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  • Progress on EU-U.S. trade bill leaves core trust problem unresolved

    European Parliament lawmakers are advancing toward finalization of the legislative framework underpinning the EU-US trade agreement, though the trade committee chair Bernd Lange acknowledged that meaningful gaps remain between the Parliament’s position and that of EU member state governments.

    Lange reported that a second round of interinstitutional negotiations had narrowed differences on several key provisions, including the safeguard mechanism that would allow either side to impose emergency trade restrictions under defined circumstances, and the procedures for periodic review and evaluation of the agreement’s implementation.

    May 7, 2026
  • India moves to reinforce export support as war and tariffs squeeze trade

    India is moving to strengthen one of its main export-support mechanisms because the Middle East war is turning what had already been a difficult trading environment into a more persistent policy problem. New Delhi is discussing higher spending for the Remission of Duties and Taxes on Export Products scheme, or RoDTEP, and a five-year extension beyond its current September 30 expiry.

    The scheme refunds taxes and levies not otherwise rebated and covers more than 10,000 products across sectors such as agriculture, textiles, and engineering goods. The immediate significance is that the government is no longer treating exporter stress as a short-lived disruption.

    May 7, 2026
  • Iran war is boosting China’s metal exports and cleantech advantage

    China is emerging as one of the clearest industrial beneficiaries of the Middle East war, not because it was insulated from the shock, but because the disruption has hit some of its external competitors harder while simultaneously boosting demand for the very products in which Chinese manufacturers are already strongest.

    The Gulf conflict has cut aluminum output and exports from a region that accounts for about 9% of global primary supply, sent London aluminum prices to four-year highs, and tightened physical markets across Europe, the U.S., and Asia. At the same time, higher oil and gas prices have strengthened the case for electric vehicles, batteries, grid equipment, and solar systems, all sectors in which China has major scale advantages.

    May 7, 2026
  • Taiwan’s energy strain exposes the weak spot in its silicon shield

    Taiwan’s current energy strain is more than a temporary wartime supply problem. It is a live demonstration of how vulnerable the island would be in any serious Chinese blockade scenario. Taiwan had previously sourced about one-third of its LNG from Qatar and, after the Iran war disrupted Gulf flows, had to scramble for alternative supplies from countries such as Australia and the United States.

    That matters because LNG is not a marginal fuel in Taiwan’s system. It is one of the central pillars of the island’s electricity mix, and unlike oil or coal, it is much harder to store for long periods. The real significance of the halted Qatari shipments is therefore psychological as much as operational.

    May 7, 2026
  • Iran war is turning European energy suppliers into global backstops

    Equinor’s latest quarter shows how profoundly the Iran war has redrawn global energy trade flows. A company whose exports normally move overwhelmingly into Europe is now fielding urgent interest from buyers as far away as Australia and India, because the disruption of Gulf shipments has forced importers to search globally for replacement barrels and molecules.

    Equinor’s chief executive said customers in Asia who would normally call only occasionally are now in touch far more frequently, while the company recently sent a gasoline cargo from Norway’s Mongstad refinery to Australia, something it had not done in years.

    May 7, 2026
  • EU builds an energy security escape valve into methane rules

    The European Commission is preparing to give national authorities more room to go easy on oil and gas companies that breach the EU’s methane law if enforcing penalties would threaten energy security. Draft guidance would allow countries to delay sanctions during an energy supply crisis and, in some cases, even outside a formal crisis if punishing non-compliance could endanger supplies.

    That does not rewrite the methane law itself, but it would materially soften how it is applied just as tougher import-related provisions are due to kick in from 2027. The immediate driver is the collision between climate regulation and wartime energy insecurity. The EU methane law requires imported gas from January 2027 to meet monitoring and verification standards equivalent to Europe’s, with potential penalties of up to 20% of annual turnover for breaches.

    May 7, 2026
  • ASEAN confronts an external shock it can no longer ignore

    ASEAN’s summit in the Philippines shows how completely the Middle East war has spilled into Asia’s regional agenda. What should have been another meeting dominated by Myanmar, the South China Sea, and intra-ASEAN diplomacy is instead being shaped by fuel security, food risk, and the threat that external conflict could destabilize one of the world’s most import-dependent growth regions.

    Energy and food security are at the center of the two-day meetings and that the Philippines, as chair, is pushing ministers to advance an oil-sharing framework before the leaders’ summit. The immediate reason is obvious. ASEAN’s economies are highly exposed to disruptions in oil and LNG flows through the Strait of Hormuz, and the region has very limited insulation when global freight, insurance, and fuel costs surge together.

    May 7, 2026
  • Australia imposes a 20% gas reservation rule on east coast LNG

    Australia has taken a much more interventionist turn in east-coast gas policy, requiring LNG exporters to reserve 20% of supply for the domestic market from July next year. The measure applies to new contracts and spot-market volumes rather than existing agreements, and it will affect the three LNG export projects on the east coast tied to Origin, Shell, and Santos.

    Energy Minister Chris Bowen described the aim as creating a “modest oversupply” at home to push down prices and partly disconnect Australian consumers from international price spikes. The significance of the move is that it marks a structural break in how Canberra is managing gas. For years, east-coast policy relied on emergency powers and negotiated commitments rather than a permanent reservation rule.

    May 7, 2026

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