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  • Oilfield services lose out as Iran conflict freezes Gulf activity

    The Iran war is delivering a harsh reminder that higher oil prices do not automatically translate into better conditions for every part of the energy industry. Oilfield services companies, which provide the rigs, equipment, crews, and technical support that keep drilling and production moving, are finding that this shock is working against them in the short term.

    Brent has surged more than 50% since the conflict began, but in the Gulf the immediate effect has been falling activity rather than a rush into new projects. Security risks, infrastructure damage, disrupted logistics, and higher insurance costs are cutting utilization and delaying work in one of the world’s most important energy-producing regions.

    March 30, 2026
  • Critical minerals reshape Washington’s sanctions approach to Venezuela

    Washington has opened a new channel for economic engagement with Venezuela by authorizing limited activity in the country’s minerals sector, a move that suggests critical minerals are becoming a more important driver of US sanctions policy.

    The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued three Venezuela-related general licenses on March 27: General License 51A, which authorizes certain activities involving Venezuelan-origin minerals including gold; General License 54, which permits the supply of certain items and services for minerals operations in Venezuela; and General License 55, which allows negotiations and contingent contracts for certain investments in Venezuela’s minerals sector.

    March 30, 2026
  • German industry finds it cannot decouple from either U.S. or China

    Germany’s largest listed companies are so deeply embedded in both the American and Chinese economies that any serious attempt to sever ties with either side would inflict major damage on revenue, production, and supply chains.

    A research, conducted by scholars at the University of Sussex and King’s College London, mapped the sales, production, and supplier exposure of firms in Germany’s DAX and MDAX indices and concluded that the country’s corporate model is structurally dependent on both powers at once.

    March 30, 2026
  • Energy security fears extend coal’s life across Asia and Europe

    The war in and around Iran is giving coal its strongest political and commercial opening in years, not because governments have suddenly abandoned decarbonization, but because a second major gas shock in barely four years is undermining faith in natural gas as a dependable transition fuel. What had already been a difficult effort to push coal into structural decline is now being complicated by a new round of energy insecurity, especially in Asia but also in parts of Europe.

    Countries facing high gas prices and disrupted LNG supply are increasingly falling back on coal as the most readily available substitute, while the International Energy Agency’s own late-2025 outlook had already shown coal demand hitting a record 8.85 billion tonnes before a projected gradual decline later in the decade.

    March 30, 2026
  • Global energy markets edge toward catastrophe as Hormuz stays shut

    One month into the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, the global energy supply system is operating under conditions that fall just short of the most catastrophic scenario analysts can envision. The central variable determining the severity of the crisis remains the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime passage that under normal circumstances channels approximately one-fifth of the world’s crude oil, refined petroleum products, and liquefied natural gas to global markets.

    That waterway remains functionally impassable for the vast majority of commercial shipping, reducing what was until recently a torrent of hydrocarbon flows to barely a trickle, only a handful of vessels have managed transit so far in March.

    March 30, 2026
  • Big oil begins Gulf exit strategy as infrastructure damage mounts

    The armed conflict engulfing the Persian Gulf is fundamentally reshaping the strategic calculus of the world’s largest oil and gas companies, compelling them to reconsider their deep-rooted investment commitments to the Middle East and begin redirecting capital toward frontier and previously overlooked producing regions.

    While the Gulf has long served as the gravitational center of the global hydrocarbons industry, offering unmatched resource scale, relatively predictable fiscal frameworks, and a reputation for operational continuity that persisted even through the Iraq and Yemen conflicts, the current war between the United States, Israel, and Iran has shattered that stability in ways that will likely reverberate through corporate boardrooms and investment committees for years to come.

    March 30, 2026
  • China’s export bans leave Asian neighbors scrambling for fuel and fertilizer

    Across Southeast Asia, mounting energy and agricultural supply pressures are forcing governments to test the limits of Beijing’s long-standing rhetoric about regional solidarity and mutual benefit. With the conflict in Iran disrupting global commodity flows, nations from Bangladesh to Australia are urging China to resume shipments of fertilizer and fuel that were quietly halted through undisclosed export restrictions.

    Yet despite its carefully cultivated image as a reliable partner and champion of South-South cooperation, Beijing has so far responded with little more than diplomatic generalities, declining even to formally acknowledge the existence of the trade curbs that multiple news organizations have documented.

    March 30, 2026
  • India accelerates renewable approvals amid Middle East gas disruptions

    New Delhi is fast-tracking the approval process for new wind energy installations and battery storage infrastructure after disruptions in the global natural gas market, triggered by the ongoing military conflict involving the United States and Israel against Iran, created supply constraints for the country’s gas-fired power sector.

    Junior Power Minister Shripad Naik confirmed the policy shift during a parliamentary session on Monday, acknowledging that both the availability and pricing of natural gas have become increasingly unpredictable as a direct consequence of the intensifying Middle East hostilities.

    March 30, 2026

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