
March 20, 2026
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