International

Why power grids are a bottleneck for clean energy

Factors influencing diverse energy transition speeds worldwide

The shift from fossil fuels to low-carbon energy systems is neither uniform nor inevitable. Countries progress at different rates because the transition depends on a complex mix of economics, institutions, resources, technology, politics and history. Understanding these interacting factors explains why some nations race ahead with rapid renewables deployment while others move slowly despite clear climate and economic incentives.Core drivers that speed up or slow down transitionsEconomics and cost structures: Falling costs for wind and solar have made renewables competitive in many markets, but the full cost of deployment depends on local prices, taxes and, crucially, the cost of capital.…
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What central banks can do when shocks come from outside

Central banks and the challenge of external shocks

External shocks—ranging from commodity-price spikes, wars, and pandemics to foreign monetary tightening and sudden stops of capital—pose immediate and diverse challenges for central banks. The appropriate response depends on the shock’s nature (demand, supply, financial, or external liquidity), its persistence, and the economy’s structural characteristics. This article outlines practical tools, strategic choices, case evidence, and trade-offs central banks face when shocks originate beyond national borders.Classifying external shocks and the policy implicationsDemand shocks: Sharp contractions in global demand cut export earnings and weaken domestic production. Policy priorities typically pivot to sustaining economic momentum through rate reductions, ample liquidity, and targeted fiscal…
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How do Americans engage with local government: city councils, school boards, elections?

Looming Iran War: Xi’s Upper Hand in Trump Talks, Say Insiders

A crucial meeting between China and the United States is approaching under the shadow of geopolitical uncertainty.China continues moving forward with plans for a high‑level meeting between its leader Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump, even as turmoil across the Middle East adds complexity to the diplomatic landscape. The summit, now anticipated for mid‑May, is regarded in Beijing as a key opportunity to adjust its relationship with Washington amid persistent tensions and uncertainty.Sources close to internal deliberations indicate that Chinese officials regard the extended U.S. engagement in a confrontation with Iran as a factor that may have subtly altered…
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How inflation can be imported from abroad

When Global Prices Raise Local Costs: Imported Inflation Explained

Inflation does not originate only from domestic demand or wage pressures. Open economies routinely absorb price pressures originating overseas. Imported inflation occurs when increases in the prices of goods and services from other countries, or shifts in exchange rates and global supply conditions, transmit into domestic prices. Understanding the channels, conditions, and policy implications helps businesses, policymakers, and households manage exposure and respond effectively.Main channels of imported inflationExchange rate pass-through: When the domestic currency weakens, the local price of imported goods rises. Retailers, producers, and service providers sourcing inputs from abroad often pass higher import costs to consumers, raising headline…
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What it means to depend on a single energy supplier

Understanding Single Energy Supplier Reliance

Relying on a single energy supplier occurs when a household, business, community, or country receives most or all of its electricity, natural gas, heating fuel, or essential components for renewable technologies from one provider, whether that provider is a lone company, a specific foreign nation, a particular fuel source, or a single point within the supply chain; such dependence heightens vulnerability, as disruptions, cost surges, technical breakdowns, policy changes, or geopolitical tensions affecting that sole supplier can disproportionately impact consumers and broader systems.Types of Single-Supplier DependenceSingle company or utility: A region served mainly by one dominant provider responsible for delivering…
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Why power grids are a bottleneck for clean energy

The Dangers of Monopolistic Energy Supply

Relying on a single energy supplier occurs when a household, business, community, or country receives most or all of its electricity, natural gas, heating fuel, or essential components for renewable technologies from one provider, whether that provider is a lone company, a specific foreign nation, a particular fuel source, or a single point within the supply chain; such dependence heightens vulnerability, as disruptions, cost surges, technical breakdowns, policy changes, or geopolitical tensions affecting that sole supplier can disproportionately impact consumers and broader systems.Forms of Reliance on a Sole SupplierSingle company or utility: A region served mainly by one dominant provider…
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How global interest rates affect local living costs

Global Interest Rates: A Local Living Cost Analysis

Global interest rates set by major central banks and reflected in international bond yields shape the cost of money worldwide. That transmission matters for everyday prices—mortgages, rents, food, energy, and consumer credit—even when domestic central banks set local policy. This article explains the transmission channels, gives concrete examples and numbers, and outlines how households, firms, and policymakers experience and respond to global rate changes.Primary routes of transmissionGlobal interest rates help shape local living expenses through a range of interconnected pathways:Exchange rates and import prices: Higher global rates, especially in reserve currencies, attract capital to those currencies. That can depreciate local…
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How peace processes balance stability and accountability

Stability and Accountability: Key to Lasting Peace Processes

Peace processes confront a core dilemma: they must stabilize post-conflict settings swiftly enough to avert renewed fighting while still providing adequate accountability to address grievances, discourage future abuses, and secure justice for victims. Achieving this balance calls for a blend of political bargaining, security assurances, judicial and non-judicial tools, and sustained institutional reform. This article outlines the inherent trade-offs, reviews available mechanisms, analyzes major cases, distills empirical insights, and presents practical design guidelines for building durable settlements that avoid exchanging justice for temporary tranquility.Core tension: stability versus accountabilityStability demands rapid reductions in violence, the reintegration of armed actors, functioning institutions,…
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Why energy storage isn’t just about batteries

Energy Storage: More Than Just Batteries

The public discourse equates energy storage with lithium-ion batteries, and for good reason: batteries have enabled rapid advances in grid flexibility, electric vehicles, and distributed energy systems. Yet a comprehensive energy transition requires a broad portfolio of storage technologies. Different storage forms deliver varied durations, scales, costs, environmental footprints, and grid services. Treating storage as a single-technology problem risks technical mismatches, economic inefficiencies, and missed opportunities for resilience.The key capabilities that storage should offerEnergy storage is not a single function. Systems are valued for:Duration: milliseconds to seconds (frequency control), minutes to hours (peak shifting), days to seasons (seasonal balancing).Power vs…
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Israel’s new spymaster is a Netanyahu aide who believed war with Iran would topple the regime

Spymaster Appointment: Netanyahu’s Man Believed War Could Oust Iran Regime

A major shift in Israel’s intelligence leadership is taking shape as tensions with Iran persist, and earlier assumptions about how the conflict would unfold have not been realized, prompting renewed scrutiny of strategic choices, decision-making processes, and the future course of regional security policies.A significant transition is underway within Israel’s intelligence apparatus at a time when the country remains deeply engaged in a prolonged and complex confrontation with Iran. At the center of this shift is the upcoming appointment of Roman Gofman as the new head of Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence agency. His arrival comes after weeks of continued hostilities…
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