2026-06-25 03:08:21
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Key Takeaways:
Innovation is often discussed at the national level, but breakthrough technologies tend to emerge from smaller geographic hubs where researchers, startups, investors, and established companies interact closely.
Using data from the World Intellectual Property Organization’s (WIPO) Global Innovation Index 2025, this graphic ranks the world’s top innovation clusters based on scientific publications, international patent filings, and venture capital activity.
The rankings highlight where research, capital, and entrepreneurship are combining to create the world’s most influential innovation ecosystems.
The table below shows the world’s leading innovation clusters according to WIPO’s 2025 rankings.
| Rank | Innovation Cluster | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shenzhen–Hong Kong–Guangzhou |
![]() China / Hong Kong |
| 2 | Tokyo–Yokohama |
Japan |
| 3 | San Jose–San Francisco |
United States |
| 4 | Beijing |
China |
| 5 | Seoul |
South Korea |
| 6 | Shanghai–Suzhou |
China |
| 7 | New York City |
United States |
| 8 | London |
United Kingdom |
| 9 | Boston–Cambridge |
United States |
| 10 | Los Angeles |
United States |
| 11 | Osaka–Kobe–Kyoto |
Japan |
| 12 | Paris |
France |
| 13 | Hangzhou |
China |
| 14 | San Diego |
United States |
| 15 | Nanjing |
China |
| 16 | Singapore |
![]() Singapore / Malaysia |
| 17 | Washington–Baltimore |
United States |
| 18 | Wuhan |
China |
| 19 | Tel Aviv–Jerusalem |
Israel |
| 20 | Seattle |
United States |
| 21 | Bengaluru |
India |
| 22 | Amsterdam–Rotterdam |
Netherlands |
| 23 | Philadelphia |
United States |
| 24 | Chengdu |
China |
| 25 | Daejeon |
South Korea |
| 26 | Delhi |
India |
| 27 | Munich |
Germany |
| 28 | Nagoya |
Japan |
| 29 | Xi'an |
China |
| 30 | Berlin |
Germany |
| 31 | Chicago |
United States |
| 32 | Stockholm |
Sweden |
| 33 | Toronto |
Canada |
| 34 | Qingdao |
China |
| 35 | Denver |
United States |
| 36 | Sydney |
Australia |
| 37 | Austin |
United States |
| 38 | Houston |
United States |
| 39 | Hefei |
China |
| 40 | Zürich |
Switzerland |
| 41 | Taipei–Hsinchu |
Taiwan* |
| 42 | Copenhagen |
Denmark |
| 43 | Cologne |
Germany |
| 44 | Changsha |
China |
| 45 | Barcelona |
Spain |
| 46 | Mumbai |
India |
| 47 | Madrid |
Spain |
| 48 | Moscow |
Russia |
| 49 | São Paulo |
Brazil |
| 50 | Tianjin |
China |
| 51 | Minneapolis |
United States |
| 52 | Melbourne |
Australia |
| 53 | Raleigh |
United States |
| 54 | Stuttgart |
Germany |
| 55 | Brussels–Antwerp |
Belgium |
| 56 | Milan |
Italy |
| 57 | Chongqing |
China |
| 58 | Istanbul |
Turkey |
| 59 | Atlanta |
United States |
| 60 | Helsinki |
Finland |
| 61 | Dallas |
United States |
| 62 | Montréal |
Canada |
| 63 | Tehran |
Iran |
| 64 | Frankfurt am Main |
Germany |
| 65 | Eindhoven |
Netherlands |
| 66 | Vancouver |
Canada |
| 67 | Miami |
United States |
| 68 | Jinan |
China |
| 69 | Cambridge |
United Kingdom |
| 70 | Harbin |
China |
| 71 | Dublin |
Ireland |
| 72 | Changchun |
China |
| 73 | Portland |
United States |
| 74 | Vienna |
Austria |
| 75 | Shenyang |
China |
| 76 | Pittsburgh |
United States |
| 77 | Oxford |
United Kingdom |
| 78 | Phoenix |
United States |
| 79 | Mexico City |
Mexico |
| 80 | Zhengzhou |
China |
| 81 | Xiamen |
China |
| 82 | Rome |
Italy |
| 83 | Cairo |
Egypt |
| 84 | Chennai |
India |
| 85 | Oslo |
Norway |
| 86 | Kuala Lumpur |
Malaysia |
| 87 | Heidelberg–Mannheim |
Germany |
| 88 | Dalian |
China |
| 89 | Warsaw |
Poland |
| 90 | Lyon |
France |
| 91 | Hamburg |
Germany |
| 92 | Salt Lake City |
United States |
| 93 | Ningbo |
China |
| 94 | Manchester |
United Kingdom |
| 95 | Busan |
South Korea |
| 96 | Ann Arbor |
United States |
| 97 | Göteborg |
Sweden |
| 98 | Macau–Zhuhai |
China |
| 99 | Ningde |
China |
| 100 | Zhenjiang |
China |
China and the U.S. dominate the rankings, while innovation hotspots in Japan, South Korea, Europe, and India also feature prominently.
