Map Pairing Cited together in 3 entries

Geopolitical risk × Permitting reform

Geopolitical risk and permitting reform are linked through the Hormuz crisis: external shocks create the political urgency that breaks domestic legislative gridlock. Posts 019 and 029 both document this dynamic, with Post 029 noting the executive maritime route as the alternative when legislative reform stalls.

Entries

3 citing both topics
04.19

Jones Act 60-Day Suspension

The Trump administration suspended the Jones Act for 60 days in March 2026, allowing foreign-flagged vessels to transport LNG between US ports. Despite this structural policy shift, energy prices continued rising, revealing physical supply constraints that shipping flexibility alone cannot resolve.

04.09

SPEED Act Senate Negotiations Reopen

Senate Democrats have reopened negotiations on the SPEED Act, hoping to add transmission infrastructure provisions to the House bill before a narrow legislative window closes in early May. Both parties face mounting political pressure from the Strait of Hormuz crisis and growing data center electricity demands.

03.25

CERAWeek 2026: Energy Policy and Geopolitics

The Strait of Hormuz closure, the Trump administration's Energy Dominance agenda, OPEC+ production decisions, tariff and supply-chain fragmentation, and the China-dominated critical minerals refining stack collide at CERAWeek to make security, not transition, the dominant policy frame for the year.

← Map
Map Pairing 3 entries

Geopolitical risk × Permitting reform

Geopolitical risk and permitting reform are linked through the Hormuz crisis: external shocks create the political urgency that breaks domestic legislative gridlock. Posts 019 and 029 both document this dynamic, with Post 029 noting the executive maritime route as the alternative when legislative reform stalls.

04.19

Jones Act 60-Day Suspension

The Trump administration suspended the Jones Act for 60 days in March 2026, allowing foreign-flagged vessels to transport LNG between US ports. Despite this structural policy shift, energy prices continued rising, revealing physical supply constraints that shipping flexibility alone cannot resolve.

04.09

SPEED Act Senate Negotiations Reopen

Senate Democrats have reopened negotiations on the SPEED Act, hoping to add transmission infrastructure provisions to the House bill before a narrow legislative window closes in early May. Both parties face mounting political pressure from the Strait of Hormuz crisis and growing data center electricity demands.

03.25

CERAWeek 2026: Energy Policy and Geopolitics

The Strait of Hormuz closure, the Trump administration's Energy Dominance agenda, OPEC+ production decisions, tariff and supply-chain fragmentation, and the China-dominated critical minerals refining stack collide at CERAWeek to make security, not transition, the dominant policy frame for the year.