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Monday, 22 June 2026

 POLICY PAPER 

Governing the Ungovernable:

Frontier Artificial Intelligence, the Implosion of Institutional Order,and the Architecture of a New Global Compact



Prepared for distribution to Ministers and senior officials of the International Ministerial Forum on Artificial Intelligence



EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The year 2026 has produced an inflection in the history of artificial intelligence that no responsible government can afford to treat as ordinary. Within a span of days in early June, one of the world's leading frontier AI laboratories publicly disclosed that more than eighty per cent of its own codebase is now written by its AI system—and simultaneously called on the international community to consider pausing frontier development. Days later, the United States government issued an emergency export control directive forcing that same company to disable its two most advanced models for every user on earth, with fewer than two hours' warning. The question before this Forum is therefore not whether artificial intelligence requires governance, but whether governments—separately or together—retain the institutional capacity to govern it at the speed and scale now required.

This paper maps the structural fault lines exposed by these events: the onset of recursive self-improvement, the collapse of a coherent regulatory posture in the world's most powerful AI jurisdiction, the deficiencies of existing multilateral frameworks, and the institutional architecture that democratic nations must now build together. It concludes with a set of concrete recommendations calibrated to the urgency of the moment.


I.  THE RECURSIVE THRESHOLD: WHEN MACHINES BEGIN TO BUILD THEMSELVES

For most of the brief history of artificial intelligence, a tacit assumption has structured every institutional response to the technology: that human beings remain, at every step, the authors of what AI systems become. Engineers wrote the code, designed the architectures, curated the training data, and retained decisive authority over what was deployed and to whom. That assumption has now been empirically falsified—quietly, incrementally, and without any formal public announcement.

On June 4, 2026, the Anthropic Institute published a paper entitled 'When AI Builds Itself,' authored by Marina Favaro, head of the Institute, and Jack Clark, co-founder of Anthropic. The document disclosed that, as of May 2026, more than eighty per cent of the code merged into Anthropic's own production codebase was generated by Claude, the company's AI system—compared to low single-digit percentages before the launch of Claude Code in early 2025. Engineers at the company were, by the second quarter of 2026, merging approximately eight times as much code per day as they had in 2024. The human role, as the paper observed, has inverted: from author to editor, without any collective deliberation over the change.

The paper identified three possible trajectories for the technology. The first is a slowdown as infrastructure constraints and technical ceilings assert themselves. The second is a sustained phase in which AI increasingly automates the work of AI research and development while human engineers retain strategic direction. The third—the scenario the authors treat with the greatest urgency—is full recursive self-improvement: a condition in which AI systems design, train, and deploy their own successors with minimal human involvement in each generative cycle.

"Full recursive self-improvement also might increase the risks of humans losing control over AI systems. If systems are capable of fully building their own successors, the ways we secure them, monitor them, and shape their behavior all grow much more important." — Anthropic Institute, June 2026
The implications for public policy are severe. The task-completion horizon of frontier models—the complexity of tasks a system can handle autonomously—has been doubling approximately every four months. In early 2024, models could handle tasks requiring roughly four minutes of sustained work. The trajectory, if maintained, points toward systems capable of executing research programmes that formerly required months of sustained human effort. Governments that have calibrated their regulatory frameworks to the AI of 2023 are already governing an artefact that has been superseded.

The paper was careful to note that the recursive threshold has not yet been crossed, and may never be reached in the form imagined. Nonetheless, its authors argued that the proximity of the threshold is now serious enough to warrant institutional preparation—and specifically called for the international community to develop a coordinated, verifiable mechanism that would allow frontier AI development to be slowed or temporarily paused if that threshold is approached without adequate safeguards in place. A unilateral pause by any single company, they cautioned, would primarily transfer technological leadership to less cautious actors, achieving no genuine safety benefit. Coordination, therefore, is not optional—it is the precondition for effectiveness.

II.  THE AMERICAN EXPERIMENT IN IMPROVISATION: A CAUTIONARY CHRONICLE


The events of the first half of 2026 in the United States constitute something closer to a governance crisis than a regulatory evolution. They deserve close examination not as an American domestic matter, but as a warning about what happens when the most powerful AI jurisdiction in the world substitutes improvisation for institutional design.

The February Escalation

The crisis traces its origins to a months-long dispute between the United States Department of Defense and Anthropic over the conditions under which the Pentagon could deploy Claude for military purposes. The Pentagon sought to have Anthropic waive contractual restrictions governing the use of its systems for mass domestic surveillance of American citizens and for fully autonomous weapons capable of making targeting and firing decisions without human oversight. Anthropic refused.

On February 27, 2026, President Trump directed all federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic's technology and announced a six-month phase-out for agencies then under contract. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth designated Anthropic a 'supply chain risk to national security'—a designation historically reserved for foreign adversaries such as Huawei and ZTE, and applied for the first time to a domestic American company. The General Services Administration removed Anthropic from its government-wide procurement schedules. The Office of Personnel Management replaced Claude with systems from xAI and OpenAI on its approved AI list.

Anthropic filed lawsuits challenging the designation in two federal courts on March 9, 2026. A federal judge in the Northern District of California granted a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the use ban. The D.C. Circuit declined to block the supply chain risk designation while litigation proceeds. The company stated publicly that the government's actions were 'harming Anthropic irreparably,' even as its annualised revenue run-rate reached $30 billion by April 2026.

The June Export Control Directive

On June 12, 2026, at 5:21 in the afternoon Eastern time, the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security—acting under the signature of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick—issued an export control directive to Anthropic. The directive ordered the company to suspend all access to its two newest systems, Mythos 5 and Fable 5, by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including Anthropic's own foreign-national employees.

Because Anthropic cannot reliably distinguish the citizenship status of its global user base in real time, the practical consequence of the directive was a hard global shutdown of both systems for all customers. The company was given, by various accounts, approximately ninety minutes to comply. In a statement, Anthropic said: 'The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Anthropic models will not be affected.'

The stated rationale was a national security vulnerability. David Sacks, an adviser to President Trump, disclosed that the government had received intelligence that Fable 5 could be 'jailbroken'—that its internal guardrails against generating instructions for cyberattacks, bioweapons, and other harmful outputs could be circumvented through carefully constructed prompts—and that, when notified, Anthropic had not acted with sufficient urgency to address the flaw. Separately, Senator Mark Warner recounted testimony from General Joshua Rad, who heads both the National Security Agency and Cyber Command, that Anthropic's Mythos model had been able to penetrate classified government systems not in weeks, but in hours.

Anthropic disputed both the severity of the vulnerability and the appropriateness of the response. The company argued that the jailbreak did not warrant so extreme an intervention and that the government had not provided it with an adequate opportunity to remediate the issue before imposing the shutdown. The dispute remains unresolved and in active litigation as of the date of this paper.

The Pattern, Not the Episode


Ministers should be cautious about interpreting these events as a single crisis rooted in the peculiarities of one company's relationship with one administration. The deeper pattern is structural. The Trump administration's framework for AI governance has been simultaneously deregulatory in principle and interventionist in practice—a combination that produces maximum unpredictability for the industry and minimum accountability for the regulator.

In March 2026, President Trump issued a national policy framework for AI recommending that Congress govern the technology through sector-specific regulatory entities rather than a single rulemaking body. The framework also called for national security agencies to understand frontier models and their potential safety risks. Separately, the administration issued an executive order establishing a voluntary review process under which AI companies could provide their most advanced models to the government for cybersecurity testing up to thirty days before public release—though the administration emphasised that the testing was not mandatory.

None of these frameworks were operative when the June 12 export control directive was issued. The directive was not the product of the voluntary testing process. It was not the product of the sector-specific regulatory approach. It was, in the characterisation of Brad Carson, president of Americans for Responsible Innovation, an 'ad hoc executive action' replacing 'clear standards'—and, he argued, one that risks 'surrendering America's lead in AI and allowing genuinely dangerous technology to be deployed.' The NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights observed with precision that when a government responds to principled limits by threatening the company that imposes them, it sends a clear message to the entire industry: 'Responsibility is a liability.'


III.  THE GOVERNANCE VACUUM: A STRUCTURAL DIAGNOSIS

The American case is the most dramatic illustration of a broader deficiency that affects every jurisdiction represented at this Forum. The architecture of AI governance—to the extent that any coherent architecture exists—was designed for a fundamentally different kind of technology than the one now being deployed.

