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Iran’s War Is Rewiring the Aluminium Market
The war involving Iran is no longer a distant geopolitical shock for the aluminium industry. It is now a direct market force, tightening supply, lifting premiums, and exposing just how fragile global aluminium logistics can be when one strategic corridor comes under pressure.
For producers, traders, and industrial buyers, the implications go far beyond a temporary price spike.
Apr 76 min read


Beyond Barrels: How the Middle East Crisis Is Rewiring Global Supply Chains for Fertilizers, Gases, and Critical Materials
What began as a shock to oil and gas markets has rapidly morphed into a broader supply chain crisis. About a third of the world’s traded urea and up to half of global sulphur exports are linked to Gulf producers and seaborne routes that are now severely constrained. Qatar alone normally supplies roughly one‑third of global helium, a niche market with almost no spare capacity elsewhere. The result is a cascade of second‑order effects that are hitting Asia, Africa, Europe and L
Mar 2610 min read


Bypassing Hormuz: How Asian FOB and CIF Flows Can Keep EN590 and Jet A1 Moving
Asian refiners, power utilities, and aviation hubs are being squeezed by the Hormuz crisis, which has choked off traditional Gulf export routes just as regional demand recovers. In this context, reliable FOB supply out of Jurong and other Asian ports —paired with CIF cargoes on an ASWP basis— offers a concrete way for traders and end‑users to secure EN590, Jet A1, and other refined products without waiting for geopolitics to normalize.
Mar 239 min read


Fault Lines in the Barrel: How the Ukraine and Iran Wars Rewired Global Energy in Four Turbulent Years
Since early 2022, the Russia–Ukraine war and the escalating Iran–Israel confrontation have combined into a twin shock that has redrawn the global energy map. Together they have fractured long‑standing trade routes, birthed parallel market systems, and injected structural volatility into pricing, logistics, and policy.
Mar 209 min read


Middle East Conflict Turns Into a Global Catalyst for Renewables
As crude and LNG flows out of the Gulf are choked by attacks and the near‑closure of the Strait of Hormuz, governments and corporates are reframing renewable energy from a climate option to a national security imperative. This article unpacks what the conflict means for oil and gas balances, how it is reshaping risk premia and supply strategies, and why it is turbo‑charging investment narratives around renewables and storage.
Mar 1912 min read


Middle Corridor Steps Into the Energy Spotlight as Hormuz Crisis Deepens
The Trans‑Caspian International Transport Route (TITR) –the Middle Corridor– is emerging from the sidelines as a strategic, if imperfect, alternative for both containerized goods and selected energy flows between Asia and Europe. Initially framed as a workaround to war‑related risks in the Black Sea and the Red Sea, the Middle Corridor is now being stress‑tested by an unprecedented combination of container diversion, fuel trade rerouting and geopolitical pressure.
Mar 1812 min read


Betting Big on Green Molecules: How EU-Backed Funds Are Rewiring Spain’s Hydrogen Future
Spain’s green hydrogen story is moving from strategy papers to bankable reality. The latest milestone is Brussels’ approval of a 440 million euro Spanish aid scheme to support renewable hydrogen production through the European Hydrogen Bank’s “Auctions‑as‑a‑Service” (AaaS) mechanism. This second Spanish participation under the AaaS framework is financed with Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRTR) funds and is explicitly tailored to scale industrial‑grade electrolysis capacity.
Mar 1610 min read


Russia Sanctions Crossroads: What Druzhba and Trump’s Oil Shift Mean for EU Fuel Markets
The EU is being squeezed between its long-term strategy to phase out Russian energy and short-term pressure to keep fuel prices under control amid war-driven volatility and supply disruptions. At the same time, Washington is moving in the opposite direction, with President Donald Trump signaling a partial easing of oil sanctions on Russia to cool prices, while Brussels publicly rejects any relaxation of its own measures.
Mar 1210 min read


