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  • Chile’s copper output hits nine-year low as ore grades keep falling

    Chile, the country responsible for roughly a quarter of global mined copper supply, recorded its weakest monthly production in nearly nine years in February, underscoring the deepening geological and operational challenges confronting the world’s most important copper-producing nation.

    Output fell to approximately 378,500 metric tons, representing an 8.5 percent decline from January and a 4.8 percent drop compared to the same month a year earlier. The last time Chilean production was this low was March 2017, when a major labor strike shut down BHP’s Escondida mine, the world’s single largest copper operation.

    April 1, 2026
  • Crude futures understate the worst supply disruption in modern oil history

    One month into the military conflict with Iran, the physical signs of an oil supply crisis are unmistakable across the global economy: airlines grounding flights as jet fuel becomes unaffordable or unavailable, filling stations running dry in multiple countries, and American gasoline prices crossing the psychologically potent four-dollar-per-gallon threshold.

    Yet in one of the more counterintuitive features of this crisis, the benchmark crude oil futures that dominate financial market headlines and shape public perception of energy costs have not come close to matching the severity implied by the physical disruption on the ground.

    April 1, 2026
  • March PMI data captures first full month of war’s toll on Asian industry

    Manufacturing activity across much of Asia continued to expand in March, but the first full month of survey data collected since the outbreak of the US-Israeli war against Iran reveals a clear and widening divergence between economies that have so far absorbed the energy shock and those where rising input costs and supply chain disruptions are already eroding industrial momentum.

    The headline picture is one of resilience fraying at the edges: while South Korea, Malaysia, and Thailand posted improving readings, factory activity in Vietnam, Indonesia, and Taiwan, the latter a globally critical semiconductor production hub, softened from February levels, and the broader ASEAN composite index dropped to its lowest point in six months.

    April 1, 2026
  • AI data centers lure European power giants back to America

    A wave of major European power companies is committing tens of billions of euros to expansion in the United States, betting that the unprecedented surge in American electricity demand driven above all by the explosive growth of data centers supporting artificial intelligence represents a generational investment opportunity large enough to justify re-entering a market where several of them have previously suffered painful and expensive failures.

    The scale of the American power sector’s capital requirements is staggering. The Edison Electric Institute, the industry’s main trade group, projected last year that regulated US utilities alone will spend approximately 1.1 trillion dollars between 2025 and 2029 to support rising demand, upgrade aging infrastructure, and build new generation capacity.

    April 1, 2026
  • Japan and France sign rare earth pact to break Chinese supply grip

    Japan and France have formalized a strategic partnership aimed at building independent rare earth supply chains outside of Chinese control, signing a cooperation roadmap during French President Emmanuel Macron’s three-day visit to Tokyo that commits both nations to joint investment in critical mineral refining, raw material procurement, and supply chain diversification.

    The centerpiece of the emerging bilateral framework is the Caremag refining facility in southern France, a project backed by the Japanese state metals agency, Japanese industrial gas firm Iwatani, and the French government, which is scheduled to begin operations in late 2026 and is expected to supply approximately twenty percent of Japan’s future requirements for dysprosium and terbium.

    April 1, 2026
  • India lets export zones sell domestically as Gulf War disrupts imports

    New Delhi is activating a trade policy mechanism that will permit manufacturers operating within India’s Special Economic Zones to redirect a portion of their output toward the domestic market at preferential customs rates, a move originally conceived as a buffer against escalating American tariffs but now acquiring far greater urgency as the Gulf conflict disrupts maritime trade routes, inflates shipping and energy costs, and makes conventional imports simultaneously more expensive and less reliable.

    Under the new order, which takes effect on April 1 and runs through the end of March 2027, eligible SEZ businesses will be allowed to sell a capped share of their production, spanning chemicals, engineering goods, heavy machinery, textiles, footwear, pharmaceuticals, electronics, and consumer products, into the Indian domestic market while paying customs duties of roughly five to twelve and a half percent, significantly below the standard import levies that would apply to equivalent goods sourced from abroad.

    April 1, 2026
  • US gas abundance rests on an increasingly narrow geological foundation

    The United States has built its claim to global energy supremacy on the back of a shale gas revolution that transformed the country from a net importer into the world’s largest producer and exporter of natural gas within the span of roughly a decade.

    Yet beneath the triumphalist narrative of American energy dominance lies an increasingly uncomfortable structural reality: the vast and diversified demand base that US gas now serves; powering electricity generation, heating homes, feeding industrial processes, supplying petrochemical feedstock, and fueling a rapidly expanding LNG export complex, is being supplied by an ever more concentrated and geologically mature production base.

    April 1, 2026
  • China flips from top LNG buyer to Asia’s opportunistic seller

    China is leveraging its unique energy security position to extract maximum financial value from the Gulf crisis, reselling record volumes of liquefied natural gas onto a desperately undersupplied Asian spot market while its regional neighbors scramble to secure replacement cargoes at prices that have nearly doubled since hostilities began.

    Chinese firms reloaded between eight and ten LNG cargoes in March alone, the highest single-month total ever recorded, bringing the year-to-date resale volume to approximately 1.31 million metric tons across nineteen shipments, a pace that has already surpassed full-year totals for most prior years after just three months.

    April 1, 2026

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