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Sports May 21, 2026

The 10 Greatest FIFA World Cup Players of All Time

As the FIFA World Cup 2026 approaches, we examine the 10 greatest players to have graced the tourna…
The Lead: Football's Global IconsFootball is a great leveller. Not everyone goes to a school with a rugby pitch and not everyone can afford a pony. However, from the favelas of Rio de Janeiro and the slums of Nairobi to the playgrounds of Monaco and Beverly Hills, you will see children kicking a football about.Arguments over the greatest 10 World Cup heroes have kept friends debating into the small hours for decades. Such arguments will continue for as long as football is played. But here, before the FIFA World Cup 2026, are the 10 we think have been the best:The Legends: Ranking World Cup Greats10. Zinedine ZidaneOne of the greatest and most controversial players of the game, Zidane won the 1998 World Cup for France at home, scoring twice in the final. Injuries kept him largely out of France's short-lived 2002 World Cup campaign, but he went on to be named player of the tournament at the 2006 edition – despite the infamous head butt that sent him off in the final against Italy. Thousands of fans lined the streets of Paris chanting Zidane's name when the team returned home.Having scored 31 goals in 108 matches for France, his talismanic leadership shaped the national team into something much greater than the sum of its parts. As a coach, he went on to win three Champions League titles and La Liga twice with Real Madrid.9. Jimmy GreavesNot even the great Bobby Moore, whose statue greets supporters arriving at Wembley Stadium, was as loved by English fans as Jimmy Greaves. Already a star at home, Greaves gained international recognition after rescuing a pitch-invading dog that had evaded the Brazilian greats during England's 1962 World Cup quarterfinal. Brazil's Garrincha took the dog home, and Greaves became known in Brazil as "Garrincha's dog-catcher".Greaves was part of the 1966 World Cup-winning squad, but a savage injury inflicted by France's Joseph Bonnel that required 14 stitches kept Greaves out of the final. Greaves scored six hat-tricks in an England shirt, a record that still stands. The 1966 campaign continues to be a focal point of English identity, the squad universally adored, and Greaves became a broadcaster, welcomed into the nation's living rooms for decades.8. Ferenc PuskasPuskas was captain of the Mighty Magyars, Hungary's golden team, which flourished under the influence of Jimmy Hogan's Total Football. He scored 84 goals in 85 matches for Hungary and made four appearances for Spain. Hungary were so dominant under Puskas that the 1954 World Cup final was the only game they lost in the entire decade.He scored 702 goals from 705 career games. The giant of European football was a vocal supporter of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and defected to Spain while on tour after the Soviet army killed 2,500 of his countrymen while crushing the uprising. He returned to Hungary after the collapse of communism and remains worshipped by Hungarians.7. Lothar MatthausGermany's most-capped player, Matthaus scored 23 goals in 150 international matches. A box-to-box midfielder, he featured in five World Cups, helping West Germany win the 1990 edition. The only German to be named FIFA World Player of the Year, Matthaus holds the record for most World Cup games (25). His natural leadership gave him a commanding presence on the field, and his technical ability combined with his tactical awareness gave him an unstoppable dominance on the pitch.The bullish Diego Maradona called him the toughest opponent he ever faced.6. Miroslav KloseIt's rare that you get prizes just for being a good guy, but Germany's record goal scorer, the somersaulting Miroslav Klose, has a handful of them. With a career hallmarked by fair play and decency – he famously refused to accept a penalty awarded to him during a club match because he knew the referee was mistaken – Klose scored in four World Cups, finally lifting the trophy in 2014.A physical powerhouse of a forward, his stature belied his speed. He scored 71 goals in 137 matches in a German jersey. He also scored 16 World Cup goals. No one has ever scored more. He was prolific, and a good guy.5. Ronaldo"The Phenomenon" reinvented the role of striker while playing for Brazil in 98 matches and scoring 62 goals. He lifted the 1994 World Cup trophy at the age of just 17. Four years later, he was named Player of the Tournament after steering Brazil into the final, only to suffer a convulsive fit just hours before the game. He scored twice in the 2002 World Cup final to add to his six in the competition earlier, once more lifting the trophy.A fourth World Cup appearance saw Ronaldo score a then-record-breaking 15th World Cup goal. But