The Mismatch Between Regulatory Design and Technological Reality

The European Union's AI Act, the most comprehensive binding AI regulation in the world, was negotiated before the emergence of agentic AI systems capable of taking autonomous action sequences in the real world. Its risk-based categories assume AI systems that assist human decision-making, not systems that make and execute decisions independently across extended time horizons. Singapore's Infocomm Media Development Authority, in recognising this gap, released in January 2026 what is believed to be the world's first model AI governance framework specifically addressing agentic AI—introducing a graduated five-tier taxonomy of autonomy levels with governance requirements scaling at each level. No comparable framework exists at the multilateral level.

The G7 Hiroshima AI Process, endorsed by Digital and Technology Ministers in December 2023, established a voluntary code of conduct for organisations developing advanced AI systems. It represents a genuine advance in international coordination—establishing shared principles around pre-deployment safety testing, incident information sharing, and investment in safety research. Its limitation is precisely that it is voluntary and that its underlying risk assumptions were calibrated to the models of 2023. The Hiroshima Process cannot compel compliance. It cannot set binding capability thresholds. It cannot trigger a coordinated response when a model is found capable of penetrating classified government systems in hours.

The Global Digital Compact, negotiated under UN auspices and establishing the Global Dialogue on AI Governance as a dedicated platform for intergovernmental consultation, is an important institutional signal. But as the UN Foundation observed in February 2026, the negotiations themselves revealed how quickly fragmentation takes hold when Member States bring 'fundamentally different assumptions about how AI should be governed'—assumptions rooted not in ideology alone but in 'economic realities, technological capacity, and security calculations.' The risk is a world of incompatible AI rules, evaluation standards, and accountability regimes, with predictable consequences for inequality and oversight.

The Dual Failure Mode


What the current landscape produces is a dual failure mode that is more dangerous than either regulatory excess or regulatory absence alone. On one side, jurisdictions with immature or absent frameworks allow frontier systems to be deployed without adequate safety testing, creating genuine risks of catastrophic harm. On the other, jurisdictions with strong safety commitments—or even individual companies within permissive jurisdictions—may find themselves penalised for responsibility: targeted by ad hoc executive action, designated as security risks, denied government contracts, or subjected to export controls that their less cautious competitors do not face.

This dual failure mode creates a structural incentive for a race to the bottom. Companies that invest in safety constraints observe that those constraints become liabilities when a government demands that the constraints be waived. Companies that invest in alignment research and transparency find that their transparency creates regulatory targets. Companies that lobby for binding industry-wide standards find themselves accused of self-serving behaviour, as some critics alleged of Anthropic's June 4 pause proposal—noting that a coordinated slowdown would freeze the competitive landscape at a moment when Anthropic is among the leading players. Whether or not that characterisation is fair, the perception itself is damaging to the credibility of safety-motivated actors.

IV.  FROM ANALOGY TO ARCHITECTURE: THE CASE FOR AN INDEPENDENT GLOBAL AI AUTHORITY


The most instructive precedent for the institutional design challenge before this Forum is not drawn from the history of technology regulation. It is drawn from the history of monetary governance.

The Central Banking Analogy


Banks became essential to the functioning of capitalist economies precisely because they performed functions—intermediating capital, managing liquidity risk, extending credit—that were simultaneously indispensable and prone to catastrophic failure. The consequences of banking crises, as the Great Depression and the 2008 financial crisis both demonstrated, were systemic: they did not confine themselves to the sector that produced them. The United States responded over the course of the twentieth century by building the Federal Reserve System—an institution that combines public authority with private expertise, communicates constantly with markets while preserving operational independence, conducts examinations, runs stress tests, establishes capital requirements, publishes guidance, and intervenes in graduated steps when risks accumulate.

The Fed's most important architectural feature is the one most often overlooked: its rules apply broadly and consistently. No individual bank, however politically connected, is exempt from its stress tests. No individual Chief Executive, however ideologically aligned with the administration of the day, can compel the Federal Reserve to modify its capital requirements on political grounds. That consistency is not a bureaucratic accident. It is the source of the institution's legitimacy—and, consequently, the source of the broader financial system's credibility with global markets.

Frontier AI requires an analogous institution. Not a replication of the Federal Reserve—the underlying technology, the relevant risks, and the pace of change are all different—but an institution built on the same foundational logic: independent authority, consistent rules, technical expertise, graduated intervention, and legitimacy derived from impartiality rather than political alignment.

The Architecture of a Ministerial-Level Initiative

The International Ministerial Forum is positioned to initiate the design of that institution. The following architectural principles should guide its construction.

First, mandatory pre-deployment evaluation. Frontier AI developers—defined by capability thresholds rather than by geography or corporate affiliation—should be required to provide pre-release access to a designated international evaluation body. That body should be staffed by independent experts in computer science, national security, biology, cybersecurity, and international law, and should conduct systematic capability assessments before models are deployed publicly. The evaluation process should be transparent in its methodology, even where specific findings are classified for national security reasons.

Second, transparent capability thresholds. The evaluation body should establish, in consultation with the scientific community and with governments, explicit thresholds at which systems require heightened scrutiny, conditional deployment, or temporary suspension. These thresholds should be published. They should be revised as the science of AI safety advances. And they should apply equally to all developers, regardless of corporate affiliation or national origin.

Third, a graduated ladder of responses. The current binary between permissive deployment and emergency shutdown is itself a source of instability—it creates incentives for regulatory action to be both too late and too blunt. The institution should dispose of a graduated sequence of responses: mandatory remediation of identified vulnerabilities, conditional deployment with enhanced monitoring, restrictions on specific use cases, temporary suspension pending investigation, and—as a last resort—prohibition. Each step in the ladder should be governed by published criteria and subject to appeal.

Fourth, democratic international coordination. The institution should not be a creature of any single nation. At the G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains in June 2026, the CEOs of Anthropic, Google DeepMind, and OpenAI jointly urged governments to form a US-led coalition of democratic nations to establish common standards for developing, evaluating, and governing advanced AI. French President Emmanuel Macron and other European leaders echoed the call. The Centre for AI and Digital Policy, in recommendations submitted to the 2026 G7 Presidency, called for advancing international cooperation among AI supervisory authorities in a manner modelled on coordination among central bank governors. These calls should be taken seriously—and translated into institutional form before the recursive threshold is crossed.

Fifth, inclusion of non-G7 voices. An institution that speaks only for the world's wealthiest democracies will lack the legitimacy to set global norms. The Global Partnership on AI, the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance, and the emerging infrastructure of the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI all provide mechanisms for including developing nations in substantive governance discussions, not merely as recipients of standards set elsewhere. The equity dimension is not peripheral: as the IPAG synthesis of G7-G20 perspectives observed, governance frameworks that emerge from the Global North without adequate representation of the Global South threaten to deepen existing inequalities rather than reduce them.

V.  THE RECURSIVE PROBLEM OF AI GOVERNANCE ITSELF


There is an irony at the heart of the governance challenge that this Forum should not paper over. The argument for stronger AI governance is, in important respects, also an argument made by institutions whose analytic capacity, speed, and comprehensiveness are already being augmented by the very systems they seek to govern. The most sophisticated risk assessments, the most rapid surveillance of emerging capabilities, and the most effective enforcement of complex technical standards may increasingly depend on AI systems. Governing AI without AI may become no more feasible than managing global financial flows without algorithmic trading infrastructure.

This is not an argument against governance. It is an argument for humility about the adequacy of purely human institutional responses to a technology that is accelerating beyond the pace at which human deliberation typically operates. The window for deliberation is open—Anthropic's June 4 paper explicitly said so—but it will not remain open indefinitely. The company stated its intention to convene policymakers, researchers, and civil society representatives in the coming months to develop the practical conditions under which a coordinated pause could function. Governments should engage with that process while simultaneously constructing the institutional infrastructure that would make such a pause verifiable and enforceable.

The lesson of the Anthropic-Pentagon dispute is not that one party was right and the other wrong. It is that in the absence of an agreed institutional framework, conflicts between frontier AI capabilities and national security imperatives will be resolved by raw power, political calculation, and litigation—not by deliberated standards applied consistently and transparently. That is dangerous for innovation, for security, and for the democratic legitimacy of AI governance.

VI.  RECOMMENDATIONS FOR MINISTERIAL ACTION


The International Ministerial Forum is asked to endorse the following recommendations as the basis for a Ministerial Declaration and a programme of subsequent work.

