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Rearmament returns, but this time governments are deeply in debt
The next era of military spending is arriving under fiscal conditions that distinguish it fundamentally from every previous cycle of rearmament in American and global history. Defense budgets are rising across the Western world and beyond, driven by the simultaneous pressures of the Gulf conflict, the Ukraine war, Chinese military expansion, and the Trump administration’s proposed 1.5 trillion dollar defense budget for 2027.
But unlike the Cold War buildup or the post-September 11 spending increases, this rearmament is beginning from a starting position of already elevated sovereign debt, rising borrowing costs, and structural fiscal deficits that leave governments with far less room to absorb the burden without painful tradeoffs.
April 21, 2026 -
Gulf War reroutes alumina to China, reshaping aluminium market
The Gulf conflict is producing a striking reallocation in global aluminum supply chains, with alumina cargoes originally destined for Middle Eastern smelters being redirected to China in volumes that have pushed Chinese imports of the raw material to their highest level in two years.
The rerouting has created a cascading set of consequences: swelling China’s already substantial alumina surplus, sustaining elevated smelting margins for Chinese producers, driving aluminum output higher, and setting the stage for increased Chinese metal exports into a global market that may not need them.
April 21, 2026 -
Trump uses Defense Production Act to accelerate energy infrastructure
President Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act across five categories of energy infrastructure, deploying Cold War-era emergency powers to channel federal funding toward coal-fired power plants, LNG facilities, petroleum refining, and electrical grid components.
The sweeping action frames domestic energy production and grid capacity as matters of national defense, unlocking financing tools that can bypass the regulatory, market, and permitting barriers that normally govern energy project development.
April 21, 2026 -
Kuwait signals oil exports will lag even after Hormuz reopens
Kuwait has issued a second force majeure declaration on crude oil and refined product shipments, formally notifying customers that it will be unable to meet its contractual supply obligations even after the Strait of Hormuz eventually reopens.
The notice from state-run Kuwait Petroleum Corporation, issued Friday, goes beyond the initial force majeure declared in early March by explicitly acknowledging that the damage to Kuwaiti oil infrastructure and the operational disruption caused by weeks of production shutdowns will require an extended recovery period before full export capacity can be restored.
April 21, 2026 -
Africa’s copper belt faces deeper squeeze as Zambia smelters pause
Two of Zambia’s largest copper smelters are planning extended maintenance shutdowns later this year, threatening to compound an already severe sulfuric acid shortage that is rippling across central Africa’s mining belt and constraining output of both copper and cobalt at a moment when global supply of both metals is tightening.
The shutdowns at Mopani and Chambishi will temporarily remove a significant portion of Zambia’s smelting capacity and, critically, halt the byproduct production of sulfuric acid that local and Congolese mines depend on as an essential processing chemical.
April 21, 2026 -
Mexico aims to lock in auto and metals terms ahead of USMCA review
Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum is seeking to lock in a preliminary agreement on steel, aluminum, and automobile trade with the United States ahead of the broader review of the USMCA free trade pact, signaling the urgency with which Mexico City views the current negotiating window as US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer arrived in the country for talks on Monday.
The three product categories Sheinbaum singled out are not incidental. They represent the core of Mexico’s industrial export relationship with the United States and the sectors most vulnerable to the Trump administration’s evolving tariff architecture. Mexico is one of the world’s largest vehicle exporters, and its auto sector is deeply integrated with American manufacturing through cross-border supply chains in which components may cross the US-Mexico border multiple times during assembly.
April 21, 2026 -
UK moves to weaken gas-linked power pricing, but reform looks modest
Britain is attempting to sever the link between its electricity costs and the volatile global gas market, announcing reforms that would shift older wind and solar generators onto fixed-price contracts in an effort to insulate the economy from the energy price shocks that have twice devastated British competitiveness in four years.
The plan, presented by the government on Tuesday, has been framed by Finance Minister Rachel Reeves as a growth-enabling structural reform. Analysts and industry groups, however, have largely dismissed it as too modest to meaningfully address a pricing structure that has given Britain some of the highest electricity costs in the world.
April 21, 2026 -
EU urges governments to keep nuclear plants running longer
The European Commission is preparing to tell EU governments not to close functioning nuclear plants prematurely, arguing that existing reactors remain one of the bloc’s few sources of reliable, low-cost, low-emission electricity at a time of renewed energy stress.
A draft of Wednesday’s energy package says member states should “avoid premature retirement” of generation assets such as nuclear plants that can still operate safely, because doing so would increase pressure on fossil-fuel use in power, heating, and industry. The recommendations are non-binding, but they are politically significant because they show Brussels becoming more explicit about nuclear power as part of Europe’s energy-security response.
April 21, 2026
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