it was the way in which he did it that set the world on fire: speed, control, vision, total mastery of the ball, explosive runs, juggling the ball past defenders with acrobatic flicks and tricks, and the goals.4. Franz BeckenbauerNo compilation of World Cup heroes could omit Franz Beckenbauer, one of only three men – along with Didier Deschamps and Mario Zagallo – to lift the World Cup trophy both as a player and a manager. Despite playing as a defender, Beckenbauer scored 14 goals in his 103 appearances for West Germany, captaining the 1974 winning side.After playing in the 1966 World Cup final loss to England, he got revenge four years later, scoring a searing goal to knock the English out and send West Germany to the semifinal. But three World Cup appearances weren't enough for him, and as Germany marched towards unification and a new era, Beckenbauer guided the national team as manager to win the 1990 World Cup.3. Johan CruyffThe three-time Ballon d'Or winner, one of the most influential figures in the sporting philosophy of Total Football, brought a new level of sophistication to the game. Football for Cruyff wasn't just an athletic sport but a blending of mind, body and artistry – an exercise in simplicity and beauty.A creative playmaker with a unique understanding of the geometry of players' pitch positions, he led his team like the conductor of an orchestra. The Netherlands never lost a game in which he scored. And he scored a lot – 33 goals in 48 international matches. Cruyff led the Netherlands to the final of the 1974 World Cup, scoring twice against Argentina and knocking out then-champions Brazil. It was only the defensive heroics of Franz Beckenbauer that frustrated Cruyff's efforts on goal and kept the Dutchman from lifting the trophy.2. Diego MaradonaThe drug-addled "Golden Boy" is widely regarded as one of the greatest players in the history of football. His 60-metre (66-yard) dribble past five England players in the 1986 World Cup quarterfinal led to the "goal of the century", yet its mastery followed the sport's most famous unpenalised handball – the goal that became known as "the hand of God".That game epitomised the two sides of Maradona: the raw, prodigious talent of the Argentinian captain mixed with an absolute disregard for rules, the shameless arrogance of a genius and the belief that one's innate talent sets you apart from – and above – the mere mortals around you. Argentina went on to win the 1986 World Cup, 10 years after Maradona had made his first appearance for the national side aged just 16.1. PeleHas there ever been a more successful football icon than Brazil's Pele? In 1958, when he scored his first World Cup goal – the result of a scuffed mishit that ended Wales's World Cup dreams for the following seven decades – could anyone have known the giant he was to become?With either foot, Pele could produce the sort of magic that inspired generations. Off the pitch, as one of the first truly global Black sports superstars, his outspoken support for improving the lives of the poor made him a national hero. Pele lifted the World Cup three times: 1958, 1962 and 1970. He remains Brazil's leading goal scorer with 77 goals in 92 games. He was so famous, so beloved all around the world that in 1969, both sides in Nigeria's civil war agreed to a ceasefire so they could watch Pele play in an exhibition match in Lagos.The Legacy: World Cup Impact on National IdentityPerhaps the way in which football stars have often escaped humble origins to shine in the sport allows the very best to become icons on and off the pitch and truly become heroes of nations. For many countries, World Cup success has become intertwined with national identity, with players elevated to almost mythical status for their contributions to the sport and their country's prestige on the world stage.The Evolution: Changing Standards of GreatnessAs the World Cup has evolved over decades, so too have the standards by which we measure greatness. Early World Cup heroes were often celebrated for their technical skill and leadership, while modern players are increasingly judged by their statistics, consistency across tournaments, and ability to perform under pressure. The rise of data analytics in football has added new dimensions to the debate about what constitutes greatness in the World Cup context.The Future: Who Will Join the Pantheon?As we approach the 2026 World Cup, the question remains: who will join this pantheon of greats? With players like Lionel Messi already having cemented their legacy, and emerging talents like Kylian Mbappé showing signs of greatness, the debate will continue to evolve. The World Cup has always been a stage where legends are made, and the 2026 tournament promises to be no exception.
#FIFA #World Cup #Football
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Politics May 21, 2026