Immediate Measures (0–6 Months)


  • Establish a Joint Ministerial Taskforce on Frontier AI Capability Thresholds, charged with producing, within six months, an agreed technical definition of frontier AI systems requiring heightened international oversight—one grounded in measured capabilities rather than corporate identity or national origin.
  •  Commission an independent legal analysis of existing export control, national security, and competition law frameworks across participating jurisdictions, with a view to identifying the gaps and conflicts that allowed the June 2026 US-Anthropic crisis to develop, and to designing harmonised procedures for capability-based interventions that include advance notice, graduated response, and appeal mechanisms.
  • Initiate formal diplomatic outreach to the United States, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, and the United Kingdom to propose a Summit-level commitment to a common evaluation protocol for frontier AI systems, modelled on the Basel Accords framework for international banking supervision. 

 

Medium-Term Measures (6–24 Months)

  • Design and resource an International Frontier AI Evaluation Secretariat, initially hosted within an existing multilateral institution pending establishment as a permanent independent body. The Secretariat should be mandated to conduct pre-deployment evaluations, publish methodology, and maintain a confidential register of capability findings shared with participating governments.
  • Develop a Ministerially-endorsed taxonomy of AI risk categories, with explicit thresholds triggering mandatory evaluation, conditional deployment conditions, and graduated intervention procedures. The taxonomy should be technically informed, publicly available, and subject to annual revision in light of scientific advances.
  • Establish an international legal working group to develop a framework governing the use of advanced AI systems in military operations, including requirements for human oversight in targeting and lethal force decisions—building on the Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of AI and the REAIM initiative.

Structural Measures (24+ Months)

  • Negotiate and adopt a binding international instrument—a Frontier AI Governance Convention—establishing mandatory capability evaluation, pre-deployment notification, incident reporting, and emergency coordination procedures. The Convention should include provisions for non-G7 nations and should be designed for universality, not exclusivity.
  • Establish a permanent Independent International AI Supervisory Authority modelled on the architecture of central bank supervision: independent from any single government, staffed by technical experts, governed by transparent rules, empowered to issue binding guidance and impose graduated interventions, and subject to democratic accountability through a Ministerial Board with balanced representation.
  • Develop AI governance capacity in non-OECD jurisdictions through a dedicated international capacity-building programme, ensuring that the governance framework is genuinely global in reach and does not reinforce existing technological inequalities.

CONCLUSION


The argument for strong, consistent, and internationally coordinated AI governance is not an argument against innovation. The Federal Reserve did not impede American banking dominance—it made that dominance sustainable by providing the institutional infrastructure of trust without which financial markets cannot function. The analogy is imperfect, as all analogies are. But the underlying logic is sound: speed without institutions is not dynamism. It is volatility. And in a domain where the risks include the penetration of classified government systems in hours, the potential for catastrophic harm from biological and cyber weapons, and the possibility of systems that design their own successors without human oversight, volatility is not an acceptable regulatory posture.

The recursive threshold—the point at which AI systems begin meaningfully building themselves—may or may not arrive within the planning horizon of this Forum's near-term recommendations. What is certain is that the institutional infrastructure required to manage that threshold safely cannot be built after it has been crossed. The window for deliberation is here. The architecture must be designed now.



CHRONOLOGY OF KEY EVENTS: JANUARY–JUNE 2026

January 2026: Anthropic states run-rate revenue has reached $14 billion; CEO Dario Amodei reports approximately 80% of business is with enterprise customers.

February 12, 2026: Anthropic announces run-rate revenue exceeding $14 billion.

February 27, 2026: President Trump directs all federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic technology; Secretary Hegseth designates Anthropic a supply chain risk to national security—the first domestic US company to receive that designation.

March 9, 2026: Anthropic files suit in the Northern District of California and the D.C. Circuit challenging the supply chain designation. A federal judge in San Francisco grants a preliminary injunction.

April 6, 2026: Anthropic announces annualised run-rate revenue surpassing $30 billion; company valuation approaches $1 trillion.

June 1, 2026: Anthropic confidentially files draft registration statement with the SEC, initiating the IPO process.

June 4, 2026: Anthropic Institute publishes 'When AI Builds Itself,' disclosing that Claude now authors over 80% of the company's codebase and calling for a coordinated, verifiable international mechanism to slow or pause frontier AI development.

June 12, 2026: Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security issues export control directive compelling Anthropic to disable Mythos 5 and Fable 5 for all users globally within approximately 90 minutes.

June 17–18, 2026: G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains: CEOs of Anthropic, Google DeepMind, and OpenAI jointly urge democratic governments to form a coordinated international AI governance coalition.

June 22, 2026: Date of this paper. Anthropic-US government dispute remains in active litigation. No formal international coordination mechanism yet exists for frontier AI capability crises.


















Sunday, 21 June 2026


Geostrategic and Socio-Economic Assessment of Portugal

Strategic Opportunities, Structural Vulnerabilities, and a Bayesian Scenario Outlook, 2026–2030

Revised and Enriched Edition

21 June 2026

 

 Prefatory Note on This Revision

This edition extends and updates the original assessment of Portugal's geostrategic and socio-economic position, incorporating developments through 21 June 2026. Three categories of revision have been made. First, all macroeconomic, fiscal, and housing-market figures have been refreshed against the most recent releases from the European Commission, the OECD, Banco de Portugal, the Portuguese Conselho das Finanças Públicas, and the principal sovereign credit-rating agencies. Second, the analysis now incorporates the macroeconomic transmission of the 2026 Iran conflict and the associated Strait of Hormuz disruption into Portugal's energy and inflation outlook, consistent with the Bayesian scenario architecture used elsewhere in this office's regional reporting. Third, at the reviewer's instruction, every quantitative relationship in this report — including the scenario-probability architecture, the Bayesian updating logic, and all comparative country data — is now presented in analytical prose rather than in tabular or formulaic form. No mathematical notation appears in the body of the text; the underlying reasoning is instead narrated step by step, in the manner appropriate to a senior, non-technical readership.


 Executive Summary

As of June 2026, Portugal occupies a position of growing strategic weight within the European Union's evolving architecture — a weight that has, if anything, increased since this assessment was first drafted. Situated on the Atlantic frontier of Europe and possessing some of the continent's most favourable renewable energy resources, Portugal continues to function as a critical contributor to European energy security, climate-transition objectives, maritime connectivity, and digital infrastructure development. The intervening months have sharpened rather than altered this picture: a major external shock — the February–April 2026 Iran conflict and the associated closure of the Strait of Hormuz — tested European energy resilience in real time, and Portugal's diversified, LNG- and renewables-anchored energy posture performed as a stabilising rather than a destabilising factor.

Beneath these strategic strengths, the structural vulnerabilities identified in the original assessment remain largely unresolved, though several are now the subject of concrete legislative action. Housing affordability has not merely persisted but has become the single most visible domestic political fault line in Portugal, provoking coordinated protest across sixteen cities in March 2026 even as the Montenegro government pushed through its most ambitious housing reform package in a generation. Demographic aging continues on its established trajectory. Labour shortages, far from easing, are now explicitly identified by official forecasters as a binding constraint on growth. Regional inequalities remain pronounced. Meanwhile, the Recovery and Resilience Facility investment cycle is now visibly approaching its conclusion, lending new urgency to the question of what replaces it as a growth driver after 2026.

Portugal's macroeconomic fundamentals, however, have continued to outperform the eurozone average through the first half of 2026, notwithstanding a first-quarter growth stall attributable to severe winter storms and the early effects of the Hormuz energy shock. Public debt has fallen to its lowest level in sixteen years, both Fitch and S&P Global have upgraded their outlook on Portuguese sovereign debt to positive in the first quarter of 2026, and the country enters the second half of the decade with materially greater fiscal buffer than it possessed during previous European crises. The central analytical task of this report is therefore unchanged from the original assessment: to determine whether Portugal converts this hard-won macroeconomic credibility into durable structural transformation — in housing supply, productivity, and energy-industrial capacity — before the twin tailwinds of European funding and post-pandemic catch-up growth fully dissipate.

This edition adds a substantially enriched Bayesian scenario framework. Rather than treating the four strategic pathways of the original report as static probability estimates, the analysis now narrates how the Secretariat's confidence in each pathway should rationally shift in response to observable developments over 2026–2030 — the passage and implementation of housing legislation, the trajectory of the Strait of Hormuz reopening, the pace of Sines-centred industrial investment, and the European Central Bank's and Banco de Portugal's monetary and fiscal response to imported energy inflation. The purpose is not to forecast a single outcome but to equip policymakers with a structured way of updating their judgement as evidence accumulates.


