The United States is leading a G20 initiative pressing member nations, the IMF, and the World Bank to coordinate on fertilizer access as Middle East conflict disrupts global food trade supply chains, according to two sources familiar with the effort. Washington's push targets the multilateral apparatus directly, signaling concern that market disruptions have moved beyond bilateral fixes and require institutional response. Fertilizer supply constraints carry outsized downstream risk: input shortages translate quickly into reduced crop yields, higher food commodity prices, and acute vulnerability in import-dependent lower-income economies. The IMF and World Bank's involvement suggests potential financing mechanisms or emergency procurement frameworks may be under discussion, though specific instruments have not been disclosed. The initiative's success will depend heavily on G20 cohesion, a variable complicated by member states with differing trade exposures and relationships to conflict-adjacent supply routes. Watch for formal communiqué language at the next G20 ministerial meeting and any coordinated multilateral lending or procurement announcements tied to agricultural input security.
Iranian armed forces attacked a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, briefly halting traffic through the waterway. The strike threatens a fragile US-Iran arrangement and could push shipping insurance costs and oil prices higher.
The US has struck Iran, with President Trump citing an Iranian attack on a ship in the Strait of Hormuz as justification. The action raises immediate risks for global oil flows through one of the world's most critical shipping chokepoints.
The US struck ten Iranian targets on the second consecutive day of military action, putting a fragile ceasefire under serious pressure. The escalation raises immediate risks for Gulf shipping, global oil supply, and regional stability.
Venezuela's twin earthquakes, magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5, have killed at least 164 people and injured 971, interim president Delcy Rodriguez confirmed Thursday. The quakes are the country's strongest since 1900, collapsing buildings across Caracas and prompting a state of emergency, with the death toll expected to rise as