The Battery Show

Copper Industry Faces Structural Supply Shortage Starting 2026


Listen Later

Recording date: 4th December 2025

The global copper market is approaching a critical supply crunch as electrification and decarbonization drive unprecedented demand growth while new mine development stalls, according to analysis by Merlin M Johnson, CEO of Fitzroy Minerals. Despite nominal copper prices appearing strong above $5 per pound, real prices measured in gold have declined 80% from historical peaks, reflecting nearly two decades of subdued demand and robust mine supply following the 2008 financial crisis.

The outlook has transformed dramatically as electrification accelerates. Global electricity demand grew 4.3% in 2024, substantially exceeding overall energy demand growth of 2.2% and GDP expansion of 3.2%. Electrification and decarbonization now represent approximately 30% of total copper demand, with electric vehicles requiring two to three times more copper than conventional vehicles. The International Energy Agency projects copper demand growth at 2.6% annually through 2035, requiring 600,000-700,000 tons of new supply each year.

However, new project approvals have fallen dramatically short, averaging under 300,000 tons annually for three consecutive years - roughly half of requirements. The industry lost 500,000-800,000 tons of capacity in 2024 through various disruptions, while social license issues, indigenous rights concerns, and permitting challenges constrain development across multiple jurisdictions.

Chile, producing 5.4 million tons representing 24% of global output, exemplifies the industry's mature economics. Despite $83 billion in planned investment through 2034, Chilean production is projected to increase by only 100,000 tons. BHP's Escondida mine will see production decline 20% from 1.2 million to 1.0 million tons despite $5-6 billion in spending.

These dynamics point toward sustained deficit conditions beginning in 2026, with prices projected to reach $20,000-30,000 per ton (above $9 per pound) from current levels around $11,000-12,000 per ton to incentivize necessary supply additions and offset extreme capital intensity in modern copper mining.

Sign up for Crux Investor: https://cruxinvestor.com

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Battery ShowBy Crux Investor