Europe’s Hormuz Armageddon

Its Father Jupiter, not Mother Gaia, that the haughty Europeans should have prayed to.

From Tilak’s Substack

Tilak Doshi

European political and intellectual elites have spent the past few decades pushing the risk of imminent Climate Armageddon. Some of us can still picture the young Joschka Fischer, a Leftist of the Greens party who took oath of office as Environment Minister in the German state of Hesse wearing sneakers and jeans in 1985.

Since then — in the name of Gaia, the Greek Goddess of Earth – they have bludgeoned their citizens and straightjacketed their once mighty corporate titans that dominated the global chemical, automotive and precision engineering industries through most of the 19th and 20th centuries. Germany’s Energiewende, the EU’s Green New Deal and the UK’s Climate Change Act unleashed punitive green mandates and carbon taxes. The Obama and Biden administrations joined Brussels in setting virtuous examples of ‘climate leadership‘, a defining criterion of energy policy in Western Europe and the US with the significant exception of President Trump’s two administrations. China, India and Russia and others in the Global South went along with the virtuous ride, but only so far as necessary to benefit from the promise of climate finance and reparations.

Alas, the Western alliance bet on the wrong god. It’s not Gaia but Neptune, the Roman God of the Seas, that threatens Western Europe with Armageddon right now. Europe’s civilisational threat is not from a ‘climate crisis’ but from a crisis in supplies of essential fossil fuels and collateral products such as fertilisers shipped through the Strait of Hormuz – the very commodities demonised by the Gaia cult. To be fair, it’s not Neptune causing tempests for wind-sailed boats that is at fault. But once Mars, the God of War, invokes his passions over Neptune’s domain, it behoves us to pay attention and understand maritime chokepoints and physical geography.

The unprecedented Strait of Hormuz closure

The Strait of Hormuz, connecting the Persian Gulf to the rest of the world, has always been the world’s most critical energy chokepoint, carrying roughly one-fifth of global oil and LNG and delivering cargoes from Middle East producers mainly to Asia, with smaller volumes to Europe, the US and the rest of the world. Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz is also affecting about a third of the world’s fertiliser trade, raising prices 30% to 40% and threatening food supply security around the world.

It also accounts for large shares of the global supply of sulphuric acid and helium, which are key to important chemical processes in fertiliser manufacturing, phosphate fertiliser production, metals refining, semiconductor fabrication and medical imaging. The Middle East accounts for 45-50% of global seaborne sulphur trade. Qatar alone supplies around 30-36% of global helium production.

Iranian officials have often made threats to the security of the shipping but the Government has never actually attempted to close the straits. The Strait of Hormuz thus has never been blockaded, although shipping traffic was badly affected during the ‘Tanker War’ phase of the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war. The spate of tanker attacks and vessel seizures in 2019 heightened the sense of vulnerability of Asian countries to disruptions of their oil and gas supplies from the Middle East. Japan’s chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga, for instance, stated in May 2019 after the tanker attacks in the straits that it is a “matter of life and death of our country in terms of energy security”.

The US-Israeli strikes on Iran that began on February 28th triggered an immediate cascade in global energy trade. Lloyds of London withdrew marine insurance, tankers turned away and maritime traffic traversing the strait collapsed by over 90%. Oil prices have surged more than 50% and the International Energy Agency and other analysts quantified the shock at 11-15 million barrels per day or roughly 10-15% of global supply. Analysts now forecast Brent between $150 and $200 under sustained disruption, especially if Kharg Island is hit. The energy arithmetic is merciless. Between 10-15% of world oil supply has effectively gone offline. Qatar’s Ras Laffan plant, the world’s largest gas liquefaction plant, with a capacity of 77 million tons per annum, lost 17% of its LNG capacity after an Iranian counterstrike, with repairs projected to take five years and costing $20 billion in lost revenue.

If there is no resolution to the war within the next few weeks, what could be a temporary and costly disruption to global energy and fertiliser trade would turn into a structural rupture in the fabric of the global economy with catastrophic impacts on people’s livelihoods around the world. The short-term pain will be manageable except for the most vulnerable countries, particularly some of the net energy-importing countries in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia, which are already showing signs of stress .

But a longer-term scenario for the closure of the strait is catastrophic. As always, when elephants fight, the grass gets trampled. The worst of its impact will fall on the most vulnerable in the poorer developing countries, dropping back into poverty and deprivation as energy and food prices soar. In the developed world, it is Western Europe and UK – already struggling with green policy-induced de-industrialisationhigh energy prices and deficit financing of overly-generous social welfare states – that face devastation.

Having already literally burned their energy bridge with Russia (in the form of cheap piped natural gas via Nord Stream), they will now have to compete with rich Asian countries such as Japan and South Korea for spot LNG cargoes, facing eye-watering prices for all those without long term LNG supply contracts.

The collapse of the old energy order?

Just over 80 years ago, in 1945, Franklin Roosevelt sealed the foundational bargain with King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud aboard a US Navy destroyer in the Red Sea: American military protection for the House of Saud in exchange for secure Arabian oil flows to Western markets and the recycling of petrodollars into US Treasuries.

That pact, which underwrote Bretton Woods long after Nixon abandoned gold convertibility in 1971, is under increasing stress. The crossing of the global financial Rubicon occurred when the collective Western alliance expropriated half of the Russian Central Bank’s foreign exchange reserves held offshore – which had totalled some $630 billion – and blocked key Russian banks’ access to the SWIFT international payments system in 2022 upon the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war. For developing countries such as Brazil, India, China and South Africa among others in the BRICS+ bloc, they see an imperative to ensure they do not become the next victims of a globalising West wielding its dominance in international financial institutions. Today, for many leaders in the Global South, the “rules based international order” continually proclaimed by Western leaders might appear as cruel deception.