Shenzhen–Hong Kong–Guangzhou claims the top spot globally, followed by Tokyo–Yokohama and Silicon Valley’s San Jose–San Francisco corridor.
Unlike city rankings, WIPO’s clusters often span multiple metropolitan areas and even national borders. The organization uses a bottom-up methodology that identifies regions with dense concentrations of inventors and scientific authors, rather than relying on political boundaries. As a result, clusters often represent entire innovation ecosystems rather than individual cities.
Innovation clusters emerge because talent, capital, and institutions tend to reinforce one another. Leading research universities attract scientists, successful startups attract investors, and large technology firms create opportunities for commercialization. Over time, these advantages compound.
This dynamic helps explain why a handful of regions consistently dominate global innovation. Silicon Valley benefits from world-class universities, deep venture capital markets, and a culture of entrepreneurship. Similarly, China’s leading clusters have been supported by sustained investment in research, advanced manufacturing, and technology commercialization.
The concentration of innovation has become an increasingly important factor in global economic competition. Recent analysis from Foreign Affairs argues that technological leadership is now a central pillar of geopolitical power, while research from CSIS highlights how government-supported R&D ecosystems can accelerate innovation capacity.
One of the most notable trends in recent years has been the rapid rise of Chinese innovation clusters. Shenzhen–Hong Kong–Guangzhou now ranks as the world’s leading cluster, while Beijing and Shanghai–Suzhou also place among the global elite. China hosts more top-100 clusters than any other economy.
At the same time, the U.S. remains a dominant force in commercialization and venture capital. New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Seattle, and Silicon Valley continue to rank among the world’s most influential innovation ecosystems. In areas such as artificial intelligence innovation, American clusters continue to attract a disproportionate share of global investment and entrepreneurial activity.
To see how innovation leadership has evolved over centuries, and what today’s leading clusters might signal about the future, check out Long Waves: The History of Innovation Cycles on the Voronoi app.
2026-06-25 01:03:23
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The world’s most valuable unicorns are no longer led by fintech, e-commerce, or social media platforms. In 2026, artificial intelligence companies dominate the top of the private-market rankings.
This graphic ranks the world’s most valuable unicorn companies, defined as private firms valued at $1 billion or more.
The data comes from Crunchbase, based on each firm’s latest reported private-market valuation.
Anthropic tops the ranking with a valuation of $965 billion, followed closely by OpenAI at $852 billion. Together, these two AI leaders are worth a combined $1.8 trillion.
