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Sunday, May 24, 2026

The shrinking snowfall on Greece's mountains is provoking anxiety and altering the economy

May 24, 2026
The shrinking snowfall on Greece's mountains is provoking anxiety and altering the economy

ARACHOVA, Greece (AP) — As a child, Giannis Stathas remembers being snowed in for days at a time in Arachova, a village famous for its ski resort and long known as a winter playground for Greeks.

Associated Press An aerial view shows melting snow on the slopes of Mount Parnassos at the Kelaria ski center in central Greece, on May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis) Snow hydrologist Konstantis Alexopoulos poses on Mount Penteli, in Athens, on May 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis) Tourists take photos with the popular winter resort town of Arachova in the background, central Greece, on May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis) A chalet stands at the foothills of snow-covered Mount Parnassos in the popular winter resort town of Arachova, central Greece, on May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis) Water from melting snow flows down the slopes of Mount Parnassos at the Kelaria ski center in central Greece, on May 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

Climate Greece Snow Melt

“We couldn’t go to school because of the snow,” said Stathas, now mayor of Arachova and the surrounding area. “We might have been stuck at home for two days without being able to go out because of the snow.”

“Now we don’t see that here anymore.”

Stathas says snowfall onMount Parnassosat an altitude of 2,400 meters (7,874 feet) is what once fell at 300 meters (984 feet).

New findings from the University of Cambridge’s Scott Polar Research Institute confirm the mayor’s observations.

“What we found across 10 mountains of Greece, across the mainland, is that snow cover is rapidly declining,” said Konstantis Alexopoulos, a snow hydrologist at the University of Cambridge and the National Observatory of Athens, and co-founder of the Hellenic Mountain Observatory. “We’ve lost more than half of the snow cover ... since the mid-1980s.”

Using 40 years of NASA and European Space Agency satellite imagery, researchers reconstructed gaps left by cloud coverage and infrequent satellite passes by using machine learning to estimate missing snow cover data.

Snow as a water reservoir

Alexopoulos said the decline matters because snow acts like a natural water reservoir.

“Snowpack is really like a savings account,” he said. “You can deposit an amount today and the longer you keep it in this savings account without spending it, the interest value is going to increase. And snow works in the exact same way.”

Unlike rain, which runs off quickly into rivers and the sea, snow remains stored in the mountains “ultimately melting at the time that we need it the most,” Alexopoulos said.

This helps sustain water supplies during the dry season, which is especially important in the Mediterranean climate where summer rainfall is limited.

Climate change in the Mediterranean

He added that the loss of snow is driven primarily by rising temperatures linked to greenhouse gas emissions, which reduce both snowfall and the duration of snow cover on the ground.

“The snow cover decline that we’re observing on the Greek mountains is not connected to the natural climate variability that does exist,” he said. “The current rate of climate change globally and specifically in hotspots like the Mediterranean is much faster than what the earth has experienced previously. “

Alexopoulos said the team expected a decline, but was surprised by its magnitude. “Other mountainous regions of the world, such as the Andes or the Himalayas, ... have all experienced a steep decline in snow cover but not at the rate that we saw in the Greek mountains.”

The study was one of the first long-term analyses of Greek mountains.

“Studying mountainous environments is inherently difficult due to remote access,” Alexopoulos said, adding that it’s difficult to install weather stations to take measurements and maintain a consistent record of observations.

“In Greece we haven’t focused so much on it because we never really understood the importance of snow’s contribution to our water resources,” he said. “But as this shifts and as this starts to decline, we are seeing thosedroughts, and we are trying to explain them.”

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While Mount Parnassos wasn’t part of the study, Alexopoulos said it is still representative of theconditions seen across Greece.

Snow shortage impact already visible

Back in Arachova, in the shadow of Mount Parnassos, the consequences are already visible.

“One hundred percent of Arachova’s water is supplied by snowmelt,” said local restaurant owner Aktida Koritou.

She said locals have become increasingly conscious of water scarcity and are extra careful not to be wasteful, especially during summer when shortages are most severe.

There is great concern because the springs in Arachova are drying up and reservoirs are not refilling, according to the mayor.

