Global news, explained in context.

The World
Understanding proved reserves, reserve replacement, and why the world's oil outlook remains deeply uncertain
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
Three West African nations produce most of the world's cocoa. When their harvests fail or politics destabilises, chocolate prices spike everywhere, including Australia.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
Multinational companies shift profits to low-tax countries legally. Australia is fighting back, but the game remains stacked in favour of the wealthy.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
The ocean feeds billions of people. Understanding who catches what, where the rules break down, and why Australian waters are under pressure.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
Discover how frost in Brazil and drought in East Africa affect Australian coffee prices and availability within months. Learn the fragile supply chain behind your daily cup.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
Global copper needs are skyrocketing for renewable energy. Australia's mines are critical to meeting this soaring demand.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
Extreme weather forces insurers to recalculate risk. What climate change means for your home and business costs.
By The Daily World · 29 June 2026

The World
The Pacific Islands Forum is the main regional body in Australia's most immediate neighbourhood, and the diplomacy around it reveals a great deal about Australian foreign policy priorities.
By The Daily World · 18 June 2026

The World
Global tourism has bounced back faster than many predicted, but it has not returned to the same shape it left, and the pressures building in popular destinations are intensifying.
By The Daily World · 16 June 2026

The World
Migrant workers send hundreds of billions of dollars home each year, making remittances one of the most important financial flows in the developing world.
By The Daily World · 13 June 2026

The World
The network of farms, ships, processors, and retailers that puts food on tables worldwide is far more complex and fragile than most people realise.
By The Daily World · 7 June 2026

The World
For low-lying Pacific nations, rising seas and intensifying storms are not future scenarios but present-day threats to land, water, and sovereignty.
By The Daily World · 5 June 2026

The World
From Sydney to London to Toronto, housing has become unaffordable for a generation, and the forces driving that are structural, not accidental.
By The Daily World · 22 May 2026

The World
The World Bank lends billions of dollars a year to developing countries, but its role is more complicated and more contested than its name suggests.
By The Daily World · 20 May 2026

The World
Africa is on course to be home to more than a quarter of the world's population by mid-century, a shift that will reshape global economics, politics, and migration.
By The Daily World · 18 May 2026

The World
Mental health conditions affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide, yet the resources devoted to treating them remain dramatically insufficient in most countries.
By The Daily World · 16 May 2026

The World
Solar and wind power are now the cheapest sources of new electricity on earth, but the grid they plug into was built for a different era.
By The Daily World · 10 May 2026

The World
Hydrogen is the universe's most abundant element and could be a zero-carbon fuel, but closing the gap between that promise and commercial reality has proved far harder than expected.
By The Daily World · 4 May 2026

The World
No single country makes a chip from scratch, and the decades-long process of specialisation that created that interdependence is now a source of strategic anxiety.
By The Daily World · 2 May 2026

The World
Behind every home insurance premium is a global system of risk transfer that is under growing strain as natural disasters become more frequent and severe.
By The Daily World · 30 April 2026

The World
When a country runs out of foreign currency and cannot pay its debts, the IMF is usually the lender of last resort, and its conditions shape the lives of millions.
By The Daily World · 28 April 2026

The World
Bacteria are evolving faster than the pipeline of new drugs can keep pace, and the consequences for routine surgery and infection treatment are already visible.
By The Daily World · 24 April 2026

The World
Forests absorb carbon, regulate rainfall, and sustain biodiversity, but they sit on land that economies have always wanted for something else.
By The Daily World · 22 April 2026

The World
Decades of predictions about the end of the oil age have not arrived, and understanding why reveals the true scale of the energy transition ahead.
By The Daily World · 16 April 2026