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Europe’s gas premium sticks as Qatar stays offline, Hormuz still uninsurable
European gas traders are essentially trying to price a moving target: whether the Strait of Hormuz is functionally closed for weeks, or whether partial passage resumes under extreme risk premia and sporadic transits.
That’s why Dutch TTF front-month futures swung intraday, briefly surging on Iran’s hardline rhetoric and then easing after reports suggesting Iran wasn’t mining the waterway and had allowed some ships through, before settling only modestly higher on the day. The close of that churn is at about €50.78/MWh, up roughly 1.6%.
March 13, 2026 -
Iran conflict rewrites energy transition as a resilience imperative
The Strait of Hormuz shock is exactly the kind of “fat tail” event that energy systems built around liquid fuels are structurally unable to hedge. It is not just a price spike; it is a logistics-and-insurance failure that rapidly becomes a political crisis because gasoline and diesel sit directly in the consumer’s face and under the freight system.
Electrification is one of the few strategies that doesn’t merely diversify suppliers or build bigger stockpiles, but shrinks the exposed surface area of the economy to oil chokepoints altogether. Governments keep treating Hormuz as an occasional crisis to be managed with emergency releases, when it should be treated as a recurring systemic risk that merits permanent risk reduction.
March 13, 2026 -
Qatar’s helium shock exposes a hidden chokepoint in global tech
The helium spot price doubling since the Iran conflict’s inception, with projections toward potentially retesting previous shortage peaks exceeding $2,000 per thousand cubic feet if disruptions persist, transforms what South Korean lawmakers characterized as theoretical semiconductor material supply threats into a catastrophic reality.
This is where the world’s most critical technology manufacturing processes face imminent paralysis from the loss of an irreplaceable industrial gas whose one-third global supply concentration in now-inaccessible Qatar creates dependencies that no amount of scrambling for alternatives or willingness to pay extreme prices can overcome within the timeframes that semiconductor fabrication’s continuous operations demand.
March 13, 2026 -
EU eases “prior authorisation” rule to keep LNG cargoes moving
Brussels is trying to avoid an own-goal: enforcing its Russia gas phase-out rules so rigidly that it inadvertently delays non-Russian gas deliveries at the exact moment Europe is short on flexibility because the Iran war has disrupted global LNG and raised the risk of cargo diversions to Asia.
The European Commission will therefore issue guidance before March 18 telling member states to apply “prior authorisation” rules for certain non-Russian imports more flexibly.
March 13, 2026 -
Trump team eyes shipping waiver to move fuel faster between U.S. ports
The White House is floating a time-limited Jones Act waiver as an emergency logistics fix for domestic fuel and agricultural supply strains that have intensified as the Iran war disrupts global oil flows and lifts U.S. pump prices.
Press secretary Karoline Leavitt framed it explicitly as a “national defense” step to keep “vital energy products and agricultural necessities” moving freely between U.S. ports, while stressing no final decision has been made. A 30-day waiver could be announced as early as Thursday.
March 13, 2026 -
Chile pivots to Washington on rare earths and critical minerals
Chile’s new right-wing government is moving quickly to align with Washington on the most strategic slice of the global commodity complex: rare earths and “critical minerals” that sit inside the supply chains for electric vehicles, semiconductors, defense platforms and consumer electronics.
Santiago and Washington have signed a joint statement to launch formal consultations, with the first meeting scheduled within about two weeks. The agenda is explicitly practical rather than rhetorical: potential public and private financing for mining projects, cooperation on recycling and scrap management, and identifying new exploration or development targets that could expand supply in both countries.
March 13, 2026 -
Venezuela signs strategic energy deal with Repsol, eyes gas exports
Venezuela’s announcement of “strategic agreements” with Repsol is best read as a pragmatic step in a broader effort to restart investment, stabilize domestic energy supply, and create new export revenues now that U.S. sanctions constraints have loosened.
Acting President Delcy Rodríguez said the deal will enable gas production at Cardón IV, the offshore project structured as a 50–50 venture between Repsol and Eni, and that it will also support an expansion in exports.
March 13, 2026 -
U.S. Treasury grants 30-day window for “stranded” Russian oil cargoes
The Trump administration is now using sanctions policy as an explicit shock-absorber for the Iran-war energy crisis, temporarily prioritizing global supply and domestic price stability over the longer-standing goal of constraining Russia’s war revenues.
Under a new Treasury general license, countries are allowed for 30 days to buy sanctioned Russian crude and petroleum products already “stranded at sea,” in a bid to push more barrels into the market while Persian Gulf flows remain severely disrupted.
March 13, 2026
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