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  • Europe’s China strategy turns from caution to confrontation

    The European Union is moving closer to a more confrontational trade and industrial posture toward China, but it is doing so with deep internal hesitation because the bloc remains heavily dependent on Chinese markets, components and raw materials. The immediate context is the Group of Seven’s new pledge to reduce reliance on China for critical minerals, rare earths and permanent magnets.

    That commitment adds momentum to a parallel debate inside the EU over whether Europe needs tougher instruments to defend its industries from Chinese state-backed competition and to reduce vulnerabilities in strategic supply chains. The shift is significant because the EU’s China debate has changed from a largely diplomatic argument about market access into a broader economic-security discussion.

    June 18, 2026
  • Germany’s offshore wind push becomes an industrial sovereignty test

    Germany is considering state support for the domestic construction of offshore wind converter platforms, a move that reflects a broader effort to rebuild industrial capacity in a sector where Europe has become heavily exposed to Chinese suppliers.

    Economy Minister Katherina Reiche has said the government is examining whether to back production of these platforms, which are essential pieces of offshore wind infrastructure because they collect electricity generated at sea and convert it for transmission into the onshore power grid. The proposal signals that Berlin increasingly sees renewable-energy equipment not only as a climate-policy issue, but also as a matter of industrial sovereignty, infrastructure security and strategic competition.

    June 18, 2026
  • Europe’s gas crisis gives way to demand erosion

    Europe’s gas market appears to have withstood one of the most severe external shocks it could face: a near-total interruption of LNG flows through the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S.-Iran peace arrangement suggests that the most acute phase of the crisis may now be passing, even if tanker traffic and normal cargo scheduling take time to recover.

    The episode has shown that Europe’s gas infrastructure is more resilient than it was during the 2022 Russian supply crisis. But it has also exposed a deeper reality. Europe’s long-term gas problem may not be an immediate shortage of supply. It may be a steady erosion of demand as high prices, electrification, efficiency gains and geopolitical uncertainty make gas a less attractive fuel across power, buildings and industry.

    June 18, 2026
  • China’s oil reserves turn imports into strategic leverage

    China’s response to the oil shock triggered by the Iran war shows how much strategic flexibility Beijing has built into its energy system. On the surface, the collapse in crude imports to the lowest level in eight years suggested that Chinese refiners might have been drawing heavily from the country’s enormous stockpiles.

    The detailed balance, however, points to a more measured response. China did use inventories in May, but the draw appears to have been modest because refiners also cut processing sharply. Rather than simply replacing lost imports with stored crude, China reduced both crude buying and refinery runs, preserving much of its stockpile while helping cool global prices.

    June 18, 2026
  • G7 turns critical minerals into an economic-security project

    The Group of Seven is trying to turn critical minerals policy into a coordinated economic-security project rather than a set of disconnected national initiatives. At their latest meeting, G7 leaders agreed to deepen cooperation to reduce dependence on China for rare earths, permanent magnets and other strategic materials that sit at the center of defense production, clean energy, advanced electronics and industrial competitiveness.

    The plan includes closer alignment on stockpiling, a new minerals platform supported by an expanded role for the International Energy Agency, and possible financial mechanisms to make non-Chinese supply chains commercially viable. The agreement reflects a growing recognition that mineral dependence has become one of the major vulnerabilities in the Western industrial system.

    June 18, 2026
  • UK-India trade deal survives a steel tariff dispute

    Britain and India are preparing to put their free trade agreement into effect on July 15 after resolving a dispute over the UK’s planned steel tariff regime, removing a last-minute obstacle to one of London’s most important post-Brexit trade deals.

    The agreement links two major economies with deep historical, commercial and migration ties, and comes at a time when global trade is being reshaped by U.S. tariff policy, industrial protectionism and growing pressure on governments to defend domestic manufacturing.

    June 18, 2026
  • Russian metals face new barriers in Western trading system

    The London Metal Exchange is tightening its warehouse procedures for Russian-origin copper and cobalt in response to the European Union’s latest sanctions against Moscow, adding another layer of compliance control to a metals market already reshaped by war, trade restrictions and geopolitical fragmentation.

    Under the new notice, Russian copper and cobalt can be registered in LME-approved warehouses located inside the European Union only if there is evidence that the material entered the EU before July 25, 2026. In practical terms, the exchange is drawing a line between pre-existing metal already inside the bloc and newly imported Russian-origin material that would fall under the EU’s ban.

    June 18, 2026
  • Australia’s carbon refinery tests a new industrial climate model

    Australia’s first carbon refinery has opened in New South Wales, marking an early attempt to turn carbon capture from a defensive climate tool into an industrial process that can create usable materials. The facility, developed by MCI Carbon on Kooragang Island, captures carbon dioxide from Orica’s ammonia operations and converts it into products that can be used in sectors such as concrete, paper and glass.

    The demonstration plant is modest in scale, with potential capture capacity of about 2,500 metric tons of CO2 a year, but its significance lies less in its immediate emissions impact than in the industrial model it is trying to prove. The technology is based on mineral carbonation, a process that imitates the natural way the Earth locks carbon into rock.

    June 18, 2026

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