HS2: The UK's Costly White Elephant That Needs to Be Put Out of Its Misery

HS2, the UK's high-speed rail project, has ballooned to an estimated cost of £102.7bn with potentia…
The LeadHS2, the UK's flagship high-speed rail project, has officially become the most expensive infrastructure endeavor in British history, with costs soaring to £102.7bn and trains potentially not running until 2039. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander has labeled the original design a "massively over-specced folly" and the cost increases "obscene," yet continues to defend the project despite its clear failures.The Escalating Costs of HS2The project's financial trajectory has been nothing short of disastrous. What began as a more modest proposal has now ballooned to over £100bn, with trains potentially delayed until 2039—decades after initial promises. To put this in perspective, the cost has escalated so dramatically that it dwarfs even other famously extravagant projects like Trump's White House renovations or Dubai's Burj Khalifa. Despite nine different transport secretaries overseeing the project since its inception, the budget has consistently spiraled out of control, with no end in sight.Political Failures and MismanagementSuccessive UK governments have failed to take responsibility for this unfolding disaster. The project originated as a "vanity project" of the David Cameron coalition, with fundamentally flawed design choices including the wrong route, wrong speed, and improper termini. Prime Ministers from Cameron to Johnson to Sunak have all lacked the political courage to cancel the project, with Sunak merely scrapping the Manchester leg, making what remains even worse value for money. Civil servants and advisors have been overwhelmed by the 30,000-strong HS2 bureaucracy, while oversight bodies like the National Audit Office have failed to provide adequate scrutiny.The Case for CancellationThe strongest argument for HS2 is its cancellation. With no track laid and only two viaducts completed out of 52, the project is still in its early stages. The £44bn already spent should be treated as "sunk costs," and the focus should shift to more beneficial investments. Contrary to claims that cancellation would be prohibitively expensive, there's no logical scenario where the £60bn still planned for HS2 would provide better value than reallocating those funds elsewhere. Cancellation would also free up valuable urban development sites around London Euston and Birmingham's Curzon Street, which currently resemble construction disaster zones.Alternative Investments for Britain's FutureThe funds currently committed to HS2—potentially over £100bn—could transform Britain's infrastructure landscape. Instead of focusing on marginal time savings for journeys between London and Birmingham, the government could invest in re-signaling, electrification, and urban transit systems. Britain currently has only nine tram networks or metros, compared to France's 30 and Germany's 60. The annual £7bn HS2 budget could build new hospitals, schools, care centers, youth clubs, and courtrooms across the nation—investments that would address far more pressing needs than marginally faster rail travel for a small segment of the population.
#HS2 #UK Infrastructure #Rail Transport
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Sports May 21, 2026

Arteta Built a Garden Fire While Arsenal Clinched Their First Premier League Title in 22 Years

Mikel Arteta admitted he left the training ground to build a fire in his garden as Arsenal secured …
Lead: A Manager’s Unusual CelebrationMikel Arteta chose a backyard barbecue over the live broadcast when Arsenal clinched the Premier League, describing the experience as "building a fire" while his family celebrated the historic triumph.Garden Fire and Family Joy: The Moment Arsenal Won the TitleArteta headed to the training ground to watch Manchester City’s draw at Bournemouth with his squad, but 20 minutes before kick‑off he returned home, unable to bear the tension. In his garden he lit a fire, barbecued, and heard his son Gabriel announce, “We’re champions, Daddy.” His wife and other children joined, creating a personal celebration separate from the players.Numbers That Matter: Breaking a 22‑Year DroughtFirst league title for Arsenal in 22 years.Three consecutive runners‑up finishes prior to this season.Arsenal’s historic comeback solidifies their place at the top of the Premier League table.Why It Changes Arsenal’s NarrativeThe victory underscores Arteta’s emphasis on perseverance, humility and resilience—values he says were as important off the pitch as on it. By confronting his own doubts about being “good enough,” Arteta set a tone of vulnerability that resonated with the squad, fostering a culture that could sustain future success.Looking Ahead: Champions League Ambitions and Squad OutlookWith Arsenal hopeful that Jurriën Timber will be fit for the upcoming Champions League final against Paris Saint‑Germain, and Mikel Merino back in training, Arteta’s next challenge is to translate domestic dominance into European glory. The manager’s focus remains on staying humble, curious, and goal‑oriented as the club prepares for the Budapest final.
#Mikel Arteta #Arsenal #Premier League
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Sports May 21, 2026

