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India’s glass shortage shows how war is hitting manufacturing from within
India’s glass shortage is a vivid example of how the Middle East war is moving far beyond oil and gas into the physical materials that keep consumer industries running. What looks at first like a narrow packaging problem is in fact a broader industrial shock: the disruption of LPG and LNG imports has forced New Delhi to divert gas away from factories and toward households, leaving energy-intensive glassmakers short of fuel just as summer demand peaks.
In a country where glass is essential not only for beverage bottles but also for pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, food packaging, and industrial uses, that has turned a fuel crunch into a manufacturing bottleneck.
April 10, 2026 -
EU and US move to build a critical minerals front against China
The EU and the US are moving toward a coordinated critical-minerals framework that would be significant not just as an industrial policy measure, but as a geopolitical statement of shared intent to reduce dependence on Chinese-controlled supply chains.
A draft action plan indicates the two sides are considering incentives such as minimum prices to support non-Chinese suppliers, alongside cooperation on standards, investment, joint projects, and responses to future supply disruptions. The draft memorandum would cover the full value chain, from exploration and extraction to refining, recycling, and recovery.
April 10, 2026 -
Beijing warns battery makers against a destructive capacity race
China’s second high-level meeting with major battery manufacturers in just over three months shows that Beijing is becoming more determined to prevent the sector from following the same path as solar: rapid capacity expansion, destructive price competition, and then a damaging collapse in margins.
At Thursday’s meeting, several central government agencies, led by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, told 16 battery makers to improve product quality, strengthen intellectual-property protection, and take the problem of “unreasonable and improper” competition far more seriously. Officials also said local-government promotion of new battery investment should be better regulated.
April 10, 2026 -
China cannot fully back Iran without risking Gulf interests
China’s position in the Iran war is constrained by a contradiction that has become central to its Middle East strategy: Beijing wants to preserve its political alignment with Tehran, but it has accumulated too much commercial exposure across the Gulf to back Iran in any way that would endanger regional stability.
Over the past two decades, Chinese investment and construction commitments in the Middle East have reached about $270 billion, and the region has become one of the most important external destinations for Belt and Road-era capital and contracting.
April 10, 2026 -
China taps commercial oil stocks as Middle East conflict drags on
China’s decision to let state refiners draw on commercial crude inventories is a sign that Beijing is shifting from precaution to active market management as the Middle East war drags on. The move allows firms such as Sinopec and CNPC to use oil held at refineries and storage sites, while leaving the strategic petroleum reserve untouched.
The practical message is that China wants to smooth refinery operations and protect domestic fuel supply without yet dipping into its most politically sensitive emergency stockpile.
April 10, 2026 -
Physical crude still screams shortage despite ceasefire in futures
The sharp divergence between futures and physical crude prices after the US-Iran ceasefire is one of the clearest signs that the oil market still does not believe the supply crisis is close to resolution. On paper, the ceasefire justified a large selloff in Brent and WTI because traders immediately priced in the possibility that Hormuz might reopen and that some geopolitical risk premium could come out of the market.
But the physical market is trading on a different logic: refiners still need actual barrels now, shipowners remain cautious, Gulf export flows have not normalized, and operators are reluctant to restart damaged or shut-in production under a two-week truce that still looks fragile.
April 10, 2026 -
Venezuela rewrites mining rules as U.S. opens strategic window
Venezuela’s new mining law is a significant attempt to turn the country’s vast but underdeveloped mineral base into a new pillar of economic recovery, and it comes at a moment when Washington is deliberately creating room for that to happen.
The National Assembly has approved legislation that opens the sector to domestic and foreign private investment, allows long-duration concessions, keeps subsoil ownership in state hands, permits arbitration in disputes, and establishes a new tax and royalty framework. The law replaces older mining rules from 1999 and 2015 and applies to gold and other strategic minerals.
April 10, 2026 -
Iran conflict sends Asia into costly hunt for LPG cargoes
Asia’s rush to replace lost Middle Eastern LPG supplies shows how the Iran war is hitting both heavy industry and household energy security at the same time. India and China, the region’s two biggest LPG importers from the Gulf, are scrambling to line up cargoes from the United States, Canada, Norway, Argentina, and other non-Middle Eastern sources after Gulf exports collapsed.
Middle Eastern LPG exports fell 73% in March to 419,000 barrels per day, while spot premiums for Gulf-loading propane and butane surged to record highs around $250 per metric ton over Saudi contract price swaps.
April 10, 2026
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