| Rank | Company | Valuation |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Anthropic |
$965B |
| 2 |
OpenAI |
$852B |
| 3 |
ByteDance |
$480B |
| 4 |
Stripe |
$159B |
| 5 |
Ant Group |
$150B |
| 6 |
Databricks |
$134B |
| 7 |
Waymo |
$126B |
| 8 |
Reliance Retail |
$101B |
| 9 |
Revolut |
$75B |
| 10 |
Shein |
$66B |
| 11 |
Anduril Industries |
$61B |
| 12 |
Reliance Jio |
$58B |
| 13 |
Ramp |
$44B |
| 14 |
Canva |
$42B |
| 15 |
Checkout.com |
$40B |
| 16 |
Ripple |
$40B |
| 17 |
Figure |
$39B |
| 18 |
Project Prometheus |
$38B |
| 19 |
Safe Superintelligence |
$32B |
| 20 |
Fanatics |
$31B |
| 21 |
Alibaba Bendi Shenghuo Fuwu Gongsi |
$30B |
| 22 |
VAST Data |
$30B |
| 23 |
Anysphere |
$29B |
| 24 |
Scale |
$29B |
| 25 |
Cognition |
$26B |
| 26 |
OKX |
$25B |
| 27 |
FNZ |
$24B |
| 28 |
JUUL |
$23B |
| 29 |
Epic Games |
$23B |
| 30 |
Yangtze Memory Technologies |
$23B |
Beyond the top two, several other AI-focused companies appear in the rankings, including Databricks, Figure, Safe Superintelligence, Anysphere, Scale AI, and Cognition.
American companies dominate the list, accounting for a substantial majority of the top-ranked unicorns.
This leadership reflects the depth of U.S. venture capital markets, access to technical talent, and a mature startup ecosystem capable of scaling companies to enormous valuations.
At the same time, the list highlights how innovation remains geographically diverse. China, India, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Seychelles are all represented among the world’s most valuable private companies.
While AI captures much of the spotlight, several of the world’s largest unicorns operate in other industries.
Stripe, Revolut, Checkout.com, and Ramp are among the highest-valued fintech companies, reflecting ongoing demand for digital financial services.
China’s ByteDance remains one of the largest private companies globally, while Shein continues to demonstrate the scale that online retail platforms can achieve.
In mobility and transportation, Waymo’s valuation highlights investor optimism surrounding autonomous driving technologies.
The list also includes Alibaba Bendi Shenghuo Fuwu Gongsi, Alibaba Group’s local services division, which includes food delivery and on-demand commerce platforms.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Ranked: The Biggest U.S. Companies by Revenue (2024–2026) on Voronoi.
2026-06-24 23:51:00
In just five years, the world has reduced the supply life of rare earth metals by nearly 300 years.
This graphic, in partnership with Global X Canada, is the first of three graphics in the Investing in Commodities series. It shows how the supply life of different critical commodities has changed between 2020-2025 using data from the USGS, OPEC, and NEA.
Rare earth metals recorded the biggest change between 2020 and 2025. Their estimated supply life fell from 500 years to 218 years, a drop of 282 years.
| Critical Commodity | 2020 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Rare Earth Metals | 500 | 218 |
| Lithium | 255 | 128 |
| Uranium | 121 | 90 |
| Oil | 61 | 58 |
| Natural Gas | 51 | 51 |
| Cobalt | 50 | 39 |
| Copper | 42 | 43 |
| Silver | 21 | 23 |
| Gold | 17 | 20 |
Source: USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries (2021 – 2026); OPEC Annual Statistical Bulletin; Nuclear Energy Agency
For uranium, the 2020 and 2025 values are estimated from 2021 and 2023 NEA data points.
Lithium supply life declined by 127 years, while uranium had a smaller drop of 31 years. These drops matter for electric vehicles, wind turbines, and defense technologies that all rely on steady rare earths and other critical minerals.
The sharpest supply-life shifts centered on critical minerals, not legacy commodities. Cobalt is the lone critical mineral with moderate change, having a decline of 11 years.
For legacy commodities, oil had a modest reduction of 4 years while the precious metals, silver and gold, saw slight increases in supply while others stayed essentially flat.
For investors, shrinking supply life can signal where demand growth may collide with limited resource availability. It can also highlight geopolitical risk when supply remains heavily concentrated in just a handful of countries.
Commodity ETFs can offer diversified access without selecting individual producers. As demand grows, Global X Canada’s ETFs may help investors position around long-term resource trends.
To learn more, explore the Global X All-In-One Commodity Producers Equity ETF (COMX). Minimize the guesswork of trying to pick which commodity segment may outperform each year.

