SET the right strategy in a fragmentıng global economy Contact us now GROW YOUR COMPANY IN THE FRIEND-SHORING ENVIRONMENT Contact us now

Read Industry Insights

  • Britain rescues Teesside CO2 plant amid war-driven supply fears

    Britain’s decision to spend £100 million to restart biogenic carbon dioxide production at the shuttered Ensus plant on Teesside is a reminder that the fallout from war in the Middle East is not confined to oil, gas, and shipping. It is now reaching into the supply of obscure but economically indispensable industrial inputs.

    The government said the funding would support three months of renewed output in order to prevent shortages of carbon dioxide used across food and drink production, healthcare, water treatment, and even parts of the nuclear sector. Ministers linked the intervention to supply risks created by the Iran war, rising gas prices, disruptions to European fertiliser production, and maintenance outages at other CO2-producing facilities.

    March 26, 2026
  • Slovakia’s ammunition revival mirrors Europe’s new defense economy

    The revival of Slovakia’s ZVS ammunition complex is more than a local industrial success story. It captures a much larger shift underway across Europe as rearmament, once treated as a temporary response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, starts to harden into a long-term economic and strategic trend.

    In Dubnica nad Váhom, a former Cold War arms center that fell into decline after communism collapsed, ammunition manufacturing has returned as a source of jobs, investment, and political importance. Slovakia now produces hundreds of thousands of artillery shells a year, up from roughly 30,000 before the war, while defense exports have jumped 2,200% over four years to €2.4 billion.

    March 26, 2026
  • EU chooses trade truce with the U.S., but hedged by safeguards

    The European Parliament’s vote to advance the EU-US trade deal marks a significant step toward stabilizing a transatlantic commercial relationship that has been repeatedly shaken by tariff threats, legal uncertainty in the United States, and deep unease in Europe about the political reliability of the Trump administration.

    Lawmakers backed legislation tied to the July 2025 “Turnberry” accord, under which the European Union would lower barriers on a range of US goods while securing a 15% tariff ceiling for most EU exports to the American market. But the vote was not a clean endorsement.

    March 26, 2026
  • China’s elite forums lose their edge as debate gives way to script

    Two of China’s most prominent international forums, the Boao Forum for Asia and the China Development Forum, are increasingly being seen by some foreign participants less as arenas for real debate and more as carefully managed showcases for official messaging. What once made these gatherings valuable was their perceived ability to expose senior Chinese policymakers to outside views, candid criticism, and global business concerns.

    The complaint now is that they have become more scripted, less open to controversy, and less important as venues for meaningful policy signaling. Several attendees described the events as more insular and more predictable than in earlier years, with fewer difficult topics addressed and noticeably less robust debate.

    March 26, 2026
  • Iran conflict reshapes LNG trade and Asia’s energy plans

    The war involving Iran has abruptly overturned what had been the dominant expectation for the global LNG market in 2026: that a wave of new supply, led by the United States and Qatar, would loosen conditions, moderate prices, and support another leg of demand growth across Asia.

    Before the conflict escalated, analysts broadly expected global LNG output to expand substantially this year as new liquefaction capacity came online. That outlook has now been badly damaged by two overlapping shocks: the disruption of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about one-fifth of global LNG trade, and physical damage to Qatari export infrastructure that has sidelined a meaningful portion of the country’s liquefaction capacity for years rather than weeks.

    March 26, 2026
  • Iran conflict sends Japanese aluminium premiums to 11-year high

    Japanese aluminium buyers have agreed to pay exceptionally high quarterly premiums for April-to-June deliveries, underscoring how the war involving Iran has rapidly spilled beyond energy markets and into industrial metals. The new agreements, set at roughly $350 to $353 per metric ton on top of the London Metal Exchange cash price, represent the highest level in about eleven years and a dramatic jump from the previous quarter.

    Because Japan is one of Asia’s most important importers of primary aluminium, the premiums negotiated by its buyers are widely treated as the benchmark for the region. In effect, these talks are now signalling that the disruption in the Middle East is no longer being treated as a temporary scare, but as a real supply shock with direct consequences for Asian manufacturers.

    March 26, 2026
  • Higher fossil fuel prices lift renewables’ case, not their valuations

    Europe’s renewable energy sector is being pulled in two directions at once by the war in Iran and the resulting spike in fossil fuel prices. On one side, the shock to oil and gas markets has strengthened the political argument for accelerating wind, solar, storage, and grid investment across the continent.

    The conflict has underscored a familiar strategic vulnerability for Europe: its continued exposure to imported hydrocarbons and to geopolitical crises far beyond its borders. As oil and gas prices have jumped sharply since the outbreak of the war, policymakers in import-dependent economies have renewed their push to build a more self-sufficient energy system rooted in domestic clean power.

    March 26, 2026
  • Asia’s petrochemical squeeze is reaching everyday consumer goods

    The Iran war is beginning to hit Asia not only through oil prices or headline shortages, but through the physical materials that sit inside everyday consumer goods. The disruption of Gulf energy and petrochemical flows is now feeding directly into the cost and availability of plastics, packaging, synthetic rubber and other petroleum-derived inputs used in products ranging from instant noodles and cosmetics to agricultural film, toys and snacks.

    That is why the story matters: the shock is moving beyond refineries and into the mundane, mass-market goods that shape daily life across the region. The core mechanism is naphtha and petrochemicals. Asia depends heavily on Middle Eastern oil derivatives, and the Strait of Hormuz disruption has sharply tightened access to naphtha, a key feedstock for plastics and chemicals.

    March 26, 2026

Couldn't see what your are looking for?
Type any keywords to search our insights database.
Also use regional and sectoral filters in the top menu bar.

Explore Our Services

Industry Insights

Elevate your business with QU4TRO PRO! Unlock the power of knowledge and gain access to comprehensive analysis, in-depth reports and market trends that will drive your business forward.

read more
Portfolio Management

Friend-shoring, onshoring, supplier diversification, sustainability. Companies have to adapt their operations to shifting market pressures and geopolitics in a fragmenting global economy.

read more
Corporate Consulting

The main challenge for businesses today is to find a way of achieving a sustainable competitive advantage in a market. Learn how we support you in gaining a leading edge competitive advantage.

read more
Government Relations

Without a comprehensive understanding of how politics affect your line of business in you home country or abroad, raeaching your objectives in a market have a slim chance.

read more

Get Top Insights Today

A concise daily brief for board-grade industry and investment signals.

Get actionable notes that codify signal detection, align decisions with policy calendars, price volatility into strategy, and convert uncertainty into sustained return.

By clicking subscribe you agree to our privacy and cookie policy and terms and conditions of use.

REQUEST A CONTACT BACK

Would you like us to contact you? Just submit your details and we’ll be in touch shortly.

    I would like to discuss:

    error: Content is protected !!