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  • Taiwan weighs AI chip controls to block China smuggling

    Taiwan is considering significantly stricter export controls on AI chip sales to China, a move that would align the island more closely with US restrictions and enable the criminal prosecution of semiconductor smuggling for the first time, even as it risks drawing a sharp rebuke from Beijing.

    The contemplated controls, under discussion as part of ongoing trade talks with the United States, would represent among the most far-reaching measures yet from President Lai Ching-te’s administration to safeguard Taiwan’s technological and national security interests, reflecting the island’s increasingly assertive posture in protecting the semiconductor industry that anchors both its economy and its strategic position.

    June 9, 2026
  • Fertilizer price retreat eases Gulf War food-inflation fears

    The risk premium that the Gulf conflict injected into global crop and fertilizer markets is rapidly evaporating as fears of prolonged supply disruptions fade, easing one of the most significant threats to food inflation that the conflict had created. Urea prices have plunged more than thirty percent since mid-April, wiping out the gains triggered by the war and dragging down the prices of corn, wheat, and other farm products, with the broad agricultural commodity index falling to its lowest level since early March.

    This dramatic reversal marks a significant turning point in one of the most worrying dimensions of the conflict’s economic impact, the threat to global food security that the disruption of fertilizer and energy supplies had raised.

    June 9, 2026
  • Germany turns to Canadian LNG to diversify gas security

    German energy firm Uniper has signed a preliminary agreement to secure liquefied natural gas from a major project on Canada’s Pacific coast, marking the latest step in an intensifying energy partnership between Germany and Canada and reflecting Europe’s determined effort to diversify its gas supply away from the dependencies that successive energy crises have exposed.

    The deal, a letter of interest for a possible offtake agreement of two million tonnes of LNG per year from the proposed Ksi Lisims export facility in British Columbia, follows a similar agreement by Uniper’s German peer SEFE last month, signaling a coordinated German push to secure Canadian gas supply.

    June 9, 2026
  • Europe recalibrates COP strategy after Brazil setback

    The European Union is recalibrating its strategy for this year’s United Nations climate summit, aiming for fewer and clearer goals supported by advance coalition-building, in an effort to avoid repeating the bruising experience of last year’s talks where the bloc struggled to advance its agenda despite its climate ambitions.

    An internal document prepared by the incoming Irish presidency, which will lead the EU’s approach to COP31 in Turkey in November, calls for a negotiating mandate that is shorter, sharper, and more strategic than in previous years, capturing the recognition that the bloc’s traditional approach has failed to deliver results commensurate with its ambitions.

    June 9, 2026
  • China’s LNG return tightens an already scarce global market

    Asian LNG demand is quietly recovering from the shock of losing nearly twenty percent of global supply to the Gulf conflict, with the region’s imports rebounding to a five-month high as top buyer China returns to the market and Japan, India, and other importers increase their purchases.

    The recovery, with regional arrivals on track to reach 21.83 million metric tons in June, the most since before the conflict began and above the level of a year earlier, signals that the world’s largest LNG-importing region is adapting to the loss of Qatari supply by securing cargoes from alternative sources, albeit at the elevated prices that the supply disruption has produced.

    June 9, 2026
  • U.S. targets Chinese solar and battery giants over military links

    The United States has added several of the world’s largest solar panel and battery manufacturers to a Pentagon list of companies it believes are aiding China’s military, escalating the technology and trade confrontation between Washington and Beijing into the clean energy supply chain that underpins the global energy transition.

    The designation of solar makers Trinasolar and JA Solar, battery producers EVE Energy and CALB, and major technology firms including Alibaba and Baidu represents a significant expansion of the effort to decouple American defense procurement from Chinese suppliers, with implications that extend well beyond the military domain into the broader clean technology relationship.

    June 9, 2026
  • India turns to Russian coking coal and nickel for resource security

    India’s state-owned Steel Authority of India and NMDC are exploring acquisitions of coking coal assets in Russia as New Delhi pursues a broader strategy to secure stable supplies of the critical raw materials its expanding steel industry and accelerating energy transition require.

    The exploratory talks, which included an Indian delegation visiting Russia last month for preliminary discussions with government and industry executives, reflect India’s determination to reduce its dependence on imported raw materials by acquiring direct ownership of overseas resource assets, a strategic approach that mirrors the resource security efforts being pursued by nations worldwide in response to the supply chain vulnerabilities that recent crises have exposed.

    June 9, 2026
  • India’s gold tariff hike revives a smuggling boom

    India’s sharp increase in gold import tariffs has triggered a resurgence in smuggling that industry officials project could exceed one hundred metric tons this year, as the elevated duties create grey market margins so substantial that smugglers can undercut legitimate banks and refiners while still earning enormous profits.

    The episode illustrates the perennial tension in commodity policy between the legitimate objectives of taxation and trade management and the unintended consequences that arise when the gap between official and grey market prices grows large enough to make illegal channels irresistibly profitable.

    June 9, 2026

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