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  • Fossil fuels become the new intermittent energy risk

    The Gulf conflict has produced a striking inversion in the energy security debate, recasting fossil fuels rather than renewables as the primary source of vulnerability and overturning decades of conventional wisdom that treated coal, oil, and gas as reliable while dismissing solar and wind as dangerously intermittent.

    This reframing, articulated forcefully by energy strategists and the chief executives of Nordic energy giants at the Eurelectric Power Summit in Helsinki, captures one of the most consequential intellectual shifts that the conflict has catalyzed: the recognition that dependence on imported fossil fuels transiting vulnerable chokepoints is itself a form of intermittency, and a more dangerous one than the weather-driven variability of renewables.

    June 5, 2026
  • Algeria advances African gas corridor as Europe diversifies supply

    Algeria has begun construction on its section of the long-envisioned Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline, an ambitious project decades in the making that would carry natural gas from Nigeria across the Sahara to European markets, advancing one of several African energy corridors that have gained renewed momentum as Europe scrambles to diversify its gas supply away from both Russia and the disrupted Middle East.

    The 1,210-kilometer Algerian segment, to be built by state-owned Sonatrach, will connect to the existing pipeline system in the Aoulef region that already supplies Europe, reinforcing Algeria’s position as a major gas provider to Spain, Italy, and France.

    June 5, 2026
  • Gulf shock may become Asia’s Ukraine moment for energy

    Just as the Russian invasion forced Europe to fundamentally rethink its energy dependence, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is now driving an analogous reckoning across Asia. The current state of the strait remains one of near-total closure, with ship tracking indicating ninety to ninety-five percent of normal traffic eliminated and almost no oil or gas escaping from inside the strait for three months.

    The recovery timeline, even under the most optimistic assumptions, is sobering. With roughly a hundred ships passing through daily before the closure and hundreds now trapped inside, simply clearing the backlog would take months even if the strait reopened immediately.

    June 5, 2026
  • Taiwan’s silicon shield strengthens as AI deepens global dependence

    The convergence of global technology leaders on Taipei this week, headlined by Nvidia’s Jensen Huang and Intel’s Lip-Bu Tan, has reaffirmed Taiwan’s central and growing role in the global AI supply chain, strengthening the island’s so-called silicon shield at a moment when its strategic position faced mounting questions.

    The messages delivered at the Computex show and Nvidia’s GPU Technology Conference suggest that the deterrent value of Taiwan’s semiconductor dominance, far from eroding, may be intensifying as the AI revolution deepens the world’s dependence on the island’s manufacturing capabilities.

    June 5, 2026
  • China’s solar giants pivot to batteries as storage becomes essential

    China’s major solar panel manufacturers are pivoting aggressively into battery storage, ramping up higher-margin energy storage exports to offset the slowing growth and collapsing prices that have battered the photovoltaic sector, in a strategic shift that positions them to capture the surging global demand for the storage technology essential to integrating renewable energy into power systems.

    The move by industry leaders including JinkoSolar, JA Solar, LONGi, and Trina Solar reflects both the financial pressures afflicting the solar manufacturing business and the recognition that the future of renewable energy lies in the integrated combination of generation and storage.

    June 5, 2026
  • Chinese nickel giants look beyond Indonesia as policy risks rise

    The Chinese companies that transformed Indonesia into the world’s dominant nickel producer are now looking as far afield as Africa and the Pacific for alternative investment destinations, as the policy pressure emanating from Jakarta tests the very investment model that reshaped global nickel supply over the past five years.

    Tsingshan Group is considering a multi-billion-dollar development in Madagascar, while Lygend Resources is pursuing projects in Tanzania and the restart of an idled operation in New Caledonia, marking the first prospective nickel investments outside Indonesia for both companies and signaling a potential diversification of the Chinese nickel investment that has been overwhelmingly concentrated in the Southeast Asian nation.

    June 5, 2026
  • Indonesia gives legal force to state control of commodity exports

    Indonesia has formalized its sweeping commodity export centralization with the publication of the implementing regulation, providing the legal detail and operational specifics that were absent from President Prabowo Subianto’s initial announcement and confirming the government’s determination to assert state control over the trade in its most valuable natural resources.

    The eleven-page regulation, signed on May 20 and published Friday, transforms what had been a startling policy declaration into a concrete legal framework with defined mechanisms, timelines, and exemption criteria. The core provisions confirm the most consequential elements of the policy while clarifying its operational structure.

    June 5, 2026
  • U.S. oil hub nears critical low as exports surge

    The vast oil storage complex at Cushing, Oklahoma, which calls itself the pipeline crossroads of the world, is running nearly empty, its hundreds of tanks drained by refiners worldwide scrambling to plug the massive supply shortfall created by the Gulf conflict.

    The depletion of one of the largest and most strategically significant oil storage hubs on the planet provides a concrete, physical illustration of the inventory exhaustion that analysts have warned about throughout the crisis, transforming the abstract concept of global stock draws into the tangible reality of empty tanks on the Oklahoma prairie.

    June 5, 2026

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