WNA Globe

World News by Wild Rose

#global trade ร—

Crisis surge or lasting shift? Chinaโ€™s solar exports double in a month

Chinese solar exports surged in March, doubling to a record high as demand accelerated across dozens of markets, according to a new report. The spike comes as global energy systems react to renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and the dual blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran and the US. The Persian Gulf shipping corridor, a critical chokepoint for global oil and gas flows, has become a focal pressure point amid escalating tensions that began on February 28 with US-Israel...

The UAEโ€™s exit from Opec could bring โ€˜even bigger troubleโ€™: Chinese expert

The United Arab Emiratesโ€™ decision to leave a global cartel of major oil-exporting countries is seen to reflect a widening fracture within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The UAE announced on Tuesday that it would leave the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and the wider Opec+ alliance, effective on Friday. The country joined the group in 1971, though one of its emirates โ€“ Abu Dhabi โ€“ joined in 1967. The UAEโ€™s Ministry of Infrastructure said in a statement that the...

Chinese manufacturers recalibrate overseas expansion plans in wake of Iran war

With domestic profits narrowing and production capacity expanding, Chinaโ€™s firms are continuing to widen their overseas footprints in search of new, more lucrative markets. In this series, we examine China Inc.โ€™s next phase of โ€œgoing globalโ€ and the complex, challenging international environment its companies have chosen to enter. When Lawrence Wong decided to set up a toy factory in Vietnam last year, he had a clear plan: 600 square metres (6,458 sq ft) of floor space at the start of 2026, with...

Bye-bye, US? Why Chinaโ€™s trade with Africa benefits from Trumpโ€™s policy volatility

Africa was Chinaโ€™s fastest growing export market in the first quarter of 2026, up 32.1 per cent year on year to US$60.66 billion, according to customs data, reflecting a continuing shift away from American trade. The growth outpaced other regions of the world, driven by high-value shipments such as machinery and vehicles as well as hi-tech equipment, including solar and battery technology. It continued a trend of Chinese manufacturers turning to the continent to offload excess capacity,...

Which countries are most vulnerable as US imposes its own blockade in Persian Gulf?

As the US imposes its own blockade on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz following the collapse of talks with Iran at the weekend, we take a look at how major economies in Asia and Europe could be affected by further restrictions on passage through one of the worldโ€™s most critical choke points for energy supplies. Who is most vulnerable in this energy crisis? According to a recent report by Japanese investment bank Nomura, the regions most exposed to the tensions in the Persian Gulf are Asian...

World faces food โ€˜catastropheโ€™ if Strait of Hormuz disruption persists: FAO

Global agriculture is highly exposed to the blockage of waterways, risking higher commodity prices and food inflation.

Energy prices may take โ€˜monthsโ€™ to normalise, despite ceasefire: Analysts

There needs to be a predictable and stable flow of cargo through the strait before markets can stabilise, experts say.

AI fuels global trade growth as China-US flows shift, McKinsey finds

Artificial intelligence has emerged as the driving force behind global trade growth, fuelled by a surge in data-centre buildouts at a time when geopolitical tensions are redrawing trade flows, according to McKinsey & Company. Global trade grew 6.5 per cent last year, outpacing the world economy, with AI-linked goods accounting for about one-third of that increase, McKinseyโ€™s research showed. The category โ€“ including semiconductors, graphics cards, routers and servers โ€“ has been propelled by the...

For Gulf states, geography is both a generous and treacherous patron

The Strait of Hormuz blockage is being felt far and wide. While the world struggles with higher pump prices, key energy exporters such as the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar face severe economic setbacks. In Gulf states serving as air hubs, expats and affluent locals are scrambling for the exit. The discovery of oil transformed Arabian deserts into rich petro-states. Knowing this wealth would not flow forever, the states leveraged their strategic locations to become air traffic hubs....