See how COMX offers diversified access across precious metals, energy, and base metals producers.
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Mexico is the leading silver producer with 20% of global production in 2025, the most silver produced of any country. Which country follows?

Rocket Lab leads the public pure-play space companies, with a C$71.4 billion market cap exceeding the next five companies combined.

SpaceX has the most operational satellites in the world, with Starlink’s scale showing how commercial networks now shape orbital infrastructure.

The space economy is set to reach C$2.5T by 2035, with supply chains, food, and defense leading growth in space-enabled industries.
2026-06-24 22:07:41
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America’s largest private landowners oversee vast stretches of ranchland, timberland, farmland, and conservation areas.
Using data from The Land Report 100, this visualization created by Julie R. Peasley ranks the 25 individuals and families with the largest landholdings in the country.
While public lands often dominate discussions about America’s geography, private ownership remains the prevailing model. Farms, ranches, forests, and other working landscapes account for much of that acreage.
The following table ranks the 25 largest private landowners in the United States, based on estimated acreage holdings compiled by The Land Report.
| Rank | Name | Total Acres |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Stan Kroenke | 2,700,000 |
| 2 | Emmerson Family | 2,440,000 |
| 3 | John Malone | 2,200,000 |
| 4 | Ted Turner | 2,000,000 |
| 5 | Reed Family | 1,615,000 |
| 6 | Peter Buck | 1,320,000 |
| 7 | Irving Family | 1,267,000 |
| 8 | King Ranch Heirs | 911,000 |
| 9 | Pingree Heirs | 830,000 |
| 10 | Cullen Heirs | 800,000 |
| 11 | Briscoe Family | 738,000 |
| 12 | Wilks Brothers | 652,000 |
| 13 | Thomas Peterffy | 647,000 |
| 14 | Stefan Soloviev | 629,000 |
| 15 | Brad Kelley | 624,000 |
| 16 | Lykes Heirs | 615,000 |
| 17 | Ford Family | 600,000 |
| 18 | Westervelt Heirs | 600,000 |
| 19 | Stimson Family | 552,000 |
| 20 | Martin Family | 550,000 |
| 21 | Jeff Bezos | 462,000 |
| 22 | Zane & Tanya Kiehne | 455,000 |
| 23 | Shannon Kizer | 445,000 |
| 24 | Simplot Family | 443,000 |
| 25 | Fisher Family | 440,000 |
Ownership at the top is highly concentrated. The four largest landowners each control at least 2 million acres, and together they hold roughly 9.3 million acres. Even the 25th-ranked owner, the Fisher family, controls approximately 440,000 acres, an area larger than many U.S. counties.
Stan Kroenke’s rise to the top spot marks the biggest shift in the latest rankings. The sports and real estate billionaire increased his holdings to 2.7 million acres after acquiring nearly one million additional acres in New Mexico, the largest U.S. land transaction in more than a decade.
His portfolio includes ranches across the American West in addition to ownership stakes in the Los Angeles Rams, Denver Nuggets, and Colorado Avalanche, among other sports franchises. His holdings now span roughly 4,200 square miles.
Despite their diverse backgrounds, many of America’s largest landowners generate value from similar land uses.
The Emmerson family, ranked second with 2.44 million acres, built its holdings through Sierra Pacific Industries, America’s largest private timber company. Meanwhile, John Malone, who ranks third with 2.2 million acres, has increasingly focused on conservation initiatives, sustainable agriculture, and land stewardship. Ted Turner, fourth with 2 million acres, is widely known for combining ranching operations with one of North America’s largest private bison conservation efforts.
Further down the ranking, several names reflect multigenerational landownership. The King Ranch heirs, Pingree heirs, Cullen heirs, and Briscoe family all trace significant portions of their holdings to historic ranching, timber, and energy fortunes built over decades or even centuries.
The list also includes modern entrepreneurs such as Subway co-founder Peter Buck and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Despite being one of the world’s wealthiest individuals, Bezos ranks just 21st with roughly 462,000 acres.