Arsenal's Arteta Builds Fire Instead of Watching Title Triumph

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta chose to build a fire at home rather than watch his team secure their …
The LeadAnxious Arsenal fans around the world were glued to their screens when Manchester City's draw at Bournemouth crowned the North London club as Premier League champions – but Mikel Arteta, who led Arsenal to their first league title in 22 years, was not watching.The manager had planned to be at Arsenal's training centre in London Colney to watch the game with his players, but could not find the energy to make the trip, and chose to stay at home.The Unconventional Celebration"I went outside to the garden, I started to build some fire. I started to do some barbecue, I didn't watch any of it," Arteta told reporters on Thursday.After finishing second three times in a row, Arteta heard the news of their long-awaited triumph from his eldest son, Gabriel, who plays for Arsenal's Under-18 side."My eldest son opened the garden door, he started to run towards me. He started to cry, gave me a hug and said, we are champions, daddy," Arteta said."Then my other two boys and my wife came over, and it was beautiful, just to see the joy on them as well."Videos shared by Arsenal on social media showed players dancing and chanting at their training centre after their league title was confirmed with a game to spare."It was their moment. And they have to be themselves in that moment. And if I'm there, I think it wasn't going to be the same," Arteta said.Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard called Arteta soon after, asking where the manager was."I said, guys, enjoy for a while and see you in a few hours somewhere in London," Arteta recalled with a smile.The Manager's JourneyIt is Arteta's first league title as manager, and he admitted that he doubted himself during a high-pressure campaign, where they were often a slip-up away from losing their lead in the title race."To play with that on your back constantly is not easy. That has been one of the toughest moments... we showed very important values not only in sport, but in life. Which is perseverance, to be resilient, to be composed in moments when people are doubting," he said."And to be vulnerable. I've asked that question to myself, am I good enough to lead these players to win a major trophy? Until you do it, you cannot validate yourself."The Team's MomentumArteta said the mood in the club had changed after winning the Premier League, buoying the team's confidence ahead of a Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain on May 30."It changes because the level of emotion you feel, it's something I haven't felt before," he said.The Final ChapterArsenal will conclude their league campaign and lift the trophy at Crystal Palace on Sunday."We will have a window to celebrate and lift the trophy and connect with the people we have constantly around us. Then we have six days to write new history in this football club," Arteta added.
#Arsenal #Mikel Arteta #Premier League
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Business May 21, 2026

French Court Convicts Airbus and Air France of Manslaughter Over 2009 AF447 Crash

A French appeals court has found Airbus and Air France guilty of manslaughter for the 2009 AF447 di…
The Paris Court of Appeal ruled Thursday that Airbus and Air France are "solely and entirely responsible" for the June 1, 2009 crash of flight AF447, marking the first manslaughter conviction in the tragedy that claimed 228 lives. The Paris Court of Appeal Convicts Airbus and Air France of Manslaughter The court ordered each victim’s family to receive 225,000 euros (approximately $261,720), the maximum corporate manslaughter fine under French law. While the amount is largely symbolic, the judgment reverses a 2023 lower‑court acquittal and re‑opens the legal battle over responsibility for the disaster. Financial Penalties and Compensation Calculations Fine per victim: €225,000 Total potential payout: €51.3 million (≈ $59 million) for all 228 victims Legal costs: Not disclosed, but both companies face extensive appeal expenses Implications for Aviation Safety Oversight and Corporate Liability The ruling underscores growing pressure on manufacturers and airlines to address known technical flaws—specifically the pitot‑tube sensor issues that contributed to the crash. Prosecutors, led by Rodolphe Juy‑Birmann, argued that both firms were aware of the defect yet failed to mandate high‑altitude training for pilots. Industry observers warn that the decision could trigger stricter regulatory scrutiny across Europe, prompting airlines to reassess training programs and sensor‑replacement schedules. Potential Appeals and Industry Repercussions Ahead Airbus announced it will appeal to France’s highest court, contending that the finding contradicts the 2023 acquittal. An appeal could extend the legal saga for years, keeping the case in the public eye and influencing future litigation strategies for aerospace firms. Should the conviction stand, it may set a precedent for holding manufacturers criminally liable in aviation accidents, potentially reshaping insurance models and prompting more proactive safety investments. Timeline of Key Events June 1 2009 – Flight AF447 disappears over the Atlantic, killing 228 people. 2011‑2015 – Deep‑sea search recovers black boxes; investigations reveal pitot‑tube malfunction. April 2023 – Lower court acquits Airbus and Air France of manslaughter. May 21 2026 – Paris Court of Appeal convicts both companies and imposes fines.
#Airbus #Air France #AF447
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Tech May 21, 2026