The petrodollar is fraying at the edges as Tehran’s gunboats, drones and missiles effectively convert the waterway into an IRGC-operated toll booth. Some 26 ships have been granted safe passage through the Strait by the IRGC, paying a reported $2 million per tanker fee predominantly in petroyuan, crypto or gold. According to Pepe Escobar writing for the financial blog ZeroHedge, IRGC-linked brokers run background checks on vessel ownership, flag, cargo and crew and approved tankers receive VHF clearance through a narrow five-mile corridor between Qeshm and Larak island. Each transaction bypasses SWIFT and trade sanctions simultaneously. What years of BRICS declarations could not achieve, a de facto chokepoint has delivered under fire. Multipolarity is being born in the Persian Gulf (and in Ukraine’s Eastern provinces), not in conference rooms.

Western Europe’s energy karma

Europe is the first developed regional energy domino to fall. For two decades the continent has pursued an ideological energy experiment: Energiewende, nuclear phase-outs, punitive carbon pricing and ever-escalating Net Zero targets that deliberately sever its access to affordable, dispatchable hydrocarbons. The latest EU Parliament commitment to 90% CO2 cuts by 2040 is merely the latest chapter in that self-harm. The result, even before Hormuz, was Europe’s industrial base hollowing out, households paying the highest electricity prices on earth and an economy dependent on expensive spot market LNG cargoes (relative to long term LNG sales contracts). With a history of banning fracking, shutting down nuclear and coal power plants and marginalising the full potential of North Sea resources (with the non-EU exception of Norway), the EU and UK face their energy karma. Haughty Europeans are paying the price for their own energy folly.

Now the bill is due in full. Asia is already rationing, since 80% of the oil and 90% of the natural gas that normally flowed through the strait went east to Asia. Countries there are now rationing fuel, ordering workers to stay home two to three days a week and desperately shifting back to coal for power generation. Rich Asian nations such as Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore can still compete for remaining cargoes. Poorer ones — India foremost among the large developing countries — have already begun rationing petrochemicals and LPG. China has ordered its top refiners to suspend exports of diesel and gasoline, prioritising domestic demand and drawing down on its massive crude oil reserves. Japan, Korea and India have already announced a return to coal to offset the loss of 10-15 million barrels per day from global oil markets. Sub-Saharan Africa, lacking the financial firepower, slides toward energy shortages and the civil strife that follows.

The broader strategic shift is now unmistakable. The United States, the world’s largest oil producer and a net exporter of refined products, retains strategic depth; Europe possesses no such buffer. Washington retains leverage: shale output may have plateaued, but the US can still calibrate exports to shield domestic gasoline prices ahead of US mid-term elections. Geopolitically, Europe’s humiliation is total. Europe’s sanctions on Russia — intended to cripple Moscow — have boomeranged into a structural energy crisis for UK and Western Europe. The same policymakers bet the continent’s future on intermittent renewables now confront the logical endpoint of their strategy. Its leaders have burned every bridge to Moscow. Russia continues exporting oil as the US temporarily lifted sanctions in mid-March to alleviate the price impact on global oil markets.

The trillions of dollars spent globally subsidising renewables and EVs over the past two decade now stands exposed as the most expensive strategic misallocation in modern history. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has shown that access to affordable, abundant supplies of oil and gas remain critical to national survival. The green transition was never a transition. It was a self-imposed vulnerability that has left Europe strategically naked in a multipolar energy contest.

The physics of hydrocarbons

European policymakers speak of rationing, rolling blackouts and tighter border controls as though these can substitute for energy realism. They cannot. The rational course — lift sanctions on Russia, negotiate seriously over Ukraine, abandon the Net Zero dogma — is politically radioactive precisely because it requires admitting that their energy policy is Lysenkoism reborn. Yet the alternative is civilisational erosion: de-industrialisation, supply-chain collapse and the permanent loss of strategic autonomy.

History is rarely kind to civilisations that mistake ideology for physics. The Strait of Hormuz has delivered a corrective lesson written in energy geopolitics. Fossil fuels do not negotiate with virtue signals. Supply chains do not run on Brussels’s green slogans. And the haughty European ruling class that alienated hydrocarbon suppliers while betting the continent’s future on intermittent wind and solar is discovering the limits of its own propaganda. Europe’s Hormuz Armageddon is not merely an energy crisis. It is the moment the post-war geopolitical illusion ends — and the real multipolar world, cold, hard and unforgiving, begins.

A version of this article was first published in the Daily Sceptic (https://dailysceptic.org/2026/04/02/europes-hormuz-armageddon/)

Dr Tilak K. Doshi is the Daily Sceptic‘s Energy Editor. He is an economist, a member of the CO2 Coalition and a former (cancelled) contributor to Forbes. Follow him on Substack and X.

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Bryan A
April 3, 2026 10:26 pm

And the Irony lies in the simple fact that Europe (EU) and its individual states (Germany) even the UK wouldn’t need to be reliant on shipping through Hormuz if they allowed tracking and North Sea Exploration. Even That oil wouldn’t be needed if they did what France did decades ago and started building Emissions Free Nuclear Generation. They could even have a reliable supply of energy for recharging EVs on the grid without the need for expensive, explosive back-up batteries.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Bryan A
April 3, 2026 10:51 pm

[“if they allowed tracking ” ]

Should that be Fracking ??

Bryan A
Reply to  1saveenergy
April 3, 2026 11:28 pm

Yep…aaaaah hate autoreplace!!!

Reply to  Bryan A
April 4, 2026 6:19 am

It’s often said that AI is just autoreplace on steroids. My limited use of it for the past month is that is way more than that. I’ve had it generate images for me (ChatGPT) and I’m amazed at what it comes up with.

Bryan A
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 4, 2026 7:38 am

Oh yea, most of the WordPress ADs here have AI generated imagery and many of those are unbelievable. Though most of the ads themselves appear to be for Internet scam ideas and products.

