Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Copper Shortage Deepens As Mine Disasters And Rising Demand Threaten Global Supply


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) A deadly mining accident in Indonesia and China's first production drop in nearly a decade have collided with artificial intelligence's explosive growth to create a global copper shortage that could raise prices for everything from smartphones to electric cars.

Trading Economics data shows copper jumped to $4.76 per pound on September 29, gaining 4.1% in just one week.

The surge followed catastrophic news from the world's second-largest copper mine, where 800,000 tonnes of wet material crashed into underground tunnels, killing two workers and trapping five others.

Freeport-McMoRan's Grasberg mine in Indonesia supplies 3.2% of global copper production. The company declared force majeure and expects full recovery only by 2027.

This single accident removes more copper from world markets than most entire countries produce. The timing creates a perfect storm.

While mines fail, artificial intelligence companies race to build massive data centers that each require tens of thousands of miles of copper wiring.



Every server, every cooling system, every power connection needs copper. The AI boom consumes copper faster than miners can dig it up. China compounds the crisis by reducing refined copper production for the first time in a September since 2016.

The world's largest copper consumer now produces less metal while global demand explodes. Chinese smelters cut operations as new regulations made scrap processing unprofitable.

Additional mines across Peru and Chile face shutdowns from protests and tunnel collapses. Multiple supply disruptions hit simultaneously while inventory levels sink to 40% below normal.

London Metal Exchange warehouses hold just 144,400 tonnes, critically low stocks that cannot buffer further shocks. Behind these numbers lies a simple truth: modern life depends entirely on copper.

Every smartphone contains about 15 grams of copper. Electric cars need four times more copper than gasoline vehicles. Wind turbines, solar panels, and power grids all require massive copper quantities.

Without steady supply, these technologies become more expensive. Goldman Sachs revised forecasts to show global copper supply growing just 0.1% in 2025 while demand accelerates.

The bank now expects a deficit of 55,000 tons this year, previously forecasting balanced markets. Citigroup predicts copper reaching $5.57 per pound within twelve months, representing 20% higher costs.

The crisis extends beyond mining accidents. New copper mines take over a decade to develop and cost billions of dollars. Environmental regulations tighten while ore quality declines at existing sites.

The industry cannot quickly replace lost production. Market professionals recognize the structural problem developing.

Managed money positions reached the highest speculative levels in over a year as institutional investors position for sustained shortages.

Trading volumes surged as funds rebuild positions expecting higher prices ahead. The convergence tells a larger story about technological progress meeting resource constraints.

Humanity's digital future requires vast quantities of an ancient metal that becomes increasingly difficult to extract. Every advancement in computing power, every electric vehicle sold, every renewable energy project demands more copper from a shrinking supply base.

For ordinary consumers, this translates into gradual price increases across countless products. Smartphones, laptops, home appliances, and cars all become more expensive as manufacturers pass along higher copper costs.

The invisible metal that powers modern civilization now constrains its growth, creating inflation pressures that touch every household budget while the world struggles to balance technological ambition with geological reality.

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