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Home North America Supply Chain

China’s World Cup Absence, Quad Critical Minerals at Risk

2026/07/04
in North America Supply Chain
0 0
China’s World Cup Absence, Quad Critical Minerals at Risk

According to www.scmp.com, Chinese fans traveled en masse to North America for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, despite China’s national team failing to qualify — marking the country’s third consecutive World Cup absence.

Chinese Fans Fill Stands Amid National Team Absence

Hundreds of thousands of Chinese supporters attended matches across North America, turning stadiums into de facto extensions of domestic football culture. Though China remains one of the world’s largest football markets by commercial scale and fan engagement, its on-field representation remains absent: the national team has not qualified for the World Cup since 2002. As a result, many fans rooted for global stars — including Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo — and even expressed vocal support for referees perceived as enforcing fair play. One fan in Toronto told reporters,

“We don’t have our own team, so we cheer for justice — and for the best players who still show heart.”

US Strike Undermines Quad Critical Minerals Coordination

A U.S. military strike on an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman in June 2026 killed three Indian sailors, severely straining bilateral relations. The incident directly challenged the cohesion of the Quad — the strategic grouping comprising the United States, India, Japan, and Australia — whose joint initiative to diversify global supply chains for critical minerals now faces renewed uncertainty. According to the report, the Quad had pledged to collectively reduce reliance on Chinese-sourced cobalt, lithium, and rare earth elements by 2030, with an interim target of securing 40% of processing capacity outside China by 2028.

Nuclear Posture Shifts Loom in Northeast Asia

A joint survey conducted in Japan and South Korea revealed that strategic elites in both countries remain opposed to unilateral nuclear weapons development. However, the report states that support would rise rapidly in one country if the other pursued such a path — indicating a potential cascade effect. The poll, fielded in May 2026, showed only 12% of Japanese respondents and 19% of South Korean respondents currently favored domestic nuclear armament. Yet over 68% of respondents in each nation said they would back their government’s decision to pursue nuclear capability if the neighboring state moved first.

Broader Geopolitical Context

These developments intersect with broader trade and security dynamics. The European Union’s carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) entered full enforcement phase on 1 July 2026, coinciding with the SCMP’s publication date — adding regulatory pressure on Chinese exporters. Meanwhile, Shein was formally excluded from retail operations in Paris following a city council vote in late June 2026, citing labor and environmental compliance concerns. These events reflect mounting scrutiny of cross-border supply chain practices amid tightening geopolitical guardrails.

Source: South China Morning Post

Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.

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