Reply to  Bryan A
April 4, 2026 8:22 am

Hindsight….if Putin hadn’t invaded Ukraine four years ago plus Trumplification in the Middle East….the decisions to utilize Russias cheap natural gas would have looked sound…still a bad supply redundancy decision…sorta like putting your farmers out of business cuz what they grow can be imported at less cost….

Phillip Chalmers
April 3, 2026 11:08 pm

Considering just how expensive and extensive the preparations Iran has made to become conqueror of the world, blocking the Strait would have been very expensive for them.
This will hurt the fat cats of Iran as much as the rest of the world.

Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 1:01 am

It hurts China more than anybody. When Hormuz is closed, or just disrupted, major suppliers from the area are cut off for China, who imported a significant amount from Iran, at the same time driving up the price of oil on the global markets. Whatever oil China buys elsewhere is much more expensive.

Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 1:28 am

Glad the high price don’t hit the US consumer…oh wait…

Derg
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 2:13 am

It’s a good thing Europe is nut zero. They don’t need hydrocarbons…they already have the cheapest energy 😉

Reply to  Derg
April 4, 2026 5:14 am

Yes, Starmer says the solution to the UK’s energy problems is to build more windmills.

Clueless. Labour’s take on this situation is not to increase domestic oil and gas production but to build more windmills.

The real problem is that the UK does not have anyone in leadership that can think straight.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 6:25 am

I heard him say that- and I hardly ever listened to him but I wanted to see what he’d say now- and was amazed that he’s doubling down on more green energy. Maybe he has nightmares of the planet burning up from watching Bill Nye torching a globe. Nye did that to terrify the children and moronic politicians.

MarkW
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 4, 2026 8:58 am

moronic politicians.”

That’s redundant.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 9:10 am

Unfortunately for Starmer Mad Ed, unbelievably, has a very strong support base among Labour MPs, possibly more support than Starmer himself. So there is nothing to stop the fool and his pursuit of Net Zero. This is not going to end well!

Reply to  Derg
April 5, 2026 3:41 am

Most reliable too. 😆😅🤣😂

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 5:09 am

My gasoline price is up just about a dollar per gallon.

A very small price to pay to rid the world of murderous Mad Mullahs in possession of nuclear weapons.

During Biden’s term the price of gasoline was much higher than today.

Under Biden we could have expected gasoline prices to go even higher. Under Trump we can expect the current price increase will be temporary and will go lower.

William Howard
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 6:20 am

it was above $5 per gallon for almost the entire Obama first term – something the media won’t report on

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 6:21 am

Gas prices have gone up here in Virginia, but still not as high as they got as soon as Biden took office.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 6:26 am

bingo!

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 8:28 am

Tom,
Are you sure Trump’s mind isn’t just playing out a “Celebrity Apprentice” episode so that he can get to the “you’re fired” part ? Some things he has done are OK…but even a blind squirrel finds the odd nut…

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 8:59 am

If Biden hadn’t drained the strategic oil reserves, the prices would not have risen as much as they did.

William Howard
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 6:19 am

high prices v zero supply – not a hard decision

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 6:20 am

I never ask for personal information because it’s none of my business, but I am curious if you’re one of the US consumers concerned about high gas prices. Otherwise, it’s just a stupid comment.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 6:22 am

Did anyone say it wouldn’t? But it’s been this high in the past and we survived. Apparently your point is that this was shouldn’t have occurred ’cause we wimpy folks can’t survived with more expensive oil. At least the oil is there at the gas station and when I call my fuel oil company. It may be expensive but it’s still dependable.

Scissor
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 7:02 am

I just bought gasoline at Costco for $3.36/gallon. Still a bargain.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 7:18 am

Where?

Scissor
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
April 4, 2026 7:37 am

Arvada.

Bryan A
Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 7:40 am

Must not be in Commiefornia where Costco is $5.59/gal

Scissor
Reply to  Bryan A
April 4, 2026 7:50 am

Up until this Iran thing, stations in my town were having gas wars. I got gas a couple of times at under $2/gallon in the past few months, and most other times it was in the low $2s.

It’s going to be some time for those prices to come back.

Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 2:20 pm

Costco $3.35/gallon, regular, Kennesaw, GA, today. If your price is different, it’s probably due to state taxes.

Bryan A
Reply to  jtom
April 4, 2026 3:26 pm

In my case CA. Definitely high gas taxes as well as availability and the nagging fact that we import foreign oil.

Bryan A
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 3:17 pm

The “High Price” does hit US consumers though not the exorbitant tax fees associated in other countries. The difference is that the use of abundant fossil fuels has elevated most US citizens to a level where those prices are better afforded. Though Renewables have jacked up the price of electricity to the point that many poorer first world dwellers are faced with the choice of Food or Heat and lights.
.
Thanks to the significantly higher price of electricity brought by green energy generation sources, Approximately one in three (roughly 27% to 34%) U.S. households experiences energy poverty or insecurity, defined as the inability to meet basic energy needs due to financial constraints. In 2020, 34 million households reported difficulty paying energy bills or keeping homes at safe temperatures. This burden heavily affects low-income families and minorities, who may spend over 10% of their income on energy and is only exacerbated by unreliable, inconsistent and costly renewables.

SxyxS
Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 5:52 am

That’s not true.

Japan gets 90% of it fuel from the Middle East.
That’s where the real problem is.

China on the other hand is said to have reached 85% self sufficiency.
And while it gets 50%+ oil from the middle east,
the chinese ships are still passing the straits and China is said to have increased its oil imports from Russia 40 % this year – and that’s why US has started attacking Russian oil infrastructure in return via Ukraine proxy.

Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 6:28 am

OK Ivan.

Bryan A
Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 7:43 am

Well then the solution is simple. Every Oil Tanker flies the Chinese Flag until they’re well passed the strait and away from Iranian potential. Hang a magnetized plackard over the ship name so that it’s something in Chinese.

Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 8:39 am

We are now in WW3 “lite”, we need to hope it doesn’t go to WW3 “heavy”…but the failure of Western countries to be energy self sufficient or establish redundant supply lines….results in destructive military decisions….
For example, did you know, the Japanese preemptive attack on Pearl Harbor was brought about by what Japan saw as U.S. military dominance over SE Asian oilfields that Japan was relying on to meet their petroleum needs ?…

MarkW
Reply to  DMacKenzie
April 4, 2026 9:03 am

Japan was seeking dominance over all commodities, not just oil.

A. O. Gilmore
Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 8:22 pm

Not sure why you are being downvoted, what you say is correct. I guess there are a lot of magatards who are butthurt about China and Russia being able to trade oil? Trump tards are really getting weird now especially if you dare to criticize their leader or – God forbid – Israel. Can’t go there!

Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 6:20 am

And China won’t be buying much oil from V anytime soon.

Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 6:48 am

China is getting supply from Iran via Hormuz. It is switching to coal to replace LNG, and indeed has been profiting from reselling its othe LNG supplies to other countries.

If China were really hurting it would apply pressure to Iran to back off on the Hormuz blockade.

Petey Bird
Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 7:47 am

I have read and heard that China bound tankers have free passage. Don’t know if that is true.

Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 1:50 am

This will hurt the fat cats of Iran as much as the rest of the world.

Oooooh, I am not sure that is correct. Between their protection rackets, extortion, “tolls”, smuggling, etc., the IRGC (the “fat cats”) are thriving more vigorously than ever.

As usual with these kinds of regimes, it’s the majority of the population who are getting hurt.

Reply to  worsethanfailure
April 4, 2026 5:15 am

The U.S. needs to put these fanatics in their graves.

No more money for you!

Sweet Old Bob
Reply to  worsethanfailure
April 4, 2026 6:13 am

“the IRGC (the “fat cats”) are thriving more vigorously than ever”

Dead people thrive? Getting paid to vote by mail?

😉

Reply to  worsethanfailure
April 4, 2026 2:34 pm

Lol. 51 of the TOP leaders of the IRGC in Iran and Lebanon have been killed in the last two weeks. I don’t think you understand what the word ‘thriving’ means.

And those in the general population are providing the US with the locations of the remaining leaders, so we can continue taking them out with targeted attacks, sparing the general population.

SxyxS
Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 5:25 am

” connqueror of the world ”
said a guy from a country that, with 800 military bases and the parasitic petro dollar,
that is waging for 7 decades a fractional WW3 all around the world coutry after country after country,
regime change after regime change
and within this context and timeframe
for the 4th time against Iran (Mosssadeq 1953,Shah 1979(Pahlavi accussed the US&UK for his removal), and Saddam who got all the chemical weapons and target data from USA after the “wrong” people got into power in Iran ).

Now from a technical point of view :
Iran is now making twice as much money than before (the only thing that hurts are the bombs from the 2 terror states)
and controlling the straits is quite inexpensive as there are high cliffs all around =
Natural bunkers, perfect view, U- shaped bottleneck = easy to observe, easy to target,easy to hide

Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 5:57 am

the only thing that hurts are the bombs from the 2 terror states”

You’re dang right that those dictators better be terrorized by the air power of the US and Israel. There’s a reason why their own people are cheering us on- those madmen were terrorizing their own people.

MarkW
Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 9:10 am

According to many on the left, killing Jews and Americans helps the world.

Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 6:29 am

OK Ivan, or is it Mohamed?

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 4, 2026 7:21 am

Adolph

Reply to  Jeff Alberts
April 4, 2026 9:18 am

oh, I get it 🙂

MarkW
Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 9:08 am

So much paranoia and hatred. Having a military base means you are preparing to take over that country? Pricing oil in dollars is parasitic, but pricing them in yuan isn’t. Really.

Reply to  SxyxS
April 4, 2026 2:41 pm

Despite the rise in oil prices, the overall Iranian economy is expected to shrink by 10% due to the war’s disruption and damage. 

William Howard
Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 6:17 am

the mullas weren’t available for a comment

Scissor
Reply to  William Howard
April 4, 2026 7:11 am

The Supreme Leader’s flats in London would feel more spacious.

Phillip Chalmers
April 3, 2026 11:14 pm

I hope I am still alive when the Nuremberg style trials of all the world leaders who implemented Net Zero on the citizens of the world.
Imprisonment and death penalty always on the table.
It has been a crime against humanity – without a shadow of a doubt!

Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 2:09 am

Yes, the article is very informative but the author, Tilak Doshi, implies that the political classes doing this are making some kind of mistake in their thinking. Are you sure Mr Doshi? It seems to me that everything they’ve done and continue to do is deliberate and, judging by the inane, gormless, smiley punchable faces of cretins like Starmer and Miliband, they’re quite proud of their achievements.

Watch them continue.

Reply to  philincalifornia
April 4, 2026 6:24 am

My thoughts exactly. The economic and social destruction is a feature, not a bug. Orwell wrote “1984” as a warning. The liberals are using it as an instruction manual.

Reply to  philincalifornia
April 4, 2026 6:31 am

“smiley punchable faces”

I like that phrase! We have those running Wokeachusetts.

William Howard
Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 6:23 am

sadly just like COVID nothing will happen

Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 6:29 am

bingo!

John Hultquist
Reply to  Phillip Chalmers
April 4, 2026 9:03 am

 Don’t expect “Nuremberg style” trials. The anti-Carbon Dioxide (Net Zero) agenda is more like the hysteria of the witch trials. In the early modern period, from about 1400 to 1775, about 100,000 people were prosecuted for witchcraft in Europe and British America.
I can’t find any reference to bringing someone “to account” for participating in these events.  