Private land ownership plays a central role in how America’s landscapes are managed. According to the USDA, roughly 70% of the nation’s land is privately owned, making private landowners critical partners in conservation, agriculture, forestry, and wildlife management.
When a country has more private land than public land, decisions about resource management and habitat protection often depend on individual owners rather than government agencies. Large landowners can therefore have an outsized influence on environmental outcomes, particularly when land remains dedicated to working forests, ranches, or conservation easements.
Foreign ownership of U.S. land is another closely watched topic. Foreign entities own tens of millions of acres nationwide, with Canadian entities historically leading foreign ownership of U.S. land, and Chinese entities holding roughly 1% of foreign-owned U.S. acreage. However, the vast majority of acreage on this ranking remains held by U.S.-based individuals and families.
Interested in exploring more of America’s largest privately held assets?
Check out America’s 10 Biggest Private Companies by Revenue on the Voronoi app to see which privately owned firms generate the most revenue in the country.
2026-06-24 20:02:12
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A small group of countries controls the world’s largest reserves of many of the minerals that power modern economies.
This map shows the top reserve-holding country for 18 key minerals, from iron ore and copper to rare earths and cobalt. In several cases, a single nation accounts for an outsized share of global reserves, creating potential supply chain bottlenecks and geopolitical leverage.
The data for this visualization comes from the U.S. Geological Survey’s Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026 and the World Nuclear Association.
While some countries dominate a single resource, Australia stands out for the breadth of its mineral wealth. It ranks first globally in reserves of five major commodities, giving it one of the most diversified resource bases in the world.
The country ranks first in reserves of gold, uranium, iron ore, zinc, and manganese.
| Mineral | Largest reserves | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Gold |
Australia |
20% |
| Silver |
Peru |
18% |
| Copper |
Chile |
21% |
| Uranium |
Australia |
28% |
| Diamond |
Russia |
44% |
| Coal |
U.S. |
23% |
| Lithium |
Chile |
25% |
| Iron ore |
Australia |
31% |
| Bauxite (Aluminum) |
Guinea |
26% |
| Rare Earth |
China |
52% |
| Nickel |
Indonesia |
44% |
| Cobalt |
DRC |
50% |
| Phosphate |
Morocco |
69% |
| Graphite |
China |
32% |
| Zinc |
Australia |
27% |
| Potash |
Canada |
45% |
| Manganese |
Australia |
32% |
| Platinum-Group Metals |
South Africa |
83% |
Its dominance in iron ore is particularly significant, with 31% of global reserves.
Australia is also home to 28% of the world’s uranium reserves, making it an important player in the future of nuclear energy.
China leads global reserves of both rare earth elements and graphite, two minerals that sit at the center of modern industrial supply chains.
Together, they support technologies ranging from EV batteries and wind turbines to semiconductors and advanced defense systems.
Rare earths are especially important because they are difficult to substitute in many advanced technologies.
Some of the world’s most important mineral reserves are concentrated in just one country. South Africa holds 83% of global platinum-group metal reserves, Morocco controls 69% of phosphate reserves, and the Democratic Republic of Congo accounts for half of global cobalt reserves. This concentration can make global supply chains highly dependent on a small number of producers.
Meanwhile, Indonesia holds 44% of nickel reserves, another key ingredient in electric vehicle batteries.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Where Are the World’s Rare Earth Metals? on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-06-24 08:41:04
This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
Fuel markets have been under pressure since the start of the Iran war, as concerns over oil supply disruptions pushed energy prices higher.
This visualization by Iswardi Ishak, using data from Global Petrol Prices, shows how diesel prices changed between February 23 and June 1, revealing where the conflict’s impact on fuel markets has been felt most acutely.
Unlike gasoline, diesel is deeply tied to freight transportation, agriculture, manufacturing, and construction, making it an important indicator of broader economic pressures.