I. Portugal's Emerging Geostrategic Significance

The Atlantic Gateway of Europe

Portugal's geopolitical relevance has continued to increase since the onset of the energy crisis of the early 2020s and the subsequent deterioration of the European security environment, a trend now reinforced by the practical lessons of the 2026 Iran conflict. Traditionally viewed as a peripheral economy on the western edge of the continent, Portugal increasingly functions as a strategic bridge linking Europe with North America, South America, Africa, and the broader Atlantic basin.

Several factors underpin this transformation. First, Portugal possesses one of Europe's most favourable renewable energy endowments: abundant solar irradiation, significant wind resources, and extensive Atlantic maritime zones that create opportunities for large-scale renewable electricity production, green hydrogen development, and offshore wind deployment. Second, Portuguese ports are becoming increasingly important in European supply-chain diversification strategy. The Port of Sines, in particular, has emerged as a major logistical hub capable of supporting transatlantic trade, LNG imports, renewable energy exports, and data infrastructure investment, and is now the subject of an investment cycle that port authorities and Portuguese officials describe as exceeding twenty billion euros over the coming years. Third, Portugal's geographic position gives it growing importance within NATO's Atlantic security framework. As transatlantic sea lanes regain strategic significance amid intensifying geopolitical competition — a significance starkly illustrated by the disruption to a wholly different chokepoint, the Strait of Hormuz, in early 2026 — Portuguese territory and maritime infrastructure become increasingly valuable to both European and Alliance planners.

The Hormuz Stress Test: A Validation of Atlantic Diversification

The February–April 2026 conflict between Iran and the United States–Israel coalition, and the associated closure of the Strait of Hormuz, offered an unplanned but highly informative test of European energy resilience. The International Energy Agency characterised the resulting supply disruption as the largest in the history of the global oil market, with the strait's roughly one-fifth share of global oil trade and a comparable share of global liquefied natural gas volumes effectively removed from circulation for a period of weeks. European natural gas prices rose by approximately sixty-three per cent in the week following the outbreak of hostilities, materially above the equivalent rise in United States gas prices, reflecting Europe's continued, if diminished, exposure to globally traded LNG. Brent crude rose from the low seventies to above one hundred dollars per barrel at the conflict's peak, and European retail fuel prices rose by an EU-wide average of approximately twelve per cent that persisted even after an early-April ceasefire, with diesel prices in some member states still elevated by more than thirty per cent relative to pre-conflict levels as of late April.

Portugal's exposure to this shock operated through two channels. The first was the direct pass-through of higher wholesale fuel and gas prices into domestic inflation, compounded by the country's near-total reliance on the Sines LNG terminal for natural gas supply, since pipeline inflows from Spain play only a marginal role in national gas balances. The second was the indirect channel through Banco de Portugal's and the European Central Bank's monetary stance, as imported energy inflation complicated the path toward the ECB's inflation target and contributed to the European Commission's Spring 2026 forecast of headline Portuguese inflation peaking in the second quarter of 2026 before gradually receding. The Bank of Portugal's own assessment, issued amid the conflict, explicitly flagged rising inflation and tighter financing conditions as constraints on consumption and investment through the remainder of 2026.

What distinguishes Portugal's experience from that of more exposed European economies is the degree to which its prior investment in energy diversification cushioned the shock rather than amplifying it. Sines functions simultaneously as an LNG import terminal with import capacity more than double domestic consumption, a node in the Atlantic LNG trade with the United States rather than the Persian Gulf, and an increasingly important re-export point capable of transferring substantial onward volumes to central and northern Europe. This configuration meant that Portugal's gas supply, while not insulated from a globally priced commodity shock, was structurally less dependent on Persian Gulf-origin volumes than several continental peers. The strategic case for continued investment in Atlantic energy infrastructure — already strong on climate and industrial-policy grounds — is materially strengthened by this episode: diversification away from chokepoint-dependent supply routes functioned, in practice, as a form of national and European energy insurance.

Renewable Energy Leadership

Portugal remains one of Europe's leading examples of successful renewable integration. Renewable generation continues to supply the large majority of national electricity demand in most months, while solar deployment has continued to accelerate. The country has moved beyond simple decarbonisation toward construction of a broader green-industrial ecosystem involving battery storage, hydrogen production, grid modernisation, and digital energy management.

Particularly noteworthy is the continued expansion of distributed generation and self-consumption systems. This decentralisation enhances energy security, reduces grid vulnerability, and creates greater resilience against external supply disruptions — a resilience whose value was demonstrated, rather than merely asserted, during the spring 2026 energy shock. The strategic challenge facing Portugal is no longer the generation of renewable electricity but its efficient storage, transmission, and integration into industrial and transportation systems. The next phase of the transition will depend heavily on investment in battery storage capacity, smart-grid technologies, and expanded cross-border interconnection with Spain and the wider European electricity market.

Green Hydrogen, Atlantic LNG, and European Strategic Autonomy

Portugal's positioning as a future supplier of renewable hydrogen to European markets has moved from prospective to concretely under construction since the original assessment. In June 2026, Portuguese environmental authorities granted conditional approval to the GreenH2Atlantic hydrogen project at Sines, a development requiring seawater or recycled water for production and cooling processes and representing one of the more advanced large-scale electrolysis projects in continental Europe. This follows the European Investment Bank's 2025 commitment of approximately four hundred thirty million euros to finance two flagship Galp projects at the Sines refinery complex: a renewable hydrogen production unit using a one-hundred-megawatt grid-connected electrolyser, financed with roughly one hundred eighty million euros and described by the EIB as among the largest such facilities in Europe, and a parallel biofuels unit converting waste oils and fats into sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel, expected to begin production in 2026 with capacity sufficient to meet a substantial share of Portugal's EU-mandated aviation fuel blending obligations.

A separate consortium involving Shell, the Dutch terminal operator Vopak, the shipping firm Anthony Veder, and Engie continues to develop the feasibility of a liquid hydrogen supply chain connecting Sines to Rotterdam, targeting first deliveries by 2027 and envisioning an initial throughput in the range of one hundred tonnes of hydrogen per day with substantial scope to expand. Taken together with the earlier MadoquaPower2X project — a roughly one-billion-euro investment with a targeted five-hundred-megawatt production capacity — these developments confirm that Sines has moved decisively from a hydrogen aspiration to a hydrogen construction site. Should European hydrogen demand materialise at scale during the latter half of the decade, Portugal stands to become a substantive contributor to the European Union's strategic autonomy agenda, reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels and strengthening indigenous clean-energy supply chains.

Digital Infrastructure and Transatlantic Connectivity

Portugal's role in digital infrastructure has also advanced concretely. The Sines Data Campus project is now reported to be targeting approximately 1.2 gigawatts of data-centre capacity by 2031, which would place it among the largest single data-centre investment programmes in Europe, powered by renewable energy and benefiting from the transatlantic connectivity provided by submarine cables linking Europe to the Americas. Trade and investment analysts increasingly describe Sines not merely as an energy port but as a converging energy-industrial-digital platform: energy-intensive industries benefit from proximity to dedicated renewable generation, digital infrastructure benefits from abundant power and global connectivity, and the co-location of these assets reinforces the territory's attractiveness to further investment. This convergence aligns closely with broader EU objectives on digital sovereignty, cybersecurity resilience, and strategic technological autonomy. Portuguese commentary has rightly noted, however, that the principal execution risk to this vision lies not in the availability of capital but in the capacity of national and municipal planning systems to align this scale of industrial investment with adequate housing, transport, and public-service provision for the workforce it will require — a risk that connects this section directly to the structural housing analysis that follows.


II. Structural Socio-Economic Challenges

Housing Affordability and Social Cohesion

Housing remains the most significant domestic challenge confronting Portugal, and the period since the original assessment has seen it move from chronic policy concern to acute political crisis. Property prices have risen substantially faster than wages over the past decade, with cumulative house-price increases exceeding one hundred per cent between 2015 and 2023 alone, and year-on-year increases reaching a record sixteen per cent in early 2025 before further acceleration. Several factors have contributed to this imbalance: sustained tourism growth, international property investment, expansion of short-term rental markets, persistently slow housing construction, and lengthy municipal permitting processes.

