Marine Fuel Desulfurization Climate Effects: The Clean Air Policy That May Be Warming the Oceans

Marine fuel desulfurization removed cloud-seeding sulfur from shipping lanes. Satellite data suggests the oceans are warming faster as a result.

Marine fuel desulfurization climate effects are now measurable in satellite data — and they point to one of the most consequential unintended consequences of environmental policy in modern history.

In 2020, the International Maritime Organization mandated a dramatic reduction in sulfur content in marine fuels globally. The stated goal was to reduce air pollution from shipping — a legitimate objective. Sulfur dioxide emissions from ships cause respiratory illness and acid rain in coastal communities. Removing sulfur from fuel was a straightforward environmental win. Except it wasn’t straightforward at all.

Sulfur particles in the atmosphere serve as cloud condensation nuclei. Raindrops and clouds don’t form from pure water vapor — they form around microscopic particles that act as nucleation sites. Sulfur emissions from the massive global shipping fleet had been inadvertently seeding clouds over the world’s major shipping lanes for decades. Remove the sulfur, remove the cloud seeding, reduce cloud cover, increase solar radiation reaching the ocean surface.

Craig Tindale flagged this in his Financial Sense interview as a prime example of ideological policy making without mechanical systems thinking. We optimized for one variable — sulfur in the air — without modeling the downstream effects on cloud formation, ocean albedo, and sea surface temperatures. Satellite measurements since 2020 show accelerated warming in shipping lane corridors that aligns with the timing and geography of the desulfurization mandate.

This is not an argument against clean air. It is an argument for understanding complex systems before intervening in them at scale. We are now running uncontrolled experiments on the planetary climate system in the name of environmental protection, without adequate modeling of second and third-order effects. The honest answer is that we don’t fully understand what we’ve done — and the oceans are warming faster than any model predicted.

Multipolar World Commodity Markets: Investing When the Rules Are Being Rewritten

Multipolar world commodity markets play by different rules. State actors use commodities as weapons, predictions fail, and supply chains built on open market assumptions are now structurally fragile.

Multipolar world commodity markets represent a fundamentally different investment environment than the one that prevailed during the era of US dollar hegemony and globalized free trade — and the frameworks built for that era are increasingly inadequate for the world taking shape in 2026.

The unipolar moment — the period from the Soviet collapse to roughly 2015 — was characterized by US-led institutions setting the rules of global trade, the dollar as uncontested reserve currency, and a liberal trading order that treated national borders as largely irrelevant to production decisions. Commodity markets in that era were relatively predictable: prices were set by supply and demand, disruptions were temporary, and the assumption of open global markets was reliable enough to build supply chains around.

The multipolar world that is replacing it has different characteristics. State actors — China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and others — are explicitly using commodity markets as instruments of foreign policy. Export restrictions, processing monopolies, investment bans, and below-cost competition are tools deployed for strategic objectives, not commercial ones. The assumption of open markets is no longer reliable. Supply chains built on that assumption carry risks that are not captured in historical price data.

Craig Tindale described this environment in his Financial Sense interview as one where prediction becomes increasingly difficult. The unknown unknowns — the Rumsfeld formulation — multiply in a multipolar world. Any actor can make a decision that disrupts a commodity market in ways that no model anticipated. Russian oil sanctions that had to be reversed. Chinese gallium restrictions that arrived without warning. Iranian threats to Hormuz that ripple through fertilizer and food markets.

Investing in multipolar world commodity markets requires building portfolios around resilience rather than optimization. Diversification across geographies, redundancy in critical material exposures, and a preference for physical assets over financial instruments that depend on institutional stability are the correct postures for a world where the rules are being rewritten in real time.