April 3, 2026 11:28 pm

Don’t know if it is true, but I have heard that because EU countries have refused to let the USA use bases in the EU and even to use EU airspace, the US will be withdrawing 100,000 troops from EU bases, with all their gear.

I don’t know how much these bases contribute to the surrounding area and industries, but I would suspect a VERY substantial amount.

Another huge hit in the EU coffers, as well as Trump stopping payments to NATO.

Scissor
Reply to  bnice2000
April 4, 2026 5:48 am

We live in such interesting times. For example, no one could have predicted that the Supreme “leader” of Iran could pass from room to room without opening doors. (He can be slid under).

Chemists marvel at the remarkable mention of helium and sulfuric acid in the same sentence. Bunker busters, stealth aircraft, and RADAR jamming are no joke.

It would be fitting if Birkenstock came out with combat sandals, so as to avoid U.S. boots on the ground.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 8:22 am

It would be fitting if Birkenstock came out with combat sandals, so as to avoid U.S. boots on the ground.”

Hoplites! Assemble!

Reply to  bnice2000
April 4, 2026 6:33 am

No reason the EU nations can’t defend themselves against Russia or anyone else. More people than the US and about the same size economy. They just have to man-up…. er… uh.. person up!

George Thompson
Reply to  bnice2000
April 4, 2026 6:56 am

The EU and the other fools are just simply betting that the US will, as always, bail them out if push comes to shove…all they have to do is wait for the Dems to regain power in D.C.

April 3, 2026 11:50 pm

Remember, Columbus sailed west to avoid the middle east in 1492 because of the restraint of trade on the silk road implemented by Persians.

500 years later and nothing has changed.

Reply to  doonman
April 4, 2026 1:18 am

He saw the movie “300” and said, yeah, I’ll go the other way…

Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 6:37 am

Didn’t Alexander conquer Persia? Then he became known as Alexander the Great.

Donald the Great? Could turn out that way once this is all over. Looks messy now- but don’t all wars look messy, especially after a month?

MarkW
Reply to  johnesm
April 4, 2026 9:14 am

That was the Greeks, not the Persians.

Reply to  MarkW
April 4, 2026 1:51 pm

Yeah, the Spartans fought the Persians. They (Columbus and company) wanted nothing to do with them over there (the Spartans are like modern-day US Marines, and they also didn’t want to deal with the Persians).

It’s a joke, so never mind the explanation.

ferdberple
April 3, 2026 11:57 pm

The Europeans have announced a bold solution to boost energy production by a factor of 5! Instead of running their solar panels at 20% capacity factor, they’ll ramp them up to 100% using plentiful back radiation. Similar plans are underway to crank windmills from 30% to 100% as well, fueled by Europe’s endless supply of hot air.

Reply to  ferdberple
April 4, 2026 5:26 am

‘…they’ll ramp them up to 100% using plentiful back radiation.’

Yes! Just buy a standoff thermometer and measure it for yourself! Oh, wait….no.

Scissor
Reply to  ferdberple
April 4, 2026 5:51 am

Room temperature tea will become all the rage.

Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 6:39 am

Rumor has it that warm beer is enjoyed in the UK. Well, in The Family Guy cartoon they joked about that.

Scissor
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 4, 2026 6:43 am

Sometimes we have to sacrifice.

George Thompson
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 4, 2026 7:05 am

My father was in England before going to Normandy in 1944. He said the English were wonderful people except for the warm beer. 70 years later I remember he saying that on a very hot Chicago summer day as he had a very, very cold Old Style beer.. Some things never change?

Mac
Reply to  George Thompson
April 4, 2026 9:48 am

I had a Jaguar XKE years ago. It had Lucas gauges. Failed often Lucas made refrigerators same problem. Result ..warm beer.

MarkW
Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 9:15 am

When I was in high school, sun tea was all the rage.

Scissor
Reply to  MarkW
April 4, 2026 10:21 am

I remember. Then you brought it inside and put it in the fridge and/or in a glass with plenty of ice. It was difficult to get consistent flavor.

Reply to  Scissor
April 5, 2026 4:39 am

Whoops, didn’t get this far. 😁

Reply to  MarkW
April 5, 2026 4:39 am

Yes but wasn’t that just for brewing (steeping) it, after which you put it into the fridge (and/or served it over ice)?

Reply to  ferdberple
April 4, 2026 6:26 am

Just power the solar panels with lights at night, just like the Spanish did.

April 4, 2026 12:17 am

“Faced with new energy shock, Europe asks if reviving nuclear is the answer“
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4g8k8vq8gno
Surely the answer is yes.

“In 1990, Europe produced around a third of its electricity from nuclear power. That has now fallen to an average of 15%, leaving the continent “completely dependent on expensive and volatile imports” of fossil fuels, she said, putting Europe at a disadvantage compared with other regions of the world.“ (European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen), who, by the way, was in the German government in 2011 when they stopped nuclear generation after Fukushima.

Reply to  JohnC
April 4, 2026 5:22 am

Yes, the obvious answer for CO2-Phobes who want reliable electric grids is to go nuclear.

Unfortunately, the clueless people in charge are also nuclear energy-phobes.

They are stuck with trying to make windmills and solar work.

Windmills and solar are obvious failures but fools carry on.

A. O. Gilmore
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 8:40 pm

Oh yeah I saw muppets on LinkedIn today who said that 💯 renewable energy is possible- nay, necessary! And they are all so transparently self serving, working for universities in environmental studies or a renewable energy company or some sort of advocacy group. Clueless!

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  JohnC
April 4, 2026 8:40 am

The answer is yes. And don’t call me Shirley.

Bernie
April 4, 2026 12:29 am

It will be quite simple to reopen the Hormuz Strait as the Iranians clearly want to use it to ship out their oil products (assuming they still have some). The other gulf nations can threaten a tit for tat strategy if the iranians attack a ship they can expect one (or more) of their own to be treated the same way.

Bingo, no more ship attacks.