The table below shows diesel price changes for the 128 countries in the dataset:
| Rank | Country | Diesel Price Change (Feb 23-Jun 1) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Laos |
149.7% |
| 2 |
Fiji |
110.1% |
| 3 |
Burma (Myanmar) |
85.6% |
| 4 |
Lesotho |
84.4% |
| 5 |
Indonesia |
80.1% |
| 6 |
United Arab Emirates |
71.8% |
| 7 |
New Zealand |
70.6% |
| 8 |
Peru |
64.5% |
| 9 |
Malaysia |
62.9% |
| 10 |
Tanzania |
60.4% |
| 11 |
Nepal |
58.5% |
| 12 |
Curacao |
55.7% |
| 13 |
Lebanon |
54.6% |
| 14 |
Singapore |
54.0% |
| 15 |
Chile |
54.0% |
| 16 |
Honduras |
53.8% |
| 17 |
Panama |
53.7% |
| 18 |
Mayotte |
52.9% |
| 19 |
Vietnam |
49.3% |
| 20 |
Sri Lanka |
48.0% |
| 21 |
South Africa |
47.9% |
| 22 |
Philippines |
46.4% |
| 23 |
Puerto Rico |
45.6% |
| 24 |
Mozambique |
45.5% |
| 25 |
Namibia |
44.0% |
| 26 |
USA |
40.5% |
| 27 |
Sierra Leone |
40.4% |
| 28 |
Kenya |
39.8% |
| 29 |
Georgia |
38.9% |
| 30 |
Pakistan |
38.1% |
| 31 |
Zimbabwe |
37.5% |
| 32 |
Grenada |
37.5% |
| 33 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
36.5% |
| 34 |
Ukraine |
35.6% |
| 35 |
Malawi |
35.2% |
| 36 |
Bulgaria |
35.0% |
| 37 |
Moldova |
34.6% |
| 38 |
Aruba |
33.2% |
| 39 |
Morocco |
32.9% |
| 40 |
Thailand |
32.1% |
| 41 |
Cape Verde |
32.0% |
| 42 |
Jordan |
31.8% |
| 43 |
Paraguay |
31.2% |
| 44 |
Zambia |
31.1% |
| 45 |
Costa Rica |
30.6% |
| 46 |
United Kingdom |
30.1% |
| 47 |
Cambodia |
29.3% |
| 48 |
Cayman Islands |
28.9% |
| 49 |
China |
28.6% |
| 50 |
Cyprus |
28.1% |
| 51 |
Andorra |
28.0% |
| 52 |
Ghana |
27.8% |
| 53 |
El Salvador |
27.6% |
| 54 |
Australia |
27.5% |
| 55 |
Jamaica |
26.7% |
| 56 |
South Korea |
26.3% |
| 57 |
Macedonia |
25.7% |
| 58 |
Guyana |
25.0% |
| 59 |
Montenegro |
24.8% |
| 60 |
Argentina |
24.5% |
| 61 |
Netherlands |
24.2% |
| 62 |
France |
23.9% |
| 63 |
Canada |
23.8% |
| 64 |
Czech Republic |
23.6% |
| 65 |
Hong Kong |
22.9% |
| 66 |
Estonia |
22.7% |
| 67 |
Guatemala |
22.5% |
| 68 |
Latvia |
21.3% |
| 69 |
Mauritius |
20.9% |
| 70 |
Finland |
20.9% |
| 71 |
Liechtenstein |
20.1% |
| 72 |
Croatia |
19.4% |
| 73 |
Lithuania |
18.9% |
| 74 |
Austria |
18.4% |
| 75 |
Switzerland |
18.1% |
| 76 |
Luxembourg |
18.1% |
| 77 |
Uruguay |
18.0% |
| 78 |
Suriname |
18.0% |
| 79 |
Belgium |
17.9% |
| 80 |
Iceland |
17.7% |
| 81 |
Slovakia |
17.2% |
| 82 |
Italy |
17.2% |
| 83 |
Egypt |
17.1% |
| 84 |
Portugal |
17.0% |
| 85 |
Sweden |
16.9% |
| 86 |
Romania |
16.9% |
| 87 |
Denmark |
16.6% |
| 88 |
Taiwan |
16.5% |
| 89 |
Rwanda |
16.1% |
| 90 |
Dominican Republic |
15.6% |
| 91 |
Ecuador |
15.0% |
| 92 |
Bangladesh |
15.0% |
| 93 |
Bahrain |
14.5% |
| 94 |
Spain |
14.4% |
| 95 |
Brazil |
14.3% |
| 96 |
Poland |
13.0% |
| 97 |
Israel |
13.0% |
| 98 |
Slovenia |
12.4% |
| 99 |
Greece |
12.4% |
| 100 |
Serbia |
12.1% |
| 101 |
Ireland |
11.4% |
| 102 |
Japan |
10.8% |
| 103 |
Wallis and Futuna |
10.7% |
| 104 |
India |
8.3% |
| 105 |
Turkey |
8.2% |
| 106 |
Qatar |
7.9% |
| 107 |
Germany |
7.4% |
| 108 |
Hungary |
7.0% |
| 109 |
Benin |
4.2% |
| 110 |
Ivory Coast |
3.7% |
| 111 |
Mexico |
3.6% |
| 112 |
Colombia |
2.7% |
| 113 |
Belarus |
2.7% |
| 114 |
Russia |
1.7% |
| 115 |
Norway |
1.3% |
| 116 |
Tunisia |
0.0% |
| 117 |
Saudi Arabia |
0.0% |
| 118 |
