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Middle East war: global economic fallout Paris, France, March 18 (AFP) Mar 18, 2026 Here are the latest economic events in the Middle East war on Wednesday:
The state-owned North Oil Company said it was sending an initial 250,000 barrels a day from its fields in the northern Kirkuk province through the pipeline, well below the 3.5 million barrels a day it has shipped in normal times from its southern Basra fields via the Strait of Hormuz.
The WTI benchmark was down about 1.5 percent at $94.7 a barrel in volatile trading, even as the United States hit Iranian missile sites near the key Strait of Hormuz and Tehran struck back at crude-producing Gulf neighbours. Stocks rose in Asia, and opened higher in Europe, also lifted by renewed interest in tech shares.
Mitsubishi Chemical and Mitsui Chemicals have cut output, Shin-Etsu Chemical said it would raise prices, and LG Chem warned it may not be able to fulfil some orders.
The IMO's 40-member council could vote Thursday on several proposed resolutions, including one to "establish a safe maritime corridor to allow the safe evacuation of seafarers and ships stranded in the Persian Gulf". However, if passed, resolutions remain non-binding.
The presidential chief of staff declined to elaborate on the route. About 70 percent of South Korea's oil imports normally pass through the strait.
The Fed is not expected to touch its rates, even as signs grow of a weakening labour market. The European Central Bank and the Bank of England follow Thursday.
Faced with an energy crisis driven by the war, Sri Lanka has begun rationing fuel and has also imposed a four-day working week starting Wednesday in a bid to reduce travel. burs-aha/md/lkd/ceg/lkd/dcp/gv/jhb |
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