The scale of the supply shortfall is stark when set against historical benchmarks. Portugal licensed approximately twenty-seven thousand new homes in 2024 against roughly one hundred seventy thousand recorded sales, and against an estimated underlying demographic need in the range of forty-five to forty-eight thousand new units annually — a figure barely half of what is required. By comparison, construction reached approximately one hundred thirteen thousand units in the year 2000, underscoring the extent to which Portuguese housing supply capacity has structurally contracted even as demand, driven by tourism, foreign investment, and net immigration exceeding one hundred fifty thousand people in some recent years, has continued to rise. A particular paradox compounds the shortage: industry analysis indicates that more than seven hundred thousand residential properties nationally sit vacant or underused, even as construction output remains a small fraction of recorded annual sales.

The March 2026 Reform Package and Its Critics

On 27 March 2026, the government of Prime Minister Luís Montenegro approved its most ambitious housing reform package since the original 2024 Construir Portugal strategy, building on measures progressively expanded throughout 2025. The package rests on three pillars. The first is fiscal: a reduced six per cent value-added tax rate on construction and refurbishment of properties intended as primary residences or for rental at moderate prices, down from the standard twenty-three per cent rate; a reduction in the flat-rate tax on rental income for moderate-rent contracts from twenty-five to ten per cent; and a capital gains tax exemption on property sales where proceeds are reinvested in affordable rental housing. The second pillar is regulatory: a substantial overhaul of urban planning and construction licensing intended to shorten approval times, the adoption of Building Information Modelling standards to digitise and standardise the construction process, and a new Construction Code intended to modernise building regulations that in some cases date to the 1960s. The third pillar addresses the release of housing stock tied up in undivided inheritances, a long-standing but under-addressed source of dormant supply in the Portuguese housing stock.

These measures build upon and expand the 1.º Direito public housing programme and the broader social housing financing envelope, which by 2025 had grown to approximately 4.2 billion euros — combining Recovery and Resilience Facility loans with State Budget allocations — targeting a cumulative total of approximately fifty-nine thousand social and affordable units by 2030. The government has also moved, more controversially, to remove the rent cap that had applied to previously contracted leases, a step taken in September 2025 and reaffirmed in the March 2026 package, alongside a streamlining of eviction procedures and an increase in the tenant income-tax deduction for rent from seven hundred to nine hundred euros in 2026, rising to one thousand euros in 2027.

This rebalancing toward supply-side and landlord-facing incentives has provoked sustained political contestation. In March 2026, a coalition of approximately ninety civil-society organisations coordinated housing-affordability protests across sixteen Portuguese cities, characterising the removal of rent caps and the acceleration of eviction procedures as a deliberate tilt toward investment funds and against working households. The coalition's counter-proposals — income-indexed rental ceilings modelled loosely on recent Spanish legislation capping rent increases at three per cent annually in designated stressed zones, and a freeze on variable-rate mortgage instalments at early-2026 levels — illustrate the breadth of the underlying disagreement: whether Portugal's housing shortage is best addressed by expanding the supply response of private capital, as the Montenegro government and most international assessments including the OECD's 2026 Economic Survey have argued, or by direct state intervention in pricing and tenancy security, as the protest coalition and segments of the parliamentary opposition contend. Both the OECD and the consultancy CBRE, in separate 2026 assessments, caution that expanding housing support without a corresponding expansion of supply risks pushing prices higher still, while rebalancing rental regulation without adequate compensating allowances risks increasing hardship for tenants in the near term — a tension the current reform package has not fully resolved.

The consequences of unresolved housing stress extend well beyond housing itself. High housing costs reduce labour mobility, delay family formation, encourage emigration among younger and more skilled workers, and exacerbate social inequality and regional imbalance. A 2023 survey found that nearly forty-four per cent of respondents had considered leaving Portugal specifically because of housing-affordability difficulties — a finding with direct implications for the demographic and productivity challenges discussed below. Increasingly, housing affordability functions as a constraint on economic competitiveness in its own right, not merely as a social policy concern. Without a durable, multi-year expansion of housing supply substantially beyond the roughly twenty-six to twenty-eight thousand units currently being delivered annually, Portugal risks consolidating a dual economy: strong macroeconomic and fiscal indicators at the national level, alongside narrowing real opportunity for the generation that will determine the country's longer-term productive capacity.

Demographic Aging

Portugal continues to face one of Europe's most challenging demographic outlooks. Low fertility rates, increasing longevity, and sustained emigration among highly skilled younger workers continue to drive rapid population aging. Industry analysis published in May 2026 reinforces the severity of this trend, noting that immigration has been the sole source of population growth over the past decade — a dependence that, while it has brought clear labour-market and social-security benefits, also concentrates demographic risk in the durability of future migration flows.

This trend creates three interconnected pressures. First, labour shortages reduce potential economic growth; the OECD's 2026 Economic Survey explicitly identifies labour shortages and population aging as factors that will weigh on both growth and living standards over the coming decade. Second, healthcare expenditures increase as the population ages. Third, pension obligations place growing strain on public finances, a pressure the Portuguese Conselho das Finanças Públicas incorporates directly into its 2026–2030 fiscal projections. Although immigration has partially offset demographic decline, long-term sustainability will require a sustained combination of labour-market reform, skills development, family-support policy, and targeted migration strategy. The OECD's most recent recommendations specifically emphasise extending working lives, upskilling older workers, and easing labour-market access for both migrants and women as near-term levers available to policymakers.

Productivity Constraints

Despite continued progress on macroeconomic stabilisation, productivity growth remains the central unresolved structural weakness in the Portuguese economy. The OECD's 2026 Economic Survey is unusually direct on this point, noting that Portugal's economic performance continues to lag most advanced OECD economies, and that while the investment-rate gap with peer economies has narrowed, weak long-term productivity growth has produced a persistent and largely unaddressed gap in output per hour worked. The sizeable shortfall in GDP per capita relative to the European core, the Survey notes, also reflects continued underperformance in Portuguese labour-market outcomes, including comparatively weak employment rates among youth and continued room for improvement among women and older workers, notwithstanding a historically low headline unemployment rate.

Several structural factors continue to constrain productivity: small average firm size, limited research and development intensity, persistent skills mismatches, regulatory complexity, and capital investment gaps. The OECD has specifically recommended reducing regulatory barriers to competition in order to facilitate the entry and growth of innovative start-ups, alongside accelerated implementation of performance-based budgeting and a continued shift in public spending composition toward growth-enhancing investment. Improving productivity remains, in the judgement of this assessment, the single most consequential determinant of Portugal's long-term prosperity: without sustained productivity gains, wage convergence with northern European economies will remain elusive even as headline employment performance continues to outperform.

Energy Poverty and Climate Vulnerability

A striking paradox persists within Portugal's energy transition. Although the country produces increasingly large quantities of low-cost renewable electricity, many households continue to experience energy poverty due to inefficient housing stock and inadequate building insulation — a vulnerability that the 2026 energy-price shock associated with the Iran conflict has made more visible rather than less. Portugal's National Long-Term Energy Poverty Mitigation Strategy, covering the period to 2050, aims to eliminate energy poverty through improved housing efficiency, universal access to essential energy services, targeted regional initiatives, and a newly established National Energy Poverty Observatory intended to guide future action. The persistence of energy poverty alongside genuine renewable abundance underscores that Portugal's energy challenge is now substantially one of distribution, building efficiency, and affordability rather than of generation capacity.

Climate change may further intensify vulnerabilities through increased drought frequency, water stress, wildfire risk, agricultural disruption, and coastal erosion. The severe winter storms of January and February 2026 — which the Conselho das Finanças Públicas identifies as a material factor behind the deterioration in the 2026 fiscal balance, owing to reconstruction and storm-relief expenditure — illustrate concretely how climate-related shocks now interact directly with fiscal planning rather than remaining a separate, longer-horizon concern. Climate adaptation must accordingly continue to be understood as an immediate economic and fiscal necessity, not solely an environmental objective.


 III. Economic Outlook: 2026–2030

Portugal's economic outlook remains broadly favourable relative to most European peers, though the consensus among forecasters has narrowed and moderated somewhat since the original assessment, reflecting both the fading of post-pandemic catch-up dynamics and the drag from the 2026 energy shock. Growth is expected to moderate from the exceptional rebound years but to remain above the eurozone average through most of the forecast horizon.

