The world, explained for Ireland.

The World
Nitrogen feeds the world. But the process of turning it into usable fertiliser consumes vast energy, depends on fossil fuels, and ties together farm economics across every continent.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Cocoa beans must ferment for days in tropical heat to develop chocolate flavour. When West African harvests fail or timing slips, Australian chocolate makers lose both quality and margin.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Fertility collapse is reshaping labour markets, pension systems, and geopolitics across continents. Here's why demographers got it wrong.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
From grazing pastures to supermarket shelves, dairy production depends on weather patterns, feed costs, and trade routes that span continents. When disruption hits one region, milk becomes expensive everywhere.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Container imbalances on opposite sides of the world cascade into price shocks and empty aisles everywhere. Here's why moving an empty box matters more than you'd think.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Cement is the world's most-produced material by mass. Understanding its supply chains, carbon footprint, and geopolitical reach reveals why your city's concrete future is decided in distant quarries and kilns across continents.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Neighbourhood clubs, volunteer coaches and converted car parks are quietly building the athletic infrastructure that professional franchises never could.
By World Sport Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
From rising commercial rents to cross-border capital chasing yield, here is a plain-language breakdown of where World's economy stands this summer.
By World Business Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
From a new accelerator opening in the city's east side to a surge in climate-tech funding, the local tech ecosystem is moving fast and getting louder.
By World Tech Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
From flood-relief preparations to a security scare downtown, here is everything that moved the needle in World this week.
By World News Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
From the Central Arena pitch to the Northgate Aquatics Centre pool, World's clubs delivered a week of drama, disappointment, and a few genuine surprises.
By World Sport Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
From emergency heat protocols to a security overhaul after Monaco's bomb attack, July 2026 is forcing communities across the globe — and locally — to make hard calls fast.
By World News Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
Across neighbourhoods worldwide, ordinary people are ditching quick fixes and building sustainable wellness lives — here's what's working on the ground.
By World Wellness Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
Skip the generic advice — here's what the research says about staying healthy in your specific conditions this July 2026.
By World Wellness Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
As the city's summer calendar fills with festivals and exhibitions, cultural institutions reveal how grassroots venues and digital platforms rewrote the rules of what local culture could be.
By World Culture Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
As heatwaves and geopolitical chaos reshape how cities operate, World's independent food businesses and neighbourhood-driven culture offer something increasingly rare.
By World Lifestyle Desk · 3 July 2026

The World
Oil reserve figures shape energy policy and investment worldwide. Here's why the world's estimates of underground fuel keep shifting, and what that means for Australian energy costs.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Australia mines a third of the world's bauxite but smelts almost none of it into aluminum. Understanding why reveals how raw materials alone don't build national wealth.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Countries borrow money just like households do. Understanding sovereign debt helps explain everything from interest rates to job growth.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
When countries negotiate trade deals, they're haggling over the cost of goods on your supermarket shelf. Here's what happens behind closed doors and why it matters to your wallet.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
The ups and downs of the Australian dollar shape everything from petrol prices to the cost of an overseas holiday. Here's why.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
From smartphones to strawberries, most things Australians buy travel thousands of kilometres before reaching a shelf. Understanding supply chains helps explain price swings, shortages, and why your favourite product suddenly costs more.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
The energy transition has made a short list of metals the most strategically contested resources on the planet, and Australia is sitting on a significant share of them.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026

The World
Most of what you buy arrives in a metal box. The world's container ships, ports, and logistics networks form an intricate system that shapes your cost of living, and Australia's ports are becoming a bottleneck.
By The Daily World · 3 July 2026