“The biggest problem begins in late August and early September and lasts until late September or early October,” Stathas said.

An unexpected snowfall in April caught locals off-guard and was welcomed as a top-up, but “will hardly help the reservoirs fill up,” according to Stathas.

Adapting to less snow

Authorities are trying to adapt. The municipality is exploring the construction of small dams so that no water is lost, while the ski center is also implementing snow retention measures to help preserve it longer.

Less snow also means drier vegetation and increasedfire risk. Stathas said fires weren’t really an issue in northern Greece in the past, but this has changed.

“You could set fire among the fir trees 30 years, 40 years ago and there was never a chance that the mountain would burn,” he said. “But now there is a great danger because of the severe drought.”

Arachova’s ski-based economy is also shifting.

Koritou, who worked at the ski center when it opened in the early 1980s, said the ski season now starts in January instead of December.

“No one will come to the mountain for Christmas. They will go to Switzerland. They will go wherever they find snow,” she said. “So they leave and (business) decreases. This Christmas, there was a 30% reduction, for me at least.”

In response, the municipality is trying to diversify beyond winter tourism, promoting the mountain town of Arachova as a summer destination.

“Someone can swim and in 20 minutes come to stay here where it’s cool,” Stathas said. “But to be able to hold on to tourism in the summer, we have to have water.”

Remembering winters past

Locals still remember how winters once were. Koritou recalls farmers rushing to harvest grapes in late October before the first snowfall. People kept shovels behind their doors, and neighbors cleared roads together. She also remembers sections of the mountain where snow never fully melted before the following winter came.

“There are some years when despair grips you,” Koritou said. “For those of us who know winter well, it’s disappointing not to see snow. You want it in the winter. The change is enormous.”

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Ecuador fans pin hopes on a World Cup run amid a surge in violence

May 24, 2026
Ecuador fans pin hopes on a World Cup run amid a surge in violence

GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP) — Ecuador could do with some good news.

Associated Press Soldiers patrol past shops selling soccer jerseys at a market in Guayaquil, Ecuador, Friday, May 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa) Boys practice at a Barcelona FC-sponsored soccer academy in Guayaquil, Ecuador, Thursday, May 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa) A boy controls the ball during practice at a Barcelona FC-sponsored soccer academy in Guayaquil, Ecuador, Thursday, May 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa) A boy practices at a Barcelona FC-sponsored soccer academy in Guayaquil, Ecuador, Thursday, May 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa) Youth play soccer on a dirt soccer field in the Cooperativa San Francisco neighborhood of Guayaquil, Ecuador, Friday, May 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa)

Ecuador WCup Soccer Insecurity

Many provinces are under a state of emergency. Thousands of military and police are fighting a surge in crime driven by drug traffickers. Night-time curfews abound. The fuel crisis has caused severe disruption. The border with Colombia is volatile.

But hope is high and undiminished for Ecuador at the comingWorld Cup.

The team qualified second in South America to World Cup champion Argentina, losing only twice in 18 games, both times away by one goal in Argentina and Brazil.

Supporters of La Tri believe they're good enough to surpass their previous best World Cup result, the round of 16 in 2006 in Germany, where Ecuador was ousted by a David Beckham free kick.

“I bought a giant TV on credit so I could watch Ecuador win the World Cup,” says Mario Uquillas, a 43-year-old shopkeeper from downtown Guayaquil.

“I hope that, at the very least, La Tri reaches the quarterfinals. It's about time, because we have a great team.”

Other merchants at the sprawling La Bahía market are taking advantage of the occasion, including offering Ecuador World Cup jerseys. The most popular feature the names of Arsenal defender Piero Hincapié, Chelsea midfielder Moisés Caicedo, and Paris Saint-Germain center back Willian Pacho.

Hincapié put smiles on the faces of Ecuador fans this week whenArsenal won the Premier Leaguefor the first time in 22 years. Those supporters have another opportunity to see homegrown stars win a major trophy when Hincapié and Pacho clash in the Champions League final next weekend.

Players murdered

Local soccer hasn't been immune to the country's violence. In fact, the local scene is stained with blood; five players were murdered last year and three more victims of armed attacks.

