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Fallout from the impasse in the Strait of Hormuz is inescapable. Some of the world’s biggest and most promising economies are being starved. In Japan, which hopes to one day retake its place among global juggernauts, news outlets closely covered the recent arrival of a single shipment of oil. India, which pushed past Japan in terms of the size of its GDP not long ago, now finds itself hindered by a reliance on imported gas.
Meanwhile countries that have invested heavily in renewables are feeling pretty good about that right about now. It’s unclear how lasting all of this might be. A fundamental rewiring of infrastructure and political economies would be needed to make it stick. For now, anyway, at least one victor in a conflict that increasingly looks like a stalemate might be an energy mix long overdue for an update.
Far away, too close. This report in The Conversation details how a neutral country nowhere near the conflict, Switzerland, is being impacted: as its pharmaceutical industry is forced to find new materials, there may be a shift in pollutants. A separate piece in the South China Morning Post visits another bucolic patch far from the fighting, where American farmers now short on fertilizer usually shipped from the Middle East are resorting to a crop at the centre of US-China trade tensions.
'China is the clear winner.' That's according to this piece published by the Council on Foreign Relations. It’s not just the country’s leadership in renewable energy and batteries, it’s China’s dominance in “electrical infrastructure writ large”.
Another potential winner: nuclear energy. “I am 100% sure nuclear is coming back,” the head of the International Energy Agency told the Associated Press. A separate AP accounting of countries now ramping up nuclear ambition includes Bangladesh, Kenya, the Philippines, Rwanda and Viet Nam.
War-related inflation threw a nasty curveball to central bankers. Expectations for interest rate cuts that can juice economic growth gave way to acknowledgement that surging energy prices could spoil the party. As expected, the US Federal Reserve held rates steady this week. This piece in The Economist digs into the challenge faced by the incoming Fed chair: fewer cuts than expected, more sweet-talk.
The menú del día as economic indicator. People in Spain and other European countries are cutting back on spending as inflation expectations rise, according to The Wall Street Journal. A separate WSJ report notes that the European Central Bank and the Bank of England are also keeping rates steady as they assess war impacts.
In Russia it’s a different story. This piece in The New York Times reports on central bank efforts there to cut and keep cutting in a bid to breathe life into an economy weighed down by the cost of the war in Ukraine.
The hottest new asset is uncertainty. Wondering why you’re constantly reading about prediction markets? You can thank our 'polycrisis era.' (LSE)
Is $25 billion a lot? There’s a new assessment of the environmental impact of America’s many data centres. (NBER)
A world where AI numbers (actually) make sense. To make all those eye-popping valuations logical, this is what needs to happen. (Project Syndicate)
What’s the real price of oil? That is, why can a barrel of the weaponized commodity go for $78 in Kansas but $286 in Sri Lanka? (Bloomberg)
Green intentions short-circuited. Americans may want to buy electric cars again, but it’s not so easy anymore. (Inside Climate News)
Sitting on a massive stockpile. China has by far the biggest strategic oil reserve in the world, and it's not even close. (US EIA)
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