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Venezuela’s new mining law faces old power structures
Venezuela’s post-Maduro government is attempting to open the country’s vast gold, iron, and bauxite deposits to international investment under a new mining law that has the Trump administration’s enthusiastic support.
But the initiative confronts a fundamental obstacle that no legislative framework or diplomatic endorsement can easily overcome: the sprawling mining regions of southeastern Bolivar state are effectively controlled by an interlocking network of Colombian rebel groups, local criminal organizations, and Venezuelan military units that have spent two decades building an entrenched and highly profitable illegal extraction economy.
April 13, 2026 -
Indonesia raises nickel ore price floors to plug budget gap from Gulf conflict subsidies
Indonesia is raising the minimum prices that smelters must pay for domestically mined nickel ore, a revenue-driven policy decision that will compound the cost pressures already bearing down on the country’s enormous processing industry from the Gulf conflict’s disruption of global sulfur and energy supply chains.
The new formula, effective Wednesday, increases price floors across all nickel ore grades and adds the value of byproduct metals including cobalt to the benchmark calculation, broadening the cost base that processors must absorb.
April 13, 2026 -
Australia and U.S. commit $849 million for rare earth refinery in joint financing
Australia and the United States are converting their critical minerals partnership from diplomatic framework into tangible financial commitment, with coordinated financing offers totaling up to 849 million Australian dollars for a Tronox Holdings rare earth refinery project and a further one billion Australian dollars for Ardea Resources’ nickel-cobalt development in Western Australia.
Export Finance Australia and the US Export-Import Bank each issued matching letters of support, splitting the potential funding equally between the two allied institutions in what represents one of the most concrete joint financing actions to emerge from the bilateral minerals agreement signed at the White House last year.
April 13, 2026 -
China’s rare rarth producers raise prices by 45% in steepest hike since 2023
China’s dominant rare earth producers have announced the steepest quarterly price increase since Beijing reformed its pricing mechanism in 2023, raising second-quarter concentrate prices by approximately forty-five percent to 38,804 yuan per metric ton. The hike, disclosed through company filings by China Northern Rare Earth and Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Union, sent shares across the sector sharply higher, with Baotou gaining as much as 8.5 percent in a single session.
The pricing signal is unambiguous: supply is tightening and Beijing is comfortable allowing, or actively encouraging, domestic producers to extract significantly more revenue from a commodity over which China exercises near-monopolistic global control. The forty-five percent quarterly increase is not a marginal adjustment reflecting routine market fluctuations.
April 13, 2026 -
Gulf conflict compresses a decade of clean energy adoption into months
China’s clean technology manufacturers are emerging as among the most direct commercial beneficiaries of the Gulf conflict, as the energy price shock radiating from the Strait of Hormuz closure drives a surge in overseas demand for the batteries, energy storage systems, solar inverters, and electric vehicles that Chinese firms produce at scale and at prices no competitor can match.
The crisis is functioning as an accelerant for adoption decisions that might otherwise have taken years to materialize, compressing the timeline on which households, businesses, and governments in energy-importing nations conclude that dependence on fossil fuels is an unacceptable vulnerability.
April 13, 2026 -
Great power rivalry meets record debt, and the Gulf crisis is making both worse
The great power competition between the United States and China is unfolding under fiscal conditions that have no precedent in the modern era of strategic rivalry. Unlike Britain after the Napoleonic Wars, which systematically reduced its debt burden to preserve the financial capacity for future conflicts, today’s major powers are entering a period of intensifying geopolitical confrontation with government balance sheets already stretched to historic extremes.
The United States, China, France, the United Kingdom, and Japan all carry gross public debt exceeding one hundred percent of GDP, and the costs of responding to simultaneous crises, the wars in Iran and Ukraine, the collapse of the post-Cold War security architecture, and the race to decouple strategically sensitive supply chains, are pushing those ratios higher at the very moment when borrowing costs have surged.
April 13, 2026 -
Germany cuts fuel taxes by €1.6 billion instead of fixing the vulnerability
Germany’s governing coalition has patched over an internal rift to deliver a 1.6-billion-euro fuel price relief package for consumers and businesses, cutting energy taxes on diesel and petrol by approximately seventeen euro cents per liter for two months.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz framed the intervention as a direct response to the Gulf conflict, stating bluntly that the war is the real cause of the economic difficulties Germany is experiencing, a rare instance of a major Western leader drawing an explicit causal line from the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran to domestic consumer hardship.
April 13, 2026 -
Physical European crude hits all-time high after Middle East diplomacy fails
The fragile ceasefire between Washington and Tehran has collapsed into an even more aggressive posture, with the United States now preparing to impose a naval blockade on the Strait of Hormuz to restrict Iranian oil exports, a military escalation that has driven physical European crude prices to all-time highs and shattered any remaining hope that the diplomatic process initiated just days ago would lead to a durable de-escalation.
The distinction between financial and physical pricing has never been more stark or more consequential. Brent crude futures for June delivery rose six percent to above one hundred dollars per barrel on Monday, a level that sounds severe but remains well below the 2008 all-time futures high of 147 dollars.
April 13, 2026
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