Reply to  Bernie
April 4, 2026 3:45 am

Which gulf nation is going to take out a Russian or Chinese tanker?

The IRGC (which is all that matters) have quite a strong hand left to play unless the US is willing to escalate to war crimes. (Obviously “war crimes” are a polite fiction. No one has a hope of making a prosecution. But life could be made very much less agreeable for senior US figures, especially if they want to travel.)

Hormuz is a tough ol’ nut, alright.

Scissor
Reply to  worsethanfailure
April 4, 2026 6:05 am

When Iranian funds are confiscated, it will become apparent that banks can be as powerful as bombs.

Reply to  worsethanfailure
April 4, 2026 3:06 pm

War crimes? The prohibition against hitting infrastructure was in Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions (also Additional Protocol I or AP I), a 1977 amendment. It was signed by the US but never ratified. It is not legally binding on the US in any way.

And the ‘strong hand of the IRGC has been amputated, all they have left is a cluster of semi-autonomous groups lacking a centralized command.

SxyxS
Reply to  Bernie
April 4, 2026 6:21 am

It is quite simple when one is ignorant.

The reality is a bit different.

All these artificial Sykes Picot tyranniess rely on average 90% on oil / gas/ byproducts etc.
(and since tourism is now gone its worse)
Irans Oil/GDP ratio is about 15% (thanks to sanctions they were forced to do some real stuff).

Iran has a highly educated population and even hypersonic missiles (while your and mine country have not).The gulf countries have lazy parasites
and Legions of slave workers doing the dirty works
and almost all sophisticated stuff is run by golden slaves( = white experts).

Tit for Tat = the gulf states die. Iran survives.

On top of tat:
Those countries have no water and completely rely on desalination plants, while Irans, now destroyed desalination plant, only contributed 3% to the water supply.
That’s why Iranians are not hitting the desalination plants(the one in Kuwait was hit by Israel to motivate the Kuwaities to participate a bit more).

Reply to  Bernie
April 4, 2026 6:41 am

America could easily simply confiscate all Iranian oil out of the Strait as was done for V oil. Makes more sense than landing marines on Kharg Island.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 4, 2026 12:53 pm

Not according to …
The 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS):
San Remo Manual on International Law Applicable to Armed Conflicts at Sea (1994):

If China buys oil in Iran, loads & transports it on a Greek ship (Two neutral flags), any confiscation is an act of aggression on those two countries.

Have you seen the size of China’s military … total military personnel of over 3 million.
USA = 2.2 million,
Russia = 3 million (guess which side they’ll be on).

So 6 million v 2.2 million

Not even Trump is stupid enough to open that can of worms.!!
Given that Trump’s net approval rating is now 10 points lower than the tosser Biden

( Trump’s net approval rating is -20,
down 1.1 points since last week.
36% approve, 57% disapprove, 7% not sure )
https://www.economist.com/interactive/trump-approval-tracker?utm_id=2178711

He needs to find a way out of this mess pronto.

Reply to  1saveenergy
April 4, 2026 3:54 pm

The United States is among the states that have not ratified the treaty. The convention resulted from the third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS III), which took place between 1973 and 1982. It is unenforceable in the US. In case you haven’t noticed, the size of the army is rather meaningless if you can’t control the air, Ukraine has proven the weakness of the Russian military, and if China loses its best customer it goes into an immediate recession and can’t feed its population.

Reply to  1saveenergy
April 5, 2026 4:27 am

“He needs to find a way out of this mess pronto.”

Trump should ask you- I’m sure you can tell him.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 5, 2026 6:42 am

Trump is too arrogant & narcissistic to listen to his own economic & military experts; he clears out all dissenting voices & has surrounded himself with ego-boosting yes men … so why would he ask me or anyone else ??

You voted for him, maybe you could help him out !!

Reply to  1saveenergy
April 5, 2026 7:44 am

And you know this for a fact because you’re soooo smart. And, proving how not smart you are, I didn’t vote at all! There are things I don’t like about him- like his personality, but I like most of his policies. So when he runs for a third term, I’ll vote for him. 🙂

1saveenergy
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 5, 2026 9:26 am

[“I didn’t vote at all”]

Then you should be ashamed of yourself.
In the past, 1,000s of people have died to make sure you have the right to vote; you should use that gift.

If you don’t like who’s on the paper, write ‘none of the above’.

Reply to  1saveenergy
April 5, 2026 1:11 pm

First time for me- at 76. I feel I no longer have to follow any rules by anyone. I appreciate what you’re saying- but this is Wokeachusetts and of course it went for that dingbat Harris by a vast margin- and I had better things to do that day. Also, my late wife would have poisoned me if she thought I voted for Trump so for the peace I abstained.

April 4, 2026 12:30 am

https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/in-batteries-we-trust

But a better future is coming, despite Donald Trump’s assault on renewable energy as he tries to drag us back into the fossil fuel past. Regardless of Trump’s chest-thumping, America is not the world. We account for only 15 percent of global energy consumption, compared with China’s 28 percent. And the rest of the world is moving rapidly to renewables, thanks to a technological revolution in solar power, wind power, and, less visibly, batteries.

The decline in battery prices has been incredible. It’s like nothing anyone has ever seen before. Big, strong men with tears in their eyes come up to me and say, “Sir, have you seen the progress in batteries?”

What will be critical for national survival is the speed nations can move towards renewables.

The Country That Made Me Think the U.S. is Behind | Renewable Energy in Uruguay

That happens when a country listens to its scientists, instead of destroying the school system and incite hatred against academics and universities.

leefor
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 1:05 am

Ah which scientists? Those that are panicking about grid reliability or those that ain’t? Because renewables are not despatchable, are not reliable (read 24/7), And charging batteries from unreliable production can’t guarantee that they will be charged when needed.