The most dramatic case occurred last December in northern Guayaquil when hitmen killed Mario Pineida, the left back of local club Guayaquil Barcelona and a former national team player.

Pineida was at a butcher shop with his mother and his female partner when two attackers shot them repeatedly. The mother was wounded and the partner died. One of the gunmen was arrested but the motive for the attack remains unclear.

Guayaquil, 270 kilometers southwest of capital Quito, ranks eighth among the most violent cities in the Americas, according to the crime index of the international platform Numbeo. Ecuador recorded 9,216 violent deaths last year, a rate of 50.1 per 100,000 inhabitants, according to the Ecuadorian Observatory of Organized Crime.

Living in the country's most violent city has led families to take precautions, especially in the sprawling slums, where children used to play soccer in the streets. Now, at nightfall, they often lock themselves in their homes for fear of the frequent shootings, robberies, or attacks.

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And, yet, in this environment soccer manages to thrive thanks to Guayaquil Barcelona, Ecuador's most popular club. It offers a dream of a better life, starting in the youth academy that once briefly included Hincapié. But he wouldn't recognize the facilities now — secure and guarded against organized crime.

‘My dream is to be a pro’

The soccer school caters for nearly 300 youths. Piero Ortega, aged 10, has been at the academy for five years.

“My dream is to play for PSG or Real Madrid,” Ortega says. “My dream is to be a professional soccer player.”

Shouts of instructions from coaches can be heard at the academy. Boys and girls chase after the ball and repeat actions to correct plays. They seem to never tire of running.

Another 10-year-old, Washington Vera, controls the ball with great skill, eludes opponents, and delivers precise passes.

“I would like to play for the national team as a right winger,” Vera says, also eager to one day “score goals for the national team.”

Enrique Benavides is trying to deliver those dreams as the coordinator of Guayaquil Barcelona's academies while also trying to keep the kids safe.

“Insecurity has set a limit for us; fear has entered every neighborhood, every community. Nobody is safe,” Benavides says. ”Given the insecurity, this school offers children the opportunity to attend our pitches and train safely. Before, they played in parks and streets at any time of day, but now that's no longer possible because of the insecurity."

That's why there's a lot riding on Ecuador at the World Cup to distract their supporters, however briefly, from the violence outside their homes.

The fans' passion is unbridled, much like their expectations.

“Before, we dreamed of qualifying; now we're hoping they reach the quarterfinals or semifinals of the World Cup,” Guayaquil lawyer Daniel Sánchez says.

Matías Oyola is an Argentine who has recently moved from being a Guayaquil Barcelona player to the sporting director. He’s also drank the Kool-Aid.

“The World Cup for Ecuador will be a continuation of what they did in the qualifiers,” Oyola says. “It's going to be excellent.”

AP World Cup:https://apnews.com/hub/fifa-world-cup

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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Pope Leo decries 'dizzying' profits earned by companies that pollute

May 23, 2026
Pope Leo decries 'dizzying' profits earned by companies that pollute

By Ciro De Luca and Joshua McElwee

Reuters Pope Leo XIV speaks during a meeting with bishops, members of the clergy, and families whose members have been victims of environmental pollution at the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, in Acerra, Italy, May 23, 2026. REUTERS/Ciro De Luca Pope Leo XIV attends a meeting with bishops, members of the clergy, and families whose members have been victims of environmental pollution at the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, in Acerra, Italy, May 23, 2026. REUTERS/Ciro De Luca Pope Leo XIV waves as he arrives for a meeting with Mayors and faithful of various municipalities of the so-called Pope Leo XIV waves as he arrives for a meeting with Mayors and faithful of various municipalities of the so-called

Pope Leo visits Acerra

ACERRA, Italy, May 23 (Reuters) - Pope Leo on Saturday called out companies who seek "dizzying" profits at the cost of environmental pollution, on a ‌visit to an area in Italy known as a hotbed for illegal dumping of toxic ‌waste.

On a visit to Acerra, about 220 km (137 miles) south of Rome, the first U.S. pope urged the world to "reject temptations ​of power and enrichment linked to practices that pollute the land, water, air, and social coexistence."