Saint Lucia |
0.0% |
| 119 |
Oman |
0.0% |
| 120 |
Nicaragua |
0.0% |
| 121 |
Malta |
0.0% |
| 122 |
Madagascar |
0.0% |
| 123 |
Kuwait |
0.0% |
| 124 |
Cameroon |
0.0% |
| 125 |
Burkina Faso |
0.0% |
| 126 |
Bolivia |
0.0% |
| 127 |
Algeria |
0.0% |
| 128 |
Barbados |
-1.2% |
The data highlights how differently countries have absorbed the shock. While diesel prices surged across much of Asia, Oceania, and parts of Africa, increases were generally more modest across several European economies. Government pricing policies, fuel subsidies, and domestic energy production all help explain these differences.
Meanwhile, several major oil-producing countries, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, and Algeria, recorded no diesel price growth, underscoring how domestic production and government fuel pricing policies can insulate consumers from global shocks.
The steepest diesel price increases were concentrated in a diverse group of fuel-importing economies. Laos tops the ranking with a 149.7% increase, followed by Fiji (+110.1%), Myanmar (+85.6%), and Lesotho (+84.4%).
A number of countries also recorded increases above 60%, including Indonesia, the United Arab Emirates, New Zealand, Peru, Malaysia, and Tanzania. These gains far exceeded the increases seen across most advanced economies and underscore how global energy shocks can affect countries very differently.
The diesel surge mirrors trends seen in gasoline markets since the conflict began. In the United States, gasoline prices rose roughly 50% from pre-war levels during the sharpest phase of the crisis, according to reporting from PBS and NBC News.
However, some analysts note that gasoline prices have recently begun easing as crude oil markets adjust and fears of major supply disruptions have moderated. Yahoo Finance reports that falling oil prices and improving market sentiment have helped pull fuel prices off their highs, though prices remain elevated relative to pre-war levels.
The contrast illustrates a familiar pattern in energy markets: prices can rise rapidly when geopolitical risks emerge but often take longer to normalize once those risks fade.
Diesel is often viewed as a leading indicator of economic cost pressures because it powers much of the world’s freight network. When diesel prices rise, transportation becomes more expensive, increasing costs for manufacturers, retailers, farmers, and construction firms. Those higher costs can eventually filter through to consumers in the form of broader inflation.
In that vein, Reuters found that higher fuel costs are increasing expenses for American farmers, while economists have warned that sustained energy inflation could place additional pressure on consumer prices. Similar concerns have emerged across Europe and Asia as businesses absorb higher transportation and operating costs.
This helps explain why investors continue to closely monitor developments in the Middle East. Even small changes in global oil flows can have outsized effects on fuel prices, transportation costs, and economic growth.
If you enjoyed this post, check out How Much Does Everyone Pay for Gas Around the Globe? on the Voronoi app to compare fuel prices across countries and see where drivers pay the most, and least, at the pump.