Bloomberg blames old tired and retired plant, but says nothing about the new improved solar and wind, which can apparently run 24/7. 😉

Scissor
Reply to  leefor
April 4, 2026 6:20 am

In the past they were called “useful idiots.”

missoulamike
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 1:31 am

Krugnuts? lololololololoLol

Reply to  missoulamike
April 5, 2026 7:47 am

Back in the day when I was a brainwashed Wokechusetts native- I actually read Krugnut’s books and sort of liked them. Once my brain recovered, I realize just how dumb he is. Typical academic whose knowledge of the world is reading what other academics have written, especially leftists academics- with little knowledge of the real world.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 2:17 am

We all know the kind of crap that you believe to be absolute truth but “Big, strong men with tears in their eyes come up to me and say, “Sir, have you seen the progress in batteries?”

You actually believe that the number of big, strong men doing that is a number greater than zero? Not even you could believe that.

Reply to  philincalifornia
April 4, 2026 5:30 am

Big, strong men crying over batteries.

That doesn’t sound very plausible.

Should a guy that cries over batteries be trusted?

No, that behavior would give me pause.

John Hultquist
Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 9:12 am

This reminds me to check the date on the battery in my truck.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  philincalifornia
April 4, 2026 8:50 am

Well, to be fair, they were either women pretending to be men, or vice versa.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 3:33 am

“compared with China’s 28 percent”

China’s energy consumption is a very large percentage of FOSSIL FUELS, especially COAL and OIL

China-energy
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 3:35 am

World energy consumption has just a very tiny percentage of wind and solar.

Krugman.. as usual, doesn’t have a clue what he is talking about.

world-energy-usage
John Hultquist
Reply to  bnice2000
April 4, 2026 9:14 am

 Erlich, Gore, Greta, Wadhams, …, Krugman

Scissor
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 6:53 am

Uruguay seems to want to lock itself into being a low GDP/capita country.

Nevertheless, in reality, they are fooling themselves about their consumption of fossil fuels. For example, they import fertilizers, plastics, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, tires, lubricants, etc.

And more directly to the point, they actually do import natural gas, LPG, gasoline, diesel fuel and even coal. They basically are liars about being “green” and people who believe in their lies are gullible, delusional or both.

Reply to  Scissor
April 5, 2026 7:50 am

Does it have any ff that it could exploit? Is it spending much of its limited national wealth on ruinables?

MarkW
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 9:18 am

Krugman? Has he been right about anything since before Reagan?

Huge drop in battery prices? Care to actually document that?

Dave Andrews
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 9:50 am

Paul Krugman – a long time anti nuclear fanatic like that other anti nuclear nut Mycle Schneider that you often like to mention!

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 4:10 pm
  • Ford & SKON: Scrapped a planned $11.4 billion EV battery joint venture, opting to license technology instead.
  • FREYR / T1 Energy: Canceled a $2.5 billion battery cell factory in Georgia, shifting focus toward solar manufacturing.
  • KORE Power: Abandoned plans to construct a major battery facility in Arizona, choosing to retrofit an existing site instead.
  • ICL Specialty Products: Cancelled a $575 million, 1,000-job battery factory in St. Louis following the withdrawal of a $200 million federal grant.
  • Fortescue: Canceled a $210 million EV battery factory in Detroit.
  • American Battery Technology Co.: Lost a $57.7 million Department of Energy grant for a Nevada plant.
  • Anovion: Had a $117 million grant for synthetic graphite production cancelled by the DOE. 
strativarius
April 4, 2026 1:59 am

Its Brother Miliband that the irredeemable British are stuck with.

Cue the confected outrage of the Greens at the idea of any development in Jackdaw and Rosebank… [mad Ed is still procrastinating and the clock is ticking]

Zack Polanski has accused Ed Miliband of “selling us all out”, in a post on BlueSky and X on Friday, April 4.
The post comes after The Times reported that Miliband is set to give the green light to the Jackdaw gas field, 150 miles off the coast of Aberdeen.Yahoo News

Fun fact. With the increased prices for a barrel of oil Rachel Reeves is trousering an extra £20 million each day in extra revenues. And like the old social workers and a light bulb joke, they’re going to have a meeting:

Reeves in line for £8BILLION tax windfall from soaring energy prices… but she STILL won’t cut fuel duty for desperate drivers as Starmer holds another Cobra meeting.DM

Taxes are approximately 52% of the cost of petrol and diesel, and I use the plural because the petrol is first taxed with fuel duty and the resulting sum is then taxed again with VAT.

We are in for a difficult summer and this amateur hour government is way out of its depth.

Reply to  strativarius
April 4, 2026 4:04 am

We are in for a difficult summer and this amateur hour government is way out of its depth.

Definitely. But let’s not single out this government. I don’t see any better government-in-waiting. Our whole political class is putrid to its marrow.

Reply to  worsethanfailure
April 4, 2026 5:35 am

Yes, it seems like the entire political class in the UK are CO2-phobes.

The UK won’t make any progress thinking like that.

It looks like it will take a serious crisis to break out of this mindset.

And it looks like that crisis is just around the corner.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 6:43 pm

In the same way that liberals are totalitarian wannabes, progressives really don’t like the idea of progress.

April 4, 2026 2:59 am

https://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Wind-Power/How-the-US-and-Europe-Are-Betting-Differently-on-Energy-Security.html

The push for homegrown offshore wind comes as a part of the bloc’s larger energy security strategy, which has been kicked into overdrive by the current global energy crisis reverberating out of the Strait of Hormuz. The current crisis marks the third time in four years that European energy markets have been kneecapped by their dependence on global supply chains to keep the lights on. European leaders are determined to make sure that it doesn’t happen again.

strativarius
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 3:14 am

The current crisis marks the third time in four years that European renewables have utterly failed.

To power the UK with wind and solar we will need to cover the entire country with the damn things. I can see that pastoral aesthetics are not your bag.