Leo said he wanted to come to the area near Naples known as the "Land of Fires", where the European Court of Human Rights ruled last year that authorities had failed to protect residents from waste dumping since at least ‌1988, to "gather the tears" of families who ⁠had lost loves ones to related illnesses.

Arriving by popemobile in an outside square on a sunny spring day, Leo was greeted by people waving small yellow and ⁠white Vatican flags and wearing yellow hats, some holding up posterboards with pictures of family members who had died.

Leo, who in recent months has been speaking more forcefully and will issue his first major document on Monday, ​said "unscrupulous ​people and organizations have been allowed to act with ​impunity for too long". During his four-hour visit ‌to Acerra, he also referred to "the dizzying profits of a few, blind to the needs of people, their work and their future." He also met with victims.

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For years, collection, treatment and disposal of garbage in southern Italy was largely in the hands of a small group of private owners, with contracts sometimes tied to the Camorra, a mafia group based around Naples.

In January 2025 the European court found that Italian ‌authorities had repeatedly failed to act to stop illegal dumping ​in a region also known as the "Triangle of Death", due ​to abnormally high rates of cancer for ​local residents.

The court gave the Italian government two years to establish a comprehensive database ‌of toxic waste sites and communicate the ​risks to the public.

Prime Minister ​Giorgia Meloni in February 2025 appointed an Italian general to head a task force aimed at helping victims and pursuing environmental clean-up.

Leo will issue his first encyclical, a major text, to ​the world's 1.4 billion Catholics, on ‌Monday. It is expected to address the rise of AI and how the technology is ​being used in warfare and challenging workers' rights.

(Reporting by Ciro De Luca in Acerra ​and Joshua McElwee in Rome; Editing by Susan Fenton)

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Pope Leo visits Italy's 'Land of Fires' as families seek justice for children lost to toxic waste

May 23, 2026
Pope Leo visits Italy's 'Land of Fires' as families seek justice for children lost to toxic waste

ACERRA, Italy (AP) — Families living in atoxic-waste polluted area around Napleswere preparing to meetPope Leo XIVduring his pastoral visit on Saturday, carrying with them years of grief, anger and hopes for justice after losing children to cancer linked to a multi-billion mafia racket of dumping toxic waste.

Associated Press Angelo Venturato talks during an interview with the Associated Press next to photos of his daughter Maria who died at the age of 25 of a cancer he claims to be connected to decades of pollution from illegal waste dumping and burning, much of it linked to organized criminal groups, in the southern town of Acerra, Friday, May 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Illegal waste is seen on the side of a road in the outskirts of the southern Italian town of Acerra in the Terra dei Fuochi, or Land of Fires, an area scarred by decades of pollution from illegal waste dumping and burning, much of it linked to organized criminal groups, Friday, May 22, 2026, a day ahead of Pope Leo XIV's visit. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Illegal waste is seen on the side of a road in the outskirts of the southern Italian town of Acerra in the Terra dei Fuochi, or Land of Fires, an area scarred by decades of pollution from illegal waste dumping and burning, much of it linked to organized criminal groups, Friday, May 22, 2026, a day ahead of Pope Leo XIV's visit. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Acerra bishop Antonio Di Donna speaks during an interview with the Associated Press ahead of Pope Leo XIV's visit to the southern Italian town of Acerra in the Terra dei Fuochi, or Land of Fires, an area scarred by decades of pollution from illegal waste dumping and burning, much of it linked to organized criminal groups, Friday, May 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) A man enters a grocery store with posters of Pope Leo XIV ahead of his visit to the southern Italian town of Acerra in the Terra dei Fuochi, or Land of Fires, Friday, May 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Italy Pope Acerra

The visit to the so-called Terra dei Fuochi, or Land of Fires, comes on the eve of the 11th anniversary of Pope Francis’ big ecological encyclical Laudato Si (Praised Be), and indicates Leo’s interest in carrying on his predecessor’s environmental agenda.

The European Court of Human Rights last year validated a generation of residents’ complaints that mafia dumping, burial and burning of toxic waste led to an increased rate of cancer and other ailments in the area of 90 municipalities around Caserta and Naples, encompassing a population of 2.9 million people.