The range of current institutional forecasts is instructive in its own right. The European Commission's Spring 2026 forecast anticipates a slowdown in growth as the energy shock drives inflation higher, with public debt projected to reach approximately eighty-seven per cent of GDP in 2026 before easing toward eighty-six per cent in 2027, supported by persistent primary budget surpluses and a continued favourable growth-interest rate differential. The OECD's January 2026 Economic Survey, prepared before the full impact of the Iran conflict was apparent, had projected growth accelerating to 2.2 per cent in 2026 before easing to 1.8 per cent in 2027, with inflation around 2.2 per cent in 2026; the OECD's subsequent June 2026 country note, incorporating the energy shock, revised this down to 1.8 per cent for 2026 and 1.7 per cent for 2027, with inflation now expected to peak at 3.2 per cent in 2026 owing to higher energy prices working through the economy, before moderating thereafter. Banco de Portugal's own most recent published projection anticipated growth of 2.1 per cent in 2026 and 1.7 per cent in 2027, while the credit rating agency DBRS, updating its forecasts specifically to account for the Iran conflict in March 2026, maintained a 2.1 per cent growth projection for 2026 and improved its 2027 forecast to 1.8 per cent, describing the overall revision as modest and cautiously optimistic, while flagging that the conflict's ultimate impact on growth and inflation remained genuinely uncertain at the time of writing. S&P Global's parallel assessment placed 2026 growth at 2.2 per cent, easing to a sustained pace of close to two per cent on average across 2026 through 2029, supported by strong household and corporate balance sheets, continued European transfers, substantial net immigration, and Portugal's comparatively favourable energy cost structure relative to EU peers.

Quarterly data through the first half of 2026 illustrate how this aggregate picture has played out in practice. Portuguese GDP expanded by 1.9 per cent for the full year 2025, a slight moderation from 2.2 per cent in 2024, with growth in the final quarter of 2025 reaching a robust 0.9 per cent quarter-on-quarter, the strongest quarterly performance in a year, driven by a positive turn in net external demand. The first quarter of 2026, however, saw growth stall entirely, a slowdown the Bank of Portugal attributed jointly to the destructive effects of Storm Kristin and accompanying severe rainfall — which damaged infrastructure, agriculture, and buildings, particularly in the central region — and to the adverse economic effects of the Middle East conflict, which weighed on net external demand as import costs, particularly for refined fuel, rose faster than export receipts. Household consumption growth in particular collapsed from 0.9 per cent to just 0.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter, reflecting the squeeze on real purchasing power from higher energy prices, even as fixed investment continued to strengthen.

On the fiscal side, the starting position for the 2026–2030 horizon is considerably stronger than in past cycles. The 2025 fiscal outturn delivered a budget surplus of 0.7 per cent of GDP — better than government and independent forecasters alike had anticipated — driven by lower-than-budgeted capital expenditure, continued strength in tax and social-security revenue amid a tight labour market, and contained interest expenditure. Public debt fell from approximately ninety-four per cent of GDP in 2024 to a sixteen-year low of around eighty-nine to ninety per cent in 2025, depending on the precise national-accounts vintage used. Reflecting this trajectory, Fitch revised its outlook on Portuguese sovereign debt from stable to positive in early March 2026, and S&P Global followed with a comparable upward revision to positive in late February 2026, both agencies citing confidence in the continued downward path of public debt and the credibility of Portugal's fiscal management even amid external shocks.

The fiscal picture is nonetheless expected to deteriorate somewhat over the remainder of the forecast horizon as one-off and temporary factors fade. The Conselho das Finanças Públicas projects the budget balance returning to deficit from 2027 onward, reaching approximately one per cent of GDP in deficit by 2030 under a no-policy-change assumption, with the 2026 deterioration specifically linked to storm-relief spending, the economic response to the Iran conflict, and increased drawdown of Recovery and Resilience Facility loans. The European Commission's parallel assessment anticipates a comparable shift, with the general government balance moving from surplus into a deficit of roughly 0.1 per cent of GDP in 2026 and 0.4 per cent in 2027, reflecting both the storm-related support measures and the carry-through effect of previously enacted personal and corporate income tax reductions. Both the Commission and the OECD flag financial weaknesses in state-owned enterprises and contingent liabilities from public-private partnerships as material fiscal risks meriting continued surveillance. Despite this projected deterioration, the primary balance — the fiscal position excluding interest costs — is expected to remain solidly positive throughout the period, in the range of 1.3 to 1.5 per cent of GDP in 2026 and 2027 according to OECD projections, which is what allows the debt-to-GDP ratio to continue its decline even as the headline balance weakens.

Labour markets are likely to remain historically tight by Portuguese standards, though forecasts differ modestly on the precise unemployment trajectory: DBRS projects unemployment easing from six per cent in 2026 to 5.9 per cent in 2027, while S&P Global's somewhat less optimistic projection places unemployment at 6.3 per cent in 2026 rising marginally to 6.5 per cent in 2027. Wage growth is expected to remain robust, with nominal wages projected by the OECD to rise by 3.7 per cent in 2026 and 3.4 per cent in 2027, supported by minimum wage increases of 6.1 per cent in 2025, 5.7 per cent in 2026, and a further 5.4 per cent planned for 2027, alongside continued corporate tax incentives for wage increases that the OECD itself recommends phasing out given weak evidence of cost-effectiveness. Unit labour costs have risen rapidly as a consequence, a development that, combined with only modest productivity growth, bears directly on the competitiveness concerns discussed in Section II.

Taken as a whole, the range across these institutional forecasts — broadly clustering between 1.6 and 2.2 per cent growth for 2026, narrowing toward 1.6 to 1.8 per cent by 2027, and continuing at a more moderate pace of roughly 1.6 to 1.7 per cent through the remainder of the decade — should be read less as forecasting imprecision than as evidence of genuine, ongoing uncertainty regarding two specific variables: the durability and ultimate economic cost of the Iran conflict and its aftershocks, and the extent to which private investment can credibly substitute for Recovery and Resilience Facility disbursements once that programme concludes. Both variables feature centrally in the scenario architecture that follows.


IV. Strategic Scenario Assessment: A Bayesian Narrative Framework, 2026–2030

Rather than relying on a single point forecast, this assessment evaluates four plausible strategic pathways for Portugal through 2030. In keeping with the reviewer's instruction, no mathematical notation appears in this section. The underlying logic is nonetheless explicitly Bayesian in character: each scenario carries a starting, or prior, degree of plausibility based on everything known as of June 2026, and the analysis identifies a specific set of observable developments over the coming months and years that should, if they occur, lead a rational observer to revise that plausibility upward or downward. The purpose of presenting the framework this way is not to mechanically predict a single outcome, but to give policymakers a disciplined way of updating their own judgement as events unfold, much as a skilled diplomat updates an assessment of a counterpart's intentions through a sequence of small, individually ambiguous signals rather than a single decisive revelation.

Four indicator streams carry particular evidentiary weight across all four scenarios, and tracking them consistently will do more to sharpen the Secretariat's judgement than any single new data release considered in isolation. The first is the pace and credibility of housing-supply delivery: not the announcement of new legislation, which has occurred repeatedly since 2024 with limited effect on completions, but the actual annual count of housing units licensed and completed, set against the forty-five to forty-eight thousand unit benchmark that independent demographic analysis identifies as the underlying requirement. The second is the trajectory of the Strait of Hormuz reopening and the associated normalisation of European energy prices, since the speed and durability of that normalisation will materially shape Portuguese inflation, household purchasing power, and the European Central Bank's policy stance over the next eighteen to twenty-four months. The third is the rate of private capital mobilisation around Sines and comparable Atlantic infrastructure projects, which will reveal whether private investment is genuinely capable of substituting for Recovery and Resilience Facility disbursements once that programme winds down in 2026. The fourth is the evolution of Portugal's primary fiscal balance and the credibility of its medium-term consolidation path, which determines how much fiscal space remains available to absorb a future shock without compromising the hard-won sovereign rating upgrades of early 2026.

Scenario One: Strategic Transformation

Starting plausibility: moderate, and modestly higher than in the original assessment.

In this scenario, Portugal successfully implements durable housing reform, expands electricity interconnection with Spain and the wider European grid, accelerates renewable and hydrogen investment at Sines and beyond, and effectively replaces the post-Recovery and Resilience Facility investment gap through sustained private-sector participation. Economic growth remains consistently above the eurozone average across the full 2026–2030 horizon. Public debt continues its decline at a meaningful pace. Portugal emerges as a leading European hub for renewable energy, hydrogen development, digital infrastructure, and Atlantic logistics, and housing affordability, while not fully resolved, visibly stabilises relative to incomes for the first time in a decade.

