Trust

Claims catalog

Every qualitative claim in the Warconomy dataset, joined to its source and carrying its confidence and live/sample mode. Claims are sourced and bounded exactly like numbers — associative, not causal. Partial coverage, not real-time.

static reference · data June 5, 2026

Warconomy tracks 38 qualitative claims, each tied to a cited source and carrying a confidence level and a live or sample mode. By confidence: 27 high, 11 medium. Claims are written associatively, never as causal attributions, and coverage is partial.

  • 38 sourced claims.
  • Each carries confidence and live/sample mode.
  • Machine-readable at /claims/data.json, .csv, .jsonl.

Claims

ClaimConfidenceModeSource
The war is associated with significant disruption to European energy supply and a reordering of oil and gas trade flows.highsampleInternational Energy Agency — International Energy Agency
Ukraine and Russia are major exporters of grain, oilseeds, and fertilizer inputs, so disruptions are tracked alongside global food-price pressure.highsampleFood and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations — Food and Agriculture Organization
The Government of Ukraine, World Bank, European Commission, and UN estimate reconstruction and recovery needs at about USD 524 billion over the next decade, as of December 2024 (RDNA4); such estimates are periodically revised.mediumsampleGovernment of Ukraine, World Bank Group, European Commission, and United Nations — Ukraine — Fourth Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment (RDNA4)
Allied financial, humanitarian, and military support to Ukraine has been tracked cumulatively by independent researchers.mediumsampleKiel Institute (Ukraine Support Tracker) — Kiel Institute for the World Economy
The Strait of Hormuz is described as the world's most important oil transit chokepoint, with limited alternative pipeline capacity.highsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — U.S. Energy Information Administration
Perceived transit risk in the strait is commonly tracked alongside movements in crude oil benchmark prices.mediumsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — U.S. Energy Information Administration
The Red Sea corridor is a primary Europe–Asia trade route; reduced transits are associated with diversions around the Cape of Good Hope.highsampleUNCTAD — UN Conference on Trade and Development
Longer reroutes are associated with higher freight costs, increased fuel use, and longer delivery lead times.mediumsampleUNCTAD — UN Conference on Trade and Development
Suez Canal Authority statistics reported 12,758 vessels transiting in 2025 (524.5 million net tons), down from 13,213 vessels (522.1 million tons) in 2024 — a partial, uneven recovery still below pre-disruption levels, with container-ship transits reported about 18% lower year over year.mediumsampleSuez Canal Authority — Suez Canal Authority — Navigation statistics
UNCTAD's Review of Maritime Transport 2024 reported that by mid-2024 tonnage transiting the Suez Canal was down about 70% while Cape of Good Hope traffic rose about 89%, as vessels diverted around Africa — a newer official assessment that complements the February 2024 rapid assessment.highsampleUN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) — UNCTAD — Review of Maritime Transport 2024
The Panama Canal Authority reported about 423 million tons transited in fiscal year 2024, down from prior years as drought-driven draft and slot restrictions cut traffic.highsamplePanama Canal Authority (Autoridad del Canal de Panamá) — Panama Canal Authority — FY2024 financial and traffic results
A severe 2023–2024 drought forced the canal to cut daily transit slots and draft, reducing FY2024 deep-draft transits about 29% versus FY2023 — a freshwater-availability constraint rather than a security disruption.highsamplePanama Canal Authority (Autoridad del Canal de Panamá) — Panama Canal Authority — FY2024 financial and traffic results
After the Strait of Hormuz, the Strait of Malacca is the world's busiest oil transit chokepoint by volume, carrying crude and petroleum products toward East Asian markets.highsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook — energy security / maritime oil chokepoints
Red Sea security disruption since late 2023 has pushed many tankers off the Bab el-Mandeb and Suez route onto the longer voyage around the Cape of Good Hope, lowering oil flows through the strait.highsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook — energy security / maritime oil chokepoints
Flows through the Turkish Straits are predominantly crude oil moving from Russian, Caspian, and Black Sea ports toward the Mediterranean and world markets.mediumsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook — energy security / maritime oil chokepoints
The Danish Straits are a primary outlet for seaborne Russian and Baltic crude and petroleum-product exports to global markets, making them central to sanctions and shadow-fleet attention in the Baltic.mediumsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook — energy security / maritime oil chokepoints
Brent and WTI are the two most-watched crude oil benchmarks; the Brent–WTI spread reflects differences between waterborne international crude and U.S. landlocked crude. Warconomy tracks them as market benchmarks alongside conflict and chokepoint risk, not as causal attributions.highsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — EIA — Spot Prices for Crude Oil (Brent & WTI)
Henry Hub is the U.S. natural gas benchmark; European and Asian gas benchmarks (e.g. TTF, JKM) can move very differently, so a single gas price does not capture the global market. Tracked as a benchmark, not a causal attribution.mediumsampleU.S. Energy Information Administration — EIA — Henry Hub Natural Gas Spot Price (monthly)
The FAO Food Price Index is a trade-weighted basket of five sub-indices (cereals, vegetable oils, dairy, meat, sugar). It is a global benchmark of international food-commodity prices, tracked alongside the food-security channel of conflict and trade disruption — not a measure of any single event's impact.highsampleFood and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations — FAO — Food Price Index (monthly)
SIPRI reports world military expenditure reached US$2,718 billion in 2024, a 9.4% increase that was the steepest year-on-year rise since at least 1988 — the predecessor point to the 2025 total.highsampleStockholm International Peace Research Institute — SIPRI — Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2024