The court found Italian authorities had known since 1988 aboutthe toxic pollution, blamed on the Camorra crime syndicate that controls waste disposal, but failed to take necessary steps to protect residents’ lives. The binding ruling gave Italy two years to set up a database about the toxic waste and verified health risks associated with living there.

The pope will visit the city of Acerra to meet families who lost young relatives to cancer, the human cost of environmental pollution. Bishop Antonio Di Donna estimated 150 young people died in the city of some 58,000 over the past three decades.

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“We very much wanted the pope to meet with them because these children and young people who have died are, to all intents and purposes, victims of environmental pollution. There is a link, a correlation between pollution and the incidence of cancer,” Di Donna said.

The victims include Maria Venturato, who died of cancer in 2016 at the age of 25. Her father Angelo said he hopes to speak with the pope to explain their reality, “not for me … for the next generation.”

“I’d like to give these young people a future, so I’m asking for the pope’s help with this. That is, I’m making a strong appeal to him to go to those in power and say, ‘Look, let’s heal this land of fires,’" he said.

Filomena Carolla plans to present the pope with a book containing memories from the life of her daughter, Tina De Angelis, who died of cancer at the age of 24.

“I’m just angry at the people who poisoned the soil, because what did our children have to do with it? What did they have to do with it, so young,” Carolla said.

Francis' plans to visit the area in 2020 were canceled by the pandemic.

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Friday, May 22, 2026

Giant inflatable artworks have taken over The Hague

May 22, 2026
Giant inflatable artworks have taken over The Hague

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — There is a giant stew pot in a small lake in the center of The Hague.

Associated Press A woman takes a selfie in front of an art installation titled Like a pan in the water by Studio Job as part of the BlowUp Jubilee Art walk in the Hague, Netherlands, Thursday, May 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Patrick Post) A tram passes by an art installation titled Crested by Steve Messam as part of the BlowUp Jubilee Art walk in the Hague, Netherlands, Thursday, May 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Patrick Post) Peope walk by an art installation titled Koncha pa dilanti by Eugenie Boon as part of the BlowUp Jubilee Art walk in the Hague, Netherlands, Thursday, May 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Patrick Post)

Netherlands Blow Up Art Jubilee

Floating in the water in front of the prestigious Mauritshuis museum,home to the “Girl with a Pearl Earring,”the 7-meter (23-foot)-tall pan is part of monthlong, open-air art exhibition. The BlowUp Jubilee features 24 inflatable artworks installed in parks, on buildings and even in a train station in the Dutch city

The project is the brainchild of curator Mary Hessing. “What I really wanted to do is show the area and show arts to everybody," she told The Associated Press.

In 2021, the Dutch government began a massive renovation project on the Binnenhof complex, which includes the Mauritshuis as well as the Parliament building. The historic site, which dates to the 13th century, was closed to the public and the city wanted to organize art events while it was inaccessible.

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The first BlowUp Art exhibition in 2022 included works from six artists, installed near the Binnenhof. Subsequent events also showcased a handful of inflatable works, but for the 2026 jubilee edition, all of the previous installations have returned plus new ones have been added.

“For me it was important to show the real Curacao in this artwork, and that is our parties, our food, and our lifestyle,” artist Eugenie Boon told AP. The 21-year-old is from the former Dutch Caribbean colony and her work, Koncha pa dilanti, referring to a board game played on the island, features scenes from local life.

British artist Steve Messam is known for his large-scale inflatable works that have been installed in locations in the United Kingdom, China and The Hague. Crested, a mass of red spikes, has been affixed on top of the entrance to a parking garage nestled between 100-year-old buildings on a tree-lined boulevard.

“The idea was that this piece would hold its own amongst this wonderful architecture that we see around us,” he said.

BlowUp Jubilee runs until June 21.

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US Ebola patient in Berlin hospital not critically ill, family tests negative

May 22, 2026
US Ebola patient in Berlin hospital not critically ill, family tests negative

BERLIN, May 22 (Reuters) - A U.S. citizen who contracted Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo, ‌where an outbreak of a rare strain has ‌killed over 130 people, is not critically ill and his wife ​and four children have tested negative, the Berlin hospital where the family is being treated said on Friday.