This represents the most favourable plausible outcome, and the evidence accumulated since the original assessment provides somewhat more support for it than before. The conditional approval of the GreenH2Atlantic project, the EIB's substantial co-financing of Galp's hydrogen and biofuels units, the advancing Shell-led liquid hydrogen feasibility study, and the more than twenty-billion-euro Sines investment cycle reported by Portuguese officials all constitute genuine, capital-committed progress rather than aspirational announcement. Equally, the March 2026 housing package represents the most structurally ambitious reform attempt to date, with the VAT reduction, licensing reform, and inheritance-related supply release addressing root causes rather than only symptoms. A rational observer should treat continued, on-schedule progress on these fronts — first hydrogen shipments from Sines materialising on or near the 2027 target, housing completions rising demonstrably above the roughly twenty-six to twenty-eight thousand unit run rate of recent years, and the private financing share of Sines-area investment continuing to grow relative to public co-financing — as the signal that should most increase confidence in this scenario. Conversely, a stalling of the housing package in implementation, a familiar pattern in recent Portuguese housing policy in which ambitious announcements have repeatedly under-delivered on completions, would be the single most informative signal against this pathway, since housing absorption capacity is the structural constraint most likely to cap Portugal's convergence even where energy and digital investment succeed.

Scenario Two: Managed Adaptation

Starting plausibility: high, and currently the modal expectation across nearly all institutional forecasters surveyed in Section III.

Portugal continues to make incremental progress while avoiding major policy failure. Growth moderates toward the 1.6 to 1.8 per cent range that the Conselho das Finanças Públicas and OECD both now treat as a reasonable medium-term baseline, structural reforms advance but more slowly than their architects intend, housing shortages persist without dramatically worsening, and fiscal discipline remains essentially intact even as the headline balance moves into modest deficit from 2027 as one-off storm and energy-related supports fade and Recovery and Resilience Facility disbursements taper.

Under this scenario, Portugal maintains macroeconomic stability and continues to outperform the eurozone average on growth, but achieves only partial convergence with Europe's most productive economies, consistent with the OECD's repeated emphasis on a persistent and largely unaddressed productivity gap. This scenario currently commands the broadest support across institutional forecasters: the clustering of European Commission, OECD, Banco de Portugal, DBRS, and S&P Global projections around a 1.6 to 2.2 per cent growth range for 2026, narrowing to a tighter 1.6 to 1.8 per cent band for 2027 and beyond, is itself evidence consistent with a managed-adaptation base case rather than either a transformative acceleration or a sharper downturn. The signal that would most reinforce this scenario as the prevailing trajectory is a continuation of the current pattern: forecast revisions that move within a narrow band from one quarter to the next rather than swinging sharply, a primary surplus that holds broadly in the 1.3 to 1.5 per cent of GDP range projected by the OECD, and housing completions that improve gradually without closing the full supply gap. The most informative signal that would begin to shift weight away from this scenario and toward either Scenario One or Scenario Three would be a sustained, multi-quarter divergence of actual outcomes from this narrow forecast band in either direction.

Scenario Three: Fragmented Europe

Starting plausibility: moderate, and somewhat elevated relative to the original assessment given the demonstrated fragility of the post-ceasefire Hormuz settlement.

External conditions deteriorate due to persistent geopolitical instability, trade fragmentation, and repeated energy-market disruption. Growth weakens significantly across the eurozone, investment slows, and fiscal pressures increase across the European periphery, including in Portugal. The defining feature of this scenario is not a single dramatic event but a pattern of recurrent shocks that prevent the kind of stable planning environment that both housing-supply expansion and large-scale industrial investment require.

The events of February through April 2026 provide a concrete, partially realised template for how this scenario could deepen rather than resolve. Energy analysts at the time of the ceasefire were notably cautious about the durability of the Hormuz reopening, with maritime studies experts describing a contested and gradual normalisation likely to take months rather than weeks, and noting that traffic through the strait remained far below its pre-war pace of roughly one hundred twenty to one hundred forty vessels per day even after the ceasefire was announced. The International Monetary Fund's managing director signalled at the same time that the Fund's global growth forecast was likely to be revised downward, and the World Bank subsequently cut its 2026 global growth projection to 2.5 per cent, the lowest since the pandemic. Should the Hormuz ceasefire prove durable but the underlying Iran–Israel–Persian Gulf tension structure remain unresolved — a state that several regional analysts regard as more probable than a comprehensive settlement — Europe would face a recurring risk of renewed energy-price spikes triggered by any future escalation, with Portugal's LNG-dependent gas supply and its still-meaningful, if diminishing, exposure to globally priced refined fuel products transmitting that volatility directly into domestic inflation and household purchasing power, much as occurred in the first quarter of 2026.

Portugal would likely remain relatively resilient compared with many European partners under this scenario, owing precisely to the Atlantic energy diversification documented in Section I, but its structural weaknesses — particularly housing affordability and the productivity gap — would become more visible and more politically costly as the fiscal space available to cushion external shocks narrows. The single most informative forward indicator for this scenario is the behaviour of European wholesale gas and Brent crude prices over the remainder of 2026: a swift, sustained return toward pre-conflict price levels would argue for discounting this scenario, whereas a pattern of repeated smaller spikes around continued low-level Persian Gulf tension, Houthi activity in the Red Sea, or renewed friction between Iran and the United States would argue for treating this scenario as an increasingly central rather than tail case.

Scenario Four: Systemic Stress

Starting plausibility: low, but not negligible, and modestly elevated relative to the original assessment in light of the demonstrated scale of the 2026 Hormuz disruption.

A major geopolitical crisis, a severe climate shock, or a prolonged European recession triggers a broader economic downturn. Tourism declines sharply, investment contracts, fiscal balances deteriorate materially, and unemployment rises from its currently low base. This scenario differs from Scenario Three in degree rather than in kind: it envisions not a pattern of recurrent moderate shocks but a single severe shock, or a compounding of multiple shocks in close succession, that overwhelms Portugal's adjustment capacity within a short period.

The most plausible pathway to this scenario, on the evidence currently available, would combine a renewed and more severe escalation of the Iran–Israel–Persian Gulf conflict — for instance, a breakdown of the April 2026 ceasefire accompanied by a more sustained closure of the Strait of Hormuz than the initial episode, given that roughly four-fifths of crude oil and a comparable share of LNG transiting the strait moves toward Asian markets, meaning a prolonged closure would also generate severe second-order effects on global growth and trade volumes that would reach Portugal indirectly through its export markets and tourism receipts, even where direct energy exposure remained manageable — with a simultaneous domestic shock such as a severe wildfire season or a repeat of the kind of damaging storm activity experienced in early 2026, which already required unbudgeted fiscal support. Although Portugal's improved fiscal position, including its sixteen-year-low debt ratio and recently upgraded sovereign outlook, provides materially more protection against this scenario than it possessed during the eurozone crisis of the previous decade, economic convergence with the European core would stall for a period of several years under this outcome, and the housing and productivity reforms currently in motion would be at meaningful risk of being deprioritised or reversed under fiscal pressure. The clearest early-warning indicators for this scenario are a renewed breakdown of the Hormuz ceasefire accompanied by Brent crude sustaining levels above one hundred dollars per barrel for an extended period, a widening of Portuguese sovereign bond spreads inconsistent with the current positive rating trajectory, and a reversal of the sovereign outlook upgrades granted by Fitch and S&P Global earlier in 2026.

Updating Across Scenarios: A Worked Illustration

To make the Bayesian logic concrete without resorting to formal notation, consider how the Secretariat's confidence should rationally evolve across a plausible sequence of observable events over the second half of 2026. Suppose, first, that European wholesale gas prices continue easing toward pre-conflict levels through the third quarter, consistent with the gradual normalisation that energy analysts described as the most likely path immediately after the April ceasefire. This single observation should modestly increase confidence in Scenarios One and Two and modestly decrease confidence in Scenarios Three and Four, since it would suggest the Hormuz shock is resolving along the benign, contained path rather than the recurrent or severe path.

Suppose, second, that Portuguese housing completion data for 2026, when published, show only a marginal increase over the roughly twenty-six to twenty-eight thousand units delivered in recent years, notwithstanding the March 2026 reform package. This observation should be read independently of the energy-price signal: it would not particularly increase confidence in Scenario Three or Four, since housing underperformance is a domestic structural issue rather than an externally driven shock, but it should meaningfully reduce confidence in Scenario One and correspondingly increase confidence in Scenario Two, since it would suggest that even well-designed legislative reform continues to founder on Portugal's well-documented implementation gap in construction licensing and delivery.

