SS: China’s abrupt halt on helium exports is sending fresh shockwaves through global supply chains, choking off a vital industrial gas essential for semiconductor manufacturing, quantum computing, medical MRIs, and high-tech defense systems — just as the Iran war has already crippled Qatar’s massive output and sent prices skyrocketing. With Beijing sitting on limited domestic production and laser-focused on chip self-sufficiency amid its tech war with the US, the move prioritizes shielding China’s own military-civil fusion industries at the direct expense of the rest of the world.
This latest resource nationalism exposes the terrifying fragility of globalization: when overlapping crises hit (Middle East conflict + great-power rivalry), critical chokepoints get weaponized overnight.
CurtCocane on
Here we go
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China has consistently been a net importer of helium.
The world’s four largest helium exporters are Qatar (30%), the US (43%), Russia (9%), and Algeria (7%). China has never been the fifth largest exporter, which is Canada.
>at the direct expense of the rest of the world.
This latest resource nationalism exposes the terrifying fragility of globalization
Is this really that important to accuse this?
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SS: China’s abrupt halt on helium exports is sending fresh shockwaves through global supply chains, choking off a vital industrial gas essential for semiconductor manufacturing, quantum computing, medical MRIs, and high-tech defense systems — just as the Iran war has already crippled Qatar’s massive output and sent prices skyrocketing. With Beijing sitting on limited domestic production and laser-focused on chip self-sufficiency amid its tech war with the US, the move prioritizes shielding China’s own military-civil fusion industries at the direct expense of the rest of the world.
This latest resource nationalism exposes the terrifying fragility of globalization: when overlapping crises hit (Middle East conflict + great-power rivalry), critical chokepoints get weaponized overnight.
Here we go
China has consistently been a net importer of helium.
The world’s four largest helium exporters are Qatar (30%), the US (43%), Russia (9%), and Algeria (7%). China has never been the fifth largest exporter, which is Canada.
>at the direct expense of the rest of the world.
This latest resource nationalism exposes the terrifying fragility of globalization
Is this really that important to accuse this?