When Hormuz Closes: Force Majeure, Disrupted Flows and Why Diversification Now Matters More Than Ever
The ongoing security crisis in and around the Strait of Hormuz has turned a boilerplate paragraph in oil and gas contracts into a front‑page market driver: the force majeure clause. Roughly 20% of the world’s seaborne oil and a significant share of globally traded LNG normally cross this narrow chokepoint between Iran and Oman, so when tanker traffic drops toward zero the legal and logistical consequences ripple through every refined products desk on the planet.
Mar 910 min read


Hormuz, Red Sea, and the New Oil Risk Premium: What Middle East Escalation Means for Crude, Diesel, Gasoline, and Gas Prices
For petroleum markets, “Middle East risk” is not a headline—it’s a transmission mechanism. When conflict intensifies around the Persian Gulf and its maritime chokepoints, prices don’t move only on barrels lost; they move on barrels that might not move, ships that won’t sail, and insurance that won’t clear.
Mar 56 min read


Winners and Losers in Oil: How the Middle East Conflict Is Rewiring Global Crude and Refined Product Supply
The escalation of conflict involving Iran and its neighbors has turned the Strait of Hormuz into a high‑risk chokepoint for global energy flows, with up to 15 million b/d of Gulf crude and products potentially at risk of disruption. Oil prices have already jumped sharply, with Brent moving from the low‑70s to well above 80–90 USD/bbl in early March, while European gas and LNG benchmarks have spiked on fears over Qatari exports.
Mar 410 min read


Hormuz Shock: War-Risk Insurance Spike Threatens Gulf Flows of Oil Products
For traders, suppliers, buyers and decision makers across the oil products value chain, the priority now is to integrate this new risk regime into commercial strategy: reassessing route economics, diversifying sourcing, tightening contractual language and stress‑testing logistics under prolonged Hormuz disruption scenarios.
Mar 35 min read


When Hormuz Closes: How a Military Escalation in Iran Rewires Global Oil and Products Trade
A military intervention in Iran that leads to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz transforms a long‑recognized chokepoint into a global shockpoint for crude, products and LNG. Between 20% of global oil and gas flows and one‑fifth of LNG trade are directly exposed to this single waterway, and even with alternative routes, the system cannot fully replace Gulf exports in the short term.
Mar 212 min read


Venezuelan Heavy Crude Heads East: How Indian Refiners Are Re‑Shaping Global Oil Trade Flows
This article explores how Venezuelan crude destined for India could reshape trade patterns, refinery economics, spreads and market prospects over the rest of the decade, and what this means in practical terms for traders, petroleum product sellers and buyers, and corporate strategy teams.
Feb 2614 min read


Europe’s Green Hydrogen Push in 2026: From Grand Targets to Real Projects
Hydrogen is moving from vision to execution in the European Union: by early 2026 the regulatory framework for renewable (“green”) and low‑carbon hydrogen is largely in place, key funding pillars are operational, but real delivered volumes and infrastructure still lag far behind the 2030 targets of 10 million tonnes of domestic renewable hydrogen and 10 million tonnes of imports.
Feb 2413 min read


Global Oil and Gas Highways: Pipelines, Sea Lanes, Chokepoints and War's Rerouting
Crude oil, refined products and LNG reach global markets through a complex network of pipelines, tanker routes and strategic chokepoints. This article maps the world's primary energy transport corridors, their capacities, vulnerabilities and trading implications. Understanding how barrels and cargoes move—or get rerouted—directly impacts spreads, cracks and compliance strategies in today's sanctioned, volatile markets.
Feb 125 min read


India Resumes Fuel Exports to Europe Amid EU Sanctions on Russian Crude
India has successfully shipped its first fuel cargo to Europe since the European Union's ban on petroleum products derived from Russian crude took effect on January 21, 2026. Reliance Industries, India's largest refiner, partially offloaded a jet fuel shipment at Italy's Fiumicino port, signaling potential continuity in trade flows despite heightened sanctions. This development comes as global markets watch closely for disruptions in refined product supplies.
Feb 105 min read
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