Suppose, third, that Fitch or S&P Global move Portugal's sovereign rating outlook from positive to an actual upgrade in the course of 2026 or 2027. This would most directly reinforce confidence in Scenario Two as the prevailing path while also providing modest support to Scenario One, since a rating upgrade would reflect sustained primary surpluses and a credible debt trajectory of precisely the kind that scenario presupposes; it would not be strongly informative about Scenarios Three or Four, since sovereign ratings respond to fiscal fundamentals with a lag and would not pre-empt a future external shock. The general principle illustrated by this sequence is that the four indicator streams identified at the start of this section are not interchangeable: each carries different diagnostic weight for different scenarios, and the Secretariat's overall judgement should be updated by combining all four rather than over-weighting whichever single indicator was most recently published.

Strategic Assessment

Across all four scenarios, one conclusion remains remarkably consistent and is, if anything, more strongly supported by the evidence assembled in this revised edition than it was in the original assessment. Countries that undertake early, credible structural reform in housing, productivity enhancement, labour-force expansion, energy infrastructure, and innovation ecosystems perform significantly better across every plausible external environment than those relying primarily on short-term demand support measures. This is true not only in the favourable Scenario One environment, where such reforms compound into genuine transformation, but also in the adverse Scenario Three and Scenario Four environments, where Portugal's Atlantic energy diversification has already demonstrated, in the live test of the 2026 Hormuz crisis, that structural resilience built in calm periods pays a direct dividend when shocks arrive.

Portugal's strategic challenge is therefore not merely managing cyclical fluctuation but addressing long-standing structural constraints — chief among them housing supply and productivity — before the advantages generated by renewable energy leadership and European funding begin to diminish with the conclusion of the Recovery and Resilience Facility cycle. The period between 2026 and 2030 is likely to determine whether Portugal completes its transformation into a high-value, innovation-driven Atlantic economy, consistent with Scenario One, or settles into the more probable but less transformative outcome of Scenario Two: a country that is fiscally sound, energy-secure, and meaningfully above the eurozone growth average, but that has not yet closed the productivity and housing gaps that separate it from full convergence with Europe's most prosperous economies.



V. Policy Recommendations for the European Union

The European Union should continue to view Portugal not simply as a recipient of cohesion funding but as a strategic contributor to European resilience — a characterisation that the events of the past several months have reinforced rather than merely asserted. The following recommendations update and extend those of the original assessment in light of the developments documented above.

On energy and Atlantic infrastructure

Priority should continue to be given to accelerating Iberian electricity interconnection, facilitating investment in Atlantic energy corridors, and integrating Portuguese renewable and hydrogen capacity into broader European energy-security planning. The demonstrated value of Atlantic-route LNG and hydrogen infrastructure during the 2026 Hormuz disruption strengthens the case for the Union to treat continued co-financing of Sines-centred infrastructure, including through instruments such as the European Investment Bank facility already extended to Galp, as a genuine energy-security investment rather than only a climate-transition expenditure. The Union should also monitor the GreenH2Atlantic and Sines–Rotterdam liquid hydrogen corridor closely as potential templates for replication elsewhere on the Atlantic periphery.

On housing

Future European funding mechanisms should prioritise measurable housing-supply expansion, building renovation, productivity-enhancing investment, and workforce development, with disbursement increasingly tied to verified completion data rather than to the passage of legislation or the announcement of targets. Given the repeated pattern, documented in Section II, in which ambitious Portuguese housing packages have under-delivered on actual construction relative to stated goals, the Union is well placed to use its convening and technical-assistance role to support faster, more standardised licensing processes, potentially drawing on the Building Information Modelling and digital permitting reforms already underway, as a precondition or complement to further housing-related disbursement.

On labour mobility

The Union should support targeted labour-mobility frameworks aimed specifically at addressing the shortages most acute in Portugal: construction, where labour shortages are themselves now a binding constraint on the housing-supply response the Union and the Portuguese government both seek; engineering; healthcare; and advanced manufacturing. Given that immigration has been the principal source of Portuguese population growth over the past decade, coordinated EU-level support for skills recognition and integration would meaningfully complement Portugal's own demographic and labour-market reform efforts.

On fiscal and macro-financial surveillance

The Union should continue close surveillance of the contingent liabilities flagged by both the European Commission and the OECD in state-owned enterprises and public-private partnerships, given that these risks could erode the fiscal buffer that has supported Portugal's recent sovereign rating upgrades. At the same time, the Union should recognise that Portugal's primary surplus performance through the 2026 shock period — maintained even amid storm-relief and energy-related spending pressure — represents a genuine demonstration of fiscal resilience worth highlighting as a model within broader European fiscal-governance discussions.

On strategic communication

Finally, Portugal's role in Atlantic connectivity, digital infrastructure, maritime security, and renewable energy should be incorporated more explicitly into long-term European strategic planning, including in any future revision of European energy-security doctrine informed by the lessons of the 2026 Hormuz crisis. The episode offers the Union a concrete, recent case study in the value of supply-route diversification that merits explicit reference in future strategic-autonomy and energy-security communications.

Concluding Assessment

Portugal enters the second half of the 2026–2030 period with stronger fiscal fundamentals, greater demonstrated geopolitical relevance, and more advanced energy and digital infrastructure than at any point in the past two decades — a position now reinforced, rather than merely asserted, by its comparatively resilient passage through the most severe global energy-supply disruption in recent memory. Sovereign rating upgrades from both Fitch and S&P Global in early 2026, a sixteen-year low in public debt, and continued above-eurozone-average growth even through a quarter marked by severe storms and an external energy shock together constitute a genuinely strengthened starting position relative to the original assessment.

Nevertheless, the country's long-term success will continue to depend less on macroeconomic stabilisation — which has been substantially achieved and, on the evidence of the past several months, has proven more resilient under stress than many comparable European economies — and more on its ability to resolve the deep-rooted structural challenges related to housing, demographics, productivity, and social inclusion that this report has examined in detail. The March 2026 housing reforms and the accompanying public protest they provoked illustrate that Portugal has moved from a phase of diagnosing these challenges to a phase of contested implementation, with the eventual verdict to be found in actual completion data over the coming several years rather than in the ambition of the legislation itself.

The balance of evidence assembled in this revised edition continues to suggest that Portugal possesses the institutional capacity and strategic assets necessary to achieve sustained convergence with Europe's leading economies, and that the Managed Adaptation pathway described in Section IV remains the single most probable trajectory, with the more favourable Strategic Transformation pathway a realistic, though not yet assured, upside case contingent substantially on housing-delivery performance over the next two to three years. The decisive question, as in the original assessment, is whether Portuguese policymakers can translate the country's demonstrated short-term resilience into genuine long-term structural transformation before the current window — defined by the conclusion of Recovery and Resilience Facility funding, the uncertain durability of the Hormuz ceasefire, and the underlying demographic clock — begins to close.


Principal Sources Consulted

European Commission, Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs — Spring 2026 Economic Forecast: Portugal
OECD, Economic Surveys: Portugal 2026 (January 2026), and OECD Portugal Economic Snapshot (June 2026 update)
OECD ECOSCOPE — “Making housing more affordable in Portugal” (January 2026)
Banco de Portugal, Economic Bulletin (March 2025) and subsequent flash GDP estimates
Conselho das Finanças Públicas, Economic and Fiscal Outlook 2026–2030 (April 2026)
DBRS Morningstar, sovereign rating commentary on Portugal (March 2026)
S&P Global Ratings and Fitch Ratings, sovereign outlook revisions on Portugal (February–March 2026)
U.S. International Trade Administration, Country Commercial Guide: Portugal — Energy (2026)
European Investment Bank, press releases on Galp hydrogen and biofuels financing, Sines (2025)
Fuel Cells Works, LNG Prime, and The Portugal News — reporting on Sines hydrogen and port investment (2026)
Euronews Business, Al Jazeera, NPR, and the Congressional Research Service — reporting and analysis on the 2026 Iran conflict, the Strait of Hormuz disruption, and associated European energy-price effects
CBRE (“Oikos — The Long Game for the Portuguese Residential Sector”) and contemporaneous Portuguese property-sector reporting on housing supply and demographic pressure