Nvidia Posts Record $58.3B Profit Amid AI Chip Boom

Nvidia has announced record quarterly profit of $58.3 billion and revenue of $81.6 billion, driven …
The Record-Breaking Quarter Nvidia has announced record quarterly profit and revenue amid explosive demand for its advanced AI chips. The US tech behemoth said on Wednesday that profit soared to $58.3bn for the February-April period, up 37 percent from the previous quarter and more than 200 percent year-on-year. Revenue jumped to $81.6bn, up 20 percent from the prior quarter and 85 percent compared with the same period in 2025. Nvidia forecast revenue for the current quarter to hit $91bn, more than most analysts' estimates. The AI Chip Surge Nvidia's data-centre business was the main driver of growth, with quarterly revenue surging 92 percent year-on-year to $75.2bn. The Santa Clara, California-based chip giant's hardware unit racked up revenue of $6.4bn, up 29 percent from the previous year. In a sweetener for shareholders, the world's most valuable company said it would buy back an additional $80bn in shares and raise its quarterly cash dividend from $0.01 a share to $0.25 per share. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang hailed the "extraordinary" results as proof of the growing utility of AI. "Demand has gone parabolic," Huang said in a conference call with investors and analysts. "The reason is simple. Agentic AI has arrived," Huang said, referring to the advent of semi-autonomous AI models. "AI can now do productive and valuable work." Market Expectations vs Reality Despite once again blasting past analysts' expectations, Nvidia's latest results received a muted market response. Shares in Nvidia fell nearly 1.3 percent in after-hours trading, an indication of the sky-high expectations attached to a company whose blistering growth since 2022 has lifted its market capitalisation to more than $5 trillion. "Expectations are very high, and when a company like Nvidia has been doing as well as it has for so long, it takes a lot for people to get excited," Jay Goldberg, a senior analyst for semiconductors and electronics at Seaport Research, told Al Jazeera. "That's just kind of the nature of Wall Street." "All these stocks have run a lot this year, but a lot of it is driven by press releases," Goldberg said, adding that tech firms have yet to demonstrate a "broad-based consumer case" for AI. The AI Valuation Debate Nvidia's spectacular rise and the sky-high valuations of other tech giants, such as Microsoft and Amazon, have stirred discussion about whether AI is overhyped and creating a massive market bubble. William Rhind, the CEO and founder of New York-based investment firm GraniteShares, said the muted reaction showed that expectations had "caught up to fundamentals." "Nvidia is no longer beating a high bar – it is the bar," Rhind told Al Jazeera. Rhind said the bullish case for Nvidia nonetheless remains strong, pointing to the dividend hike and share buyback scheme as signs of a company with "more cash than it can possibly redeploy into the business". "When the marginal use of capital starts shifting toward buybacks and dividends, you're watching a hypergrowth story begin to mature in real time," he said. "That's not bearish – it's a different kind of bullish." Future Outlook John Belton, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, said Nvidia's latest results should not "dramatically shift the story one way or another". "Overall, another solid earnings," Belton told Al Jazeera, saying the results mirrored the "strong numbers" of previous quarters "albeit without any new earth-shattering developments." As Nvidia continues to dominate the AI chip market, the company faces the challenge of maintaining its extraordinary growth trajectory while navigating increasing scrutiny about whether current valuations reflect sustainable business fundamentals or speculative enthusiasm.
#Nvidia #AI chips #Jensen Huang
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Business May 21, 2026