Reuters

"Because the course of the illness can change, he remains ‌under close observation and ⁠is receiving treatment," Charite university hospital said in a statement. "He is being cared for ⁠in the high-security area of the specialized isolation unit."

The patient's wife and four children "are currently asymptomatic and quarantined ​in a ​separate part of the ​unit - an initial PCR ‌test detected no Ebola virus infection."

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The patient, identified by the Serge Christian mission organization as medical missionary Dr. Peter Stafford, contracted Ebola while treating patients in the DRC, where he had been living with his family.

The ‌White House said Stafford and ​his family had been brought to ​Germany because it ​is 12 hours closer to the DRC ‌than the United States.

Charite said ​in its statement ​that the patient room had been made as child-friendly as possible, adding that the children were ​able to see ‌their father "through a glass partition, and family members ​can communicate via an intercom."

(Reporting by Friederike ​Heine; editing by Matthias Williams)

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Thursday, May 21, 2026

Japanese auto exports to Middle East plunge in April as war disrupts shipping

May 21, 2026
Japanese auto exports to Middle East plunge in April as war disrupts shipping

By Daniel Leussink

Reuters Newly manufactured cars and trucks await export at port in Yokohama, Japan, January 16, 2017. Picture taken January 16, 2017.     REUTERS/Toru Hanai Newly manufactured cars awaiting export are parked at a port in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, Japan March 27, 2025.  REUTERS/Issei Kato

Newly manufactured cars and trucks await export at port in Yokohama

TOKYO, May 21 (Reuters) - Japanese vehicle exports to the Middle East were nearly wiped out in April, government data showed on Thursday, as the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran disrupted shipping to a key region for global ‌automakers like Toyota and Nissan.

The collapse suggests shipments of passenger cars, trucks and buses to the region, which is also ‌a major destination for Japanese used cars, have largely ground to a halt following the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Motor vehicle exports to the Middle East ​plunged more than 90% in both value and volume terms from a year earlier, Ministry of Finance data released on Thursday showed, highlighting the auto sector's exposure to shipping disruptions from the Iran war.

The region accounted for about 14% of Japan's global motor vehicle exports in 2025, government figures showed.

Japan's auto industry is feeling the hit from the war through transportation disruptions, said Toshihiro Mibe, a vice chairman of the country's auto lobby, ‌on Thursday.

"The biggest impact we're seeing is from ⁠the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has led some manufacturers to reduce production of vehicles bound for the Middle East," Mibe said.

The Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association expects the impact to be primarily limited ⁠to shipping, he said, adding that it would continue monitoring the situation and the government has said it secured ample supplies of chemical products other than naphtha and lubricants.

The war could push automakers to rejigger their supply chains over the longer term, as they seek to reduce risks related to ​the conflict ​and the strait's closure, analysts said.

"This is not something that will end ​in the short term," said Sanshiro Fukao, an executive ‌fellow at the Itochu Research Institute, the think tank that is part of trading house Itochu, about supply and transportation disruptions caused by the war.

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"In the broader trend, as companies take Middle East risk into account, the flow of goods could change," he said.

A SHIFT TO INDIA

The war may accelerate a move by automakers to build their presence in India over the next three to five years and step up production and exports from there, Fukao said, as they seek to reduce shipping-related risks and costs.

Toyota said this month it would build a ‌new factory with an annual output capacity of 100,000 vehicles in India.

The ​automaker said it will export cars made at the plant, which is slated to ​begin production in the first half of 2029, to other ​countries.

Analysts said the Middle East is particularly important for Japanese automakers because it is a profitable market with ‌strong demand for high-margin models like Toyota's Land Cruiser ​sport-utility vehicle.

"In terms of absolute sales, ​Toyota is the most exposed, as it is the most successful automaker in the region," said Julie Boote, an auto analyst at Pelham Smithers Associates.

"However, since Toyota is regionally well diversified, with the Middle East accounting for about 6% of its total ​sales, it can absorb this hit better than ‌others."

While automakers may be able to divert some vehicles originally destined for the Middle East to other markets, they ​are unlikely to fully offset the lost volumes.

Toyota, Nissan and other automakers are set to release their April production ​and sales data next week.

(Reporting by Daniel Leussink; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

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