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Europe starts gas refill season with storage dangerously low
Europe is entering the gas refill season from a far weaker position than it had hoped, and that leaves the continent exposed at exactly the wrong moment. Dutch storage sites are only about 6% full, the lowest for this point in the year in data going back to 2010, while Germany’s inventories are also unusually depleted at roughly 22%. Gas Infrastructure Europe’s latest figures put total EU storage at about 28.4% full, the lowest for this time of year since 2022.
The background is that Europe exited winter with storage much more drained than usual and was already facing a difficult refill season before the Iran war intensified the global LNG squeeze. Europe’s task of refilling storage had suddenly become riskier and more expensive because the Middle East conflict was disrupting LNG production and shipments just as the continent needed to start buying more gas for next winter.
March 25, 2026 -
China’s grip on African battery metals is meeting political resistance
African governments are beginning to rewrite the terms on which foreign miners can access the continent’s battery-metal wealth, and Chinese companies are discovering that spending billions to secure reserves is no longer enough to guarantee smooth supply.
The clearest examples are the Democratic Republic of Congo’s cobalt curbs and Zimbabwe’s abrupt suspension of lithium concentrate exports, both of which have raised prices sharply and disrupted the operating assumptions of Chinese miners and refiners that had treated Africa as the essential upstream base of China’s battery-material system. These restrictions are now biting companies that invested heavily in anticipation of years of booming demand from electric vehicles and energy storage.
March 25, 2026 -
BHP’s potash push reflects a new era of fertilizer security
BHP is betting that potash will become one of the tightest and most strategically important commodity markets of the next decade, and the timing of that view is significant.
The company expects demand for the crop nutrient to grow by about 2% to 3% annually, while additional supply outside BHP’s own Jansen project looks limited enough that the market could move into deficit by 2035. BHP’s head of potash, Karina Gistelinck, said the company expects a tight market with significant pressure on the supply side.
March 25, 2026 -
EU delays Russian oil ban, but the strategic direction holds
The European Commission has dropped the April 15 timing for its legal proposal to permanently ban Russian oil imports, but the measure was not cancelled and would still be published later, with the delay explicitly linked to current geopolitical developments.
The delay looks tactical rather than a real reversal of EU policy toward Russian energy. The immediate reason is straightforward: the Iran war has created an extreme global oil shock, and Brussels does not want to launch a politically sensitive oil measure in the middle of the biggest supply disruption in history, as the IEA has described it.
March 25, 2026 -
QatarEnergy’s force majeure marks a new phase in the LNG crisis
QatarEnergy said on March 24 it had determined it needed to declare force majeure on some affected long-term LNG contracts, including counterparties in Italy, Belgium, South Korea and China.
The company said it had to do so, rather than saying every contract had already been formally declared in force majeure at that moment. The statement is a major escalation because it shifts the LNG crisis from market stress into formal contract disruption.
March 25, 2026 -
China’s coal-chemicals industry gains as imported oil becomes riskier
China’s coal-to-chemicals sector is one of the clearest domestic winners from the Iran war, and for reasons that go beyond a simple commodity rally. Stocks in the sector have climbed sharply since the conflict began because these companies can turn abundant domestic coal into oil, gas and chemical feedstocks without depending on the Middle East or the Strait of Hormuz.
Ningxia Baofeng Energy is up about 30% and Shenhua Energy about 15%, while conventional oil-based petrochemical names such as Rongsheng, Hengli and Wanhua have fallen sharply. That divergence reflects a real change in relative competitiveness inside China’s chemical system.
March 25, 2026 -
Asia turns to COVID-era conservation tools as energy crisis deepens
Asia’s response to the fuel shock is starting to resemble the early policy playbook of the pandemic, but with one crucial difference: this time governments are trying to conserve energy and cushion living costs while central banks stay on inflation alert.
Countries across the region are considering or reviving measures such as work-from-home arrangements, shortened workweeks, public-holiday shutdowns, energy-saving campaigns and targeted household support as they confront shortages and soaring prices caused by the near-total disruption of flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Because Asia buys more than 80% of the crude moving through that route, it is the first region being forced to improvise.
March 25, 2026 -
Gulf petrodollar’s foundations look less secure after the Iran conflict
The Iran war is forcing Gulf states to confront a question that had long been deferred but rarely answered openly: what exactly are they receiving in return for anchoring so much of their financial, trade and security architecture to the United States?
The old bargain of American protection in exchange for dollar-priced oil, petrodollar recycling and strategic alignment now looks more fragile because the Gulf monarchies have taken much of the direct economic pain from retaliation while the credibility of U.S. protection has come under visible strain.
March 25, 2026
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