BT Warns of Smartphone Price Rises Due to Chip Shortages from AI Boom

BT warns that smartphone prices may rise due to chip shortages caused by the boom in artificial int…
The Impact of AI on Chip Supply Chains BT has warned that the cost of smartphones could rise as technology companies buy up semiconductor chips due to the boom in artificial intelligence, putting pressure on supply chains. Chip Shortages and Price Increases The telecoms company’s chief executive, Allison Kirkby, said she was anticipating shortages as tech firms bought large quantities of memory chips to power the datacentres relied on by AI. Kirkby added that price increases would mainly hit smartphone handsets, but could also affect the cost of routers. The Data Analysis Memory chips are essential for almost every modern item of electronics and are also used in other important components such as graphics cards. The largest manufacturers of laptops and phones, including Microsoft, Samsung and Dell, have already begun to put up prices in response to the chip shortages and have pulled cheaper models from the market. Sony has also hiked the price of its PlayStation 5 consoles, including a $100 (£75) increase in the US, while Nintendo has confirmed a price rise for its Switch 2. The Impact Analysis A global investment spree in AI has led to a huge expansion of server farms, enormous banks of computers filled with high-end memory chips. These requirements are not only consuming the world’s current supply of chips, but also production capacity for the coming years, creating shortages and driving up the cost of electronics. The Prediction Kirkby said she had not yet seen price increases from premium handset manufacturers, but expected companies such as Apple to pass higher costs on to customers. BT plans to cut costs by a further £700m over the next four years and reported flat full-year earnings and falling revenues.
#BT #Artificial Intelligence #Chip Shortage
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Economy May 21, 2026

The Economics of Hormuz: Calculating the Cost of Iran's Transit Toll

As the Strait of Hormuz remains closed eleven weeks into the Iran war, this analysis examines wheth…
The LeadEleven weeks after the start of the Iran war, the Strait of Hormuz has remained closed to naval traffic, bleeding the global economy far beyond the Gulf. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) maintains an iron grip over this narrow, strategic waterway, while a corresponding United States naval blockade on Iranian ports has failed to reopen it.Before the war began, between 120 and 140 ships travelled through the strait each day, about half of them oil tankers carrying some 20 million barrels of oil between them. Now, only a few vessels whose owners have negotiated with the IRGC are permitted to pass.The Strategic Control of HormuzOn Wednesday, Iran said it coordinated the transit of 26 vessels through the Strait of Hormuz in 24 hours, two days after announcing the formation of the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA), a new body to provide "real-time updates" on operations in the strait.Since the announcement of a temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran in April, Iran has been working on formalising a mechanism to charge a transit fee from ships crossing the critical chokepoint, through which 20 percent of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) are shipped during peacetime.Tehran has reportedly already charged fees as high as $2m per ship for transit since the war started. Even though countries opposing Tehran say this is illegal, it may still be less expensive than the overall cost of the closure of the strait each day.The Economic Cost of BlockadeNearly one-fifth of global oil and LNG exports were shipped by Gulf producers through the Strait of Hormuz before the US and Israel bombed Iran on February 28, triggering the Iranian closure of the waterway. The strait is the only waterway linking Gulf producers to the open ocean – there is no other route through which they can ship exports.About 20.3 million barrels per day of oil passed through the Strait of Hormuz in peacetime – nearly 27 percent of global maritime oil trade. The lion's share of that crude went to Asian markets.Global LNG trade has been similarly hard hit. On the day before the war broke out, Brent crude – the global benchmark for oil prices – closed at $72.48 per barrel. After Iran closed the waterway on March 4 and began attacks on vessels attempting to sail through, traffic came to a standstill, stranding about 2,000 ships on either side of the strait.In terms of lost oil revenues, this amounts to $114.8bn of losses per day. About 10 billion cubic feet of LNG per day also used to pass through the strait, worth a further $7.8bn.The Cost-Benefit Analysis of Transit FeesFor hundreds of ships stranded in the Gulf with thousands of sailors on board, the cost of remaining anchored is steep, including crew wages, loan repayments, repair and management, coupled with inflated war risk premiums.In turn, Iran has reportedly been charging up to $2m for authorisation to pass. Experts say many will see this as worthwhile purely in terms of monetary cost."There is no doubt that paying Iran is cheaper than a continuous blockade because a sitting tanker bleeds money," said Nader Habibi, an Iranian American economist."It makes sense from an economic point of view, but it is not politically feasible," he added. "The companies are under pressure from the US sanctions and not to make arrangements with Iran. This is not just a purely economic cost-benefit analysis, but long-term considerations that are taken into account."International Legal PerspectivesInternational law protects free transit through strategic waters such as natural straits like Hormuz, barring countries from imposing passage tolls even where the waterways fall entirely into territorial waters, like in the case of Hormuz.However, services such as security controls, inspections and insurance regimes can be charged for. Chargeable fees also partly depend on whether a waterway is a man-made passageway or a natural one.These are three different precedents in maritime traffic flow:Panama Canal: An artificial waterway connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Vessels pass through a unique system of locks that raise and lower vessels across elevated terrain. Since Panama built, maintains and operates the canal, it can charge transit fees based on vessel size, cargo capacity and booking priority. These range from several hundred thousand dollars per transit to some slots sold for millions of dollars.Suez Canal: Another artificial canal, linking the Mediterranean and Red seas. Egypt charges transit fees for the use of canal infrastructure, maintenance and traffic management services through the narrow waterway. Container ships and oil tankers pay from several hundred thousand dollars to more than one million dollars per voyage.Turkiye's Bosporus Strait and Dardanelles: These are different because they are natural straits, rather than man-made canals. Turkiye charges for navigation-related services such as lighthouse operations, rescue readiness, medical support and traffic management – and tightly controls ship scheduling and navigation.Regional Cooperation PossibilitiesIran's newly-formed PGSA published a new map of Hormuz, stretching from Kuh-e Mubarak in Iran to south of Fujairah, in the UAE, at the eastern entrance of the strait, and from the tip of Qeshm Island to Umm al-Quwain at the western entrance.Given how the Iran war has spilled over into the Gulf region – with the UAE taking the brunt of Iranian strikes – economist Mohammad Reza Farzanegan said "regional cooperation with Iran is the most realistic path to stable transit through the Strait of Hormuz."The UAE, Oman, Qatar and Iran will have to work together because their economies require it, he argued. A workable arrangement could include a joint maritime authority, shared monitoring, emergency coordination, environmental protection and service-based contributions for maintaining safe passage."This would give Iran a recognised role in the security of the waterway while giving Persian Gulf economies more predictability," Farzanegan added. "Such a framework is also more realistic than relying on external military enforcement, which has been more a source of trouble for these states."The Future OutlookWhile it may seem that the economics of the closure of the strait are currently skewed towards Iran, Aniseh Tabrizi, an associate fellow on the Middle East and North Africa Programme at think tank Chatham House, noted that "the economics by itself is not going to be the driver to change calculation or move from the current standpoint."She emphasized that Iran and the US need to reach a "diplomatic compromise, with other calculations linked in to the economic factor", before there can be an end to the energy supply crisis.Farzanegan added that if the world expects stable access to the Strait of Hormuz, then paying Iran could well be accepted as the price of keeping the vital waterway predictable. "From an economic perspective, a negotiated transit arrangement [with Iran] now makes more sense than continued closure," he concluded.
#Iran #Strait of Hormuz #Oil Prices
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Business May 21, 2026

