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4 votes
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Riches thought to lie beneath Greenland have been coveted for more than a century – but how easy are they to access, and will climate change make any difference
7 votes -
US introduces additional export restrictions on AI-chips
14 votes -
Ukraine forces a halt to flow of natural gas from Russia to Europe
36 votes -
Dozens of sites linked to the Viking great army as it ravaged Anglo-Saxon England more than 1,000 years ago have been discovered
11 votes -
How China became the world’s largest car exporter
7 votes -
TSMC will stop making 7nm chips for Chinese customers
13 votes -
Lost Silk Road cities unearthed in Uzbekistan's high mountains
15 votes -
Why did Norway try to take Greenland from Denmark in 1931?
3 votes -
Kyiv will not extend gas transit deal, Ukraine tells Slovakia
10 votes -
The Vikings were part of a global network trading in ivory from Greenland
7 votes -
Beyond the politics of nostalgia: What the fall of the steel industry can tell us about the future of America
16 votes -
China's Arctic dreams make the Norwegian port of Kirkenes a global prize – and an unlikely hotbed of East-West rivalry
6 votes -
Ocean plastics: How much do rich countries contribute by shipping their waste overseas?
17 votes -
Did Rome know about Scandinavia and the Vikings?
7 votes -
Israeli port Eilat in financial distress due to lack of Red Sea freight traffic
4 votes -
US bans sales of Kaspersky anti-virus software, citing ties to Russia
22 votes -
The forgotten Roman roads
9 votes -
Electric bikes are about to get more expensive in the US
8 votes -
Bread, how did they make it? Part IV: Markets, merchants and the tax man
7 votes -
Mediterranean ports warn of overflowing storage yards in latest threat to supply chain
9 votes -
Why is Montreal a stolen car export hub?
5 votes -
What happened when you visited a medieval inn?
11 votes -
Cutting-edge tech made the Netherlands a major exporter of food (2022)
15 votes -
The US pepper that was nearly lost
24 votes -
Security crises from Red Sea to Black Sea pose a troubling question: How much has freedom of navigation been an anomaly?
4 votes -
The tragic story of this famous meteorite and the boy who fought the museum that took everything from him
14 votes -
The Vikings and the Muslim scholar
11 votes -
Rwanda authorizes visa free travel for all Africans, joining Gambia, Benin, the Seychelles. Kenya promised to do the same this year.
35 votes -
The Silk Road: Eight goods traded along the ancient network
7 votes -
So who was in Essen?
What did you play? What did you buy? Who did you meet? How did you get there? Where did you stay? What shenanigans did you get up to? Tell us all about it!
17 votes -
A closer look at Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong, the most densely populated place that ever existed
40 votes -
China exports of gallium and germanium, used in manufacture of semiconductors, fell to zero in August
25 votes -
Bubble Tea, also called Boba, is everywhere. But who made it first?
11 votes -
Palm oil giants Indonesia, Malaysia start talks with EU over deforestation rule
7 votes -
Norway to spend $6 million a year stock-piling grain, citing pandemic, war and climate change – will start storing 15,000 tons of grain yearly until 2028 or 2029
54 votes -
Huawei accused of building secret microchip factories to beat US sanctions
19 votes -
Capturing the spirit of ancient seafaring, the reconstructed Viking sailboat "Saga Farmann" has successfully completed an epic journey from Norway's Tønsberg to Istanbul
16 votes -
White House unveils ban on US investment in Chinese tech sectors linked to the military
41 votes -
Why India's rice ban could trigger a global food crisis
44 votes -
Southeast Asia moves closer to economic unity with new regional payments system using local currencies
10 votes -
Canada’s $30bn gamble to become an energy superpower
11 votes -
Shifting trade patterns see Mexico become biggest exporter to US
19 votes -
The impact of Brexit on the UK economy - reviewing evidence
10 votes -
International Monetary Fund calls on Indonesia to lift mineral export ban
https://asiatimes.com/2023/07/indonesias-mineral-export-bans-face-hot-global-fire/ JAKARTA – Indonesia is under rising fire at the World Trade Organization and by the International Monetary Fund...
https://asiatimes.com/2023/07/indonesias-mineral-export-bans-face-hot-global-fire/
JAKARTA – Indonesia is under rising fire at the World Trade Organization and by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the government’s seemingly haphazard policy of banning mineral ore exports, a market intervention Jakarta insists is just and necessary to maximize its economic and industrial growth.
In a sharply worded statement accompanying its 2022 country report, the IMF called for Indonesia to phase out the restrictions and not extend them to other commodities. “The increasing use of trade measures and industrial policies may destabilize the multilateral trade system,” the IMF said.
9 votes -
The Dutch Textile Trade Project aims to understand the circulation of globally-sourced textiles on Dutch ships around the world in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
6 votes -
How Mexico is becoming the new China
6 votes -
US economy is in a 'freight recession,' with China trade decline continuing
7 votes -
Residents of Greenland have switched to daylight saving time this weekend for the very last time
11 votes -
Sweden and France could be set to join forces to build new nuclear power stations in the Nordic nation
5 votes