SIPRI reports that world military expenditure rose for the eleventh consecutive year in 2025, continuing a sustained multi-year increase.highsampleStockholm International Peace Research Institute — SIPRI — Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2025
SIPRI reports the top three spenders — the United States, China, and Russia — spent a combined US$1,480 billion in 2025, about 51% of the global total.highsampleStockholm International Peace Research Institute — SIPRI — Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2025
SIPRI reports the five biggest spenders in 2025 — the United States, China, Russia, Germany, and India — together accounted for 58% of world military spending.highsampleStockholm International Peace Research Institute — SIPRI — Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2025
Maritime disruption risk varies across chokepoints; UNCTAD reports on trade and transport impacts of such disruptions.mediumsampleUNCTAD — UN Conference on Trade and Development
The G7, EU, and Australia first set the price cap on seaborne Russian crude oil at US$60 per barrel, applicable from 5 December 2022; the EU subsequently lowered its cap to a dynamic level — US$47.6 per barrel under the 18th package, then US$44.10 per barrel from 1 February 2026 — while the United States continued to apply the original US$60 level.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — Dynamic mechanism lowers the Russian crude oil price cap to US$44.10/bbl
The U.S. Treasury reports that the G7-led Price Cap Coalition set the price cap on seaborne Russian-origin crude oil at US$60 per barrel, effective 5 December 2022, via an OFAC determination under Executive Order 14071; the United States continued to apply the US$60 level after the EU adopted a lower dynamic cap. It is a policy threshold for covered services, not a market price, and not legal or compliance advice.highsampleU.S. Department of the Treasury (OFAC) — U.S. Department of the Treasury — Price cap on Russian oil (US$60/bbl crude)
EU price caps on seaborne Russian refined products have applied since 5 February 2023, at US$100 per barrel for premium-to-crude products (e.g. diesel, kerosene, gasoline) and US$45 per barrel for discount-to-crude products (e.g. fuel oil, naphtha).highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — EU sanctions against Russia: energy (oil price cap)
Under REPowerEU, the European Commission reported that the EU dropped its share of Russian gas imports from 45% to 19%, with a partial rebound in 2024, and set out a roadmap to fully end EU dependency on Russian energy.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — Roadmap to fully end EU dependency on Russian energy (REPowerEU)
The IEA tracks Russia's oil export revenues, which it has reported declining over 2025 as discounted Urals prices and tighter sanctions weighed on receipts; revenue and rerouting estimates are associative and not a causal attribution to any single measure.mediumsampleInternational Energy Agency — International Energy Agency
The EU lists shadow-fleet vessels in successive sanctions packages; with the 20th package (23 April 2026) the cumulative list reached 632 vessels in Russia's shadow fleet (up from 557 after the 19th package), subject to port-access and maritime-service bans, with vessels both added and occasionally delisted.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission / Council of the EU — 20th sanctions package (shadow-fleet vessel listings)
CREA has identified a 'shadow'/'dark' tanker fleet that obscures Russian oil trade through practices such as ship-to-ship transfers and gaps in vessel-tracking signals; such estimates vary by methodology and are not directly comparable across sources.mediumsampleCentre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) — CREA — Shedding light on shadow tankers
The EU reports that around €260 billion of Central Bank of Russia assets are immobilized worldwide, with more than two-thirds (about €210 billion) in the EU; in December 2025 the EU decided to keep them immobilized indefinitely. The assets are immobilized, not confiscated.highsampleCouncil of the European Union — Council of the EU — Russia's war against Ukraine: EU sanctions (immobilised assets)
G7 ERA loans for Ukraine are repaid from the extraordinary revenues/windfall proceeds generated by immobilized Russian assets — not the principal assets themselves; the European Commission estimates these revenues at up to €2.5–3 billion a year.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — EU's €18.1 billion contribution to the G7 ERA loans (first €3 billion tranche)
The U.S. Treasury disbursed a US$20 billion loan to benefit Ukraine as part of the US$50 billion G7 Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration (ERA) loan initiative, to be repaid with proceeds from immobilized Russian sovereign assets.highsampleU.S. Department of the Treasury — U.S. Department of the Treasury — Disbursement of $20 billion ERA loan to benefit Ukraine
With its 20th sanctions package (23 April 2026) the EU activated its anti-circumvention tool against a third country for the first time, restricting exports of certain machine tools and telecommunications equipment to the Kyrgyz Republic over re-export risk to Russia.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — 20th sanctions package (military-industrial & circumvention listings)
Of the 60 entities the EU listed in its 20th package for supporting Russia's military-industrial complex or circumvention, 28 are established in third countries (including China, the UAE and Türkiye) — illustrating the third-country routing channel.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — 20th sanctions package (military-industrial & circumvention listings)
The EU, US, UK, and Japan jointly maintain a Common High Priority Items list of battlefield/dual-use goods (50 HS codes as of February 2024) that Russia seeks to procure, used to focus export-control and circumvention-enforcement efforts.highsampleEuropean Commission — European Commission — Common High Priority Items list (with the US, UK and Japan)
IMF PortWatch reported that the volume of trade transiting the Suez Canal fell by about 50% year over year in the first two months of 2024, while trade rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope rose by an estimated 74% — a reminder that chokepoint disruptions can reroute traffic rather than simply reduce global trade.highsampleInternational Monetary Fund — IMF PortWatch — Red Sea Attacks Disrupt Global Trade

Machine-readable: /claims/data.json · caveats: /caveats · confidence rubric: /methodology/confidence.

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