Then we will still need to grow food…

In other news:

Italy will postpone the permanent shutdown of its coal-fired power plants until 2038

Reply to  strativarius
April 4, 2026 3:38 am

It is the “global supply chains” that allow Europe, and especially the UK, to function at all on windless nights !

What EU leaders are doing will make sure that cannot function AT ALL. !!

Perhaps MUNT means that EU and UK are going to go back to being more energy dependant.. something that can never happen with wind and solar.

Reply to  strativarius
April 4, 2026 5:42 am

All those windmills are going to make the UK very vulnerable to drone attacks as the windmills interfere in the detection of inbound drones.

The U.S. may have to relocate some of their military assets to places less vulnerable to drone attacks.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
April 4, 2026 7:09 am

How many drone swarms does it take to knock out a wind or solar farm?

MarkW
Reply to  Jim Gorman
April 4, 2026 9:24 am

One, if you target the inverter.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Jim Gorman
April 4, 2026 10:10 am

If your solar panel and wind turbine are manufactured in China they will obligingly turn them off if asked nicely.

Reply to  Jim Gorman
April 4, 2026 8:37 pm

A kite festooned with dental floss will likely do it.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 5:39 am

There’s their problem: Depending on a global supply chain.

The solution is to establish a domestic supply chain.

Refusing to do so is pure stupidity.

MarkW
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 4, 2026 9:23 am

It’s a choice between fossil fuels which are always available and occasionally expensive and wind/solar which occasionally available and always expensive.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 5, 2026 5:36 am

For some reason the “third time in four years” link in your selected extract piqued my curiosity …

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

  • Europe is facing its third energy crisis in four years, this time triggered by the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, exposing the continent’s persistent dependence on fossil fuel imports.
  • Renewable energy overtook fossil fuels in Europe’s energy mix for the first time in 2025, but experts say deeper investment in wind, solar, and nuclear is the only path to true energy independence.
  • European leaders are pivoting hard toward next-gen nuclear technologies including small modular reactors — a dramatic reversal from the EU’s previous push to phase nuclear out.

But European leaders also have some well-founded anxieties about a totally renewable-powered grid. As solar and wind have gone gangbusters across the bloc, there have been some hiccups as markets contend with variable production patterns, volatile pricing, and even country-wide blackouts.

This is where nuclear comes in. It is becoming increasingly clear that in order to insulate European energy markets from global energy shocks as well as internal volatility stemming from variability in electricity production and consumption, nuclear energy will have to provide a critical backstop. It’s carbon-free, produces energy around the clock, and its technology is rapidly advancing. European leaders are quickly pivoting toward next-gen nuclear energy technologies, including small modular reactors and the research and development of nuclear fusion, showing a complete turnaround from a previous phasing-out of nuclear power across the majority of the European Union.

There is a light at the end of the tunnel for Europe. Leaders just have to stay the course in terms of renewable and nuclear deployment. The era of stable global energy supply chains is quickly coming to close as global geopolitics transition away from an ethos of free trade to one of protectionism, nationalism, near-shoring and friend-shoring.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

What was that implication about “renewables” … i.e. “Wind + Solar”, and only “Wind + Solar” … being so “cheap” that they will (very) soon replace all other alternatives ?

Reply to  Mark BLR
April 5, 2026 8:00 am

nuclear energy will have to provide a critical backstop”

So, they’ll keep the nuclear reactors running until there’s a day with little sun and wind or at night- then use it? Wow, that’s dumb. I presume you can’t just turn on a reactor the second you need it.

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
April 6, 2026 7:12 am

I presume you can’t just turn on a reactor the second you need it.

I’m based in France, which gets ~70% of its electricity from nuclear (with most of the rest being hydro).

Even with 1980s technology they manage to “demand follow” quite well, though France does export quite a lot of electricity, especially to the UK (via cross-Channel interconnectors) and Germany, which helps keep the total output more stable (/ less “jumpy”).

My understanding is that most advocates of SMRs claim that “rapid” output changes are designed in as one of their main advantages over “classic / GW-scale” nuclear reactors (+ turbines), but even so on timescales closer to “tens of minutes / a few hours” rather than “one second”.

Time will tell just how good those claims actually are.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
April 6, 2026 2:01 pm

Their “dependence on global supply chains” gets worse, not better, with more worse-than-useless “renewables.”

You seem to be forgetting where that worse-than-useless crap is manufactured. And where the manufacturer gets most of it electricity.

Daniel Muller
April 4, 2026 3:06 am

“History is rarely kind to civilisations that mistake ideology for physics”
The irony of this statement is that Angela Merkel, who decided to end nuclear power in Germany, was supposed to be a ʹPhysicistʹ.

Scissor
Reply to  Daniel Muller
April 4, 2026 6:12 am

I would call her a physical chemist, among other things.

Her thesis, was titled “Investigation of the mechanism of decay reactions with single bond breaking and calculation of their velocity constants on the basis of quantum chemical and statistical methods,” was conducted at the Central Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Academy of Sciences in East Berlin. 

Reply to  Scissor
April 5, 2026 8:02 am

Who did she work for- any industry or in government or in academia? Probably not much real world experience.

William Howard
April 4, 2026 6:15 am

what an excellent summary- sb required reading for everyone especially politicians- and the worst part is that it was all built on a lie – CO2 has nothing to do with the climate every thing to do with life on the planet

April 4, 2026 6:17 am

“negotiate seriously over Ukraine”

Simple solution. Russia go home.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 4, 2026 6:24 am

Who put Iran in charge of the strait of Hormuz? So now they’re complaining because another country is challenging their bullying?

Scissor
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
April 4, 2026 7:14 am

Basically, Jimmy Carter did it or whoever was “advising” him.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
Reply to  Scissor
April 4, 2026 9:04 am

Time to change ownership. International “law”, for what it’s worth, says “ownership” is divided equally among contingent nations including rights of passage.