Elon Musk's SpaceX Plans $1.75tn Flotation with Ambitious Mars Colonization Goals

Elon Musk's SpaceX has revealed plans for a $1.75tn flotation, seeking investor backing for its amb…
The Lead Elon Musk's SpaceX has revealed plans for a highly anticipated $1.75tn (£1.3tn) flotation next month as he seeks investor backing for his quest to make life “multiplanetary”. SpaceX's Financial Performance SpaceX is a sprawling business, encompassing the eponymous rocket launch company, the Starlink satellite broadband service, Musk’s xAI artificial intelligence startup and the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. The entire business lost $4.9bn in 2025 on revenues of $18.7bn. Revenue is growing, however, rising by a third on 2024. The Data Analysis SpaceX's losses have widened since the start of the year, losing $4.3bn in the first quarter, compared with a loss of $528m in the same period last year. The company is split into three segments: space, which incorporates the rocket launch business whose clients include Nasa; connectivity, which houses Starlink; and AI, the unit behind xAI and the X platform. Connectivity makes the most revenue, at $11.4bn Space with $4.1bn AI at $3.2bn The Impact Analysis Musk will have 85% control of the business under the IPO plans, making it extremely difficult to unseat him from the company. Musk's control will be derived from majority ownership of a type of stock known as class B, which carries much more heft than the class A stock that everyone else will own. The Prediction Musk, who is already worth about $676bn, stands to make a vast sum from SpaceX although the exact amount is unclear. He has been granted 1bn class B shares that vest – meaning, Musk gets full ownership of them – if SpaceX manages to achieve the “establishment of a permanent human colony on Mars with at least one million inhabitants”.
#SpaceX #Elon Musk #IPO
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