
Q2 2026 Strategic Materials Pre‑Brief: What to Watch This Quarter
Executive pre-brief for Q2 2026 on critical minerals: rare earths, copper, nickel, lithium, graphite and cobalt. Key risks, scenarios and actions for…
27 février 2026
Anna K.Atomic #29
critical
The backbone of electrification — every EV, wind turbine, power grid, and data center depends on it.
Copper is the standard non-precious electrical conductor: roughly half of all copper mined goes into wire and cable. Global mine production reached 23 million tonnes in 2024, with Chile, DR Congo, and Peru supplying nearly half. China dominates refining at 43% of global output. As ore grades decline and permitting delays trap over 25% of supply, the energy transition's insatiable copper appetite is colliding with structural supply constraints.
Global Mine Production
23 Mt
/year (2024)
China Refining Share
43%
of global refined output
Refined Consumption
>26 Mt
/year (2023, rising)
Secondary (Recycled) Share
16.9%
of refined output (4.5 Mt)
End-of-Life Recycling Coverage
~23%
of total demand
US Supply Risk Score
0.488
(>0.40 USGS threshold, CDA 2023)
Supply Trapped by ESG
>25%
of global supply delayed/blocked
Current Rate
16.9% of refined output from secondary copper
End-of-Life Rate
~40–45% end-of-life collection rate
Target
EU CRMA 25% recycling by 2030; models show max 33–50% by 2050
Economics
Recycled copper chemically identical to primary; lower energy and carbon intensity
| Grade | Specification | Form | Applications | Impurity Limits |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LME Grade A cathode | ≥99.99% Cu | Cathode sheets | Wire rod, electrical applications | Ag, As, Bi, Sb <65 ppm total |
| Fire-refined (FRHC) | 99.90% Cu | Wirebar, billet | General purpose wire, plumbing | O₂ 0.02–0.05% |
| Electrolytic tough pitch (ETP) | 99.90% Cu, O₂ controlled | Rod, strip, wire | Electrical conductors, motors | O₂ 0.02–0.04% |
| Oxygen-free (OFE/OFHC) | 99.99% Cu | Rod, tube, billet | Vacuum electronics, superconductor stabilizer | O₂ <0.001% |
Where Copper Goes
Largest
Electrical & Electronics
42%
Electrical & Electronics
42%Power cables, building wiring, motors, transformers, PCB traces, and semiconductor interconnects. Copper's unmatched electrical conductivity (resistivity ~16.8 nΩ·m) makes it irreplaceable for dense electrical applications.
Machinery & Engineering
32%Heat exchangers, bearings, bushings, industrial motors, and automation equipment. Copper alloys (brass, bronze) provide corrosion resistance and mechanical strength.
Construction & Infrastructure
26%Plumbing, HVAC tubing, roofing, building wiring, and antimicrobial touch surfaces. Copper's corrosion resistance and formability make it a long-lived building material.
From Source to Industry
Who Uses Copper
| Industry Segment | Form Consumed | Purity Required | Key Customers | Constraints |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wire & cable manufacturers | Wire rod (8mm continuous cast) | ≥99.99% (LME Grade A) | Nexans, Prysmian, Southwire, LS Cable | Oxygen content critical for welding/drawing quality |
| Automotive (EV) | Wire rod, strip, busbar | ETP grade (99.90%+) | Tesla, BYD, Volkswagen, Toyota | 50–80 kg Cu per EV; 3–4× conventional vehicles |
| Construction & plumbing | Tube, strip, sheet | FRHC (99.90%) | Mueller Industries, Wieland, KME Group | Long product lifespan delays recycling return (30–50 years) |
| Electronics & PCB | Electrolytic foil, wire | OFE/OFHC (99.99%+) | TTM Technologies, AT&S, semiconductor fabs | Ultra-low oxygen for vacuum electronics |
Structural Bottlenecks
Mining HHI
Chile + DRC + Peru produce 48% of global mine output (11.2 Mt of 23 Mt)
Refining HHI
China refines 43% of global copper; next largest (Chile, Japan) at 7–9% each
Chokepoints
Over eight decades, copper smelting output increased six-fold while average ore grades declined. More rock must be moved per tonne of copper, increasing energy, water, and carbon intensity.
Impact
Higher production costs, greater water consumption in arid regions (Chile's Atacama), and increasing carbon footprint per tonne. New projects face longer payback periods.
Mitigation
More efficient grinding and flotation technologies. Tailings reprocessing. Desalination for water supply. Demand-side efficiency and material substitution where possible.
Environmental permits, community opposition, governance issues, and litigation delay or block major projects in the US, Chile, Peru, and Panama.
Impact
Cobre Panamá closure (2023) removed ~330–350 kt/year (~1.5% of global supply). Project pipeline cannot keep pace with demand growth from electrification.
Mitigation
More predictable permitting frameworks. Stronger community engagement. Clearer environmental standards. Case-by-case ESG risk assessment rather than blanket opposition.
Chile, DR Congo, and Peru together produce nearly half of global mine output (~11.2 Mt of 23 Mt). Geological endowment concentrates supply in a few jurisdictions.
Impact
Vulnerable to country-specific shocks: strikes, protests, policy shifts, political instability. DR Congo conflict risk. Chile water scarcity. Peru social license challenges.
Mitigation
Diversification via new mines in other regions. Greater reliance on secondary copper. Strategic stockpiles.
End-of-life secondary supply covers only ~23% of demand. Even under optimistic scenarios, models project EoL copper covers at most 33–50% by 2050.
Impact
Primary mining must keep growing until at least 2040 regardless of recycling progress. Long product lifespans (buildings, infrastructure) delay copper return to the recycling stream.
Mitigation
Improved collection systems and product design for disassembly. Higher recycling rates in construction demolition. Urban mining of in-use copper stocks. EU CRMA 25% recycling target by 2030.
China built massive smelting/refining capacity through investment and large scrap imports. Western smelters struggled with cost competition and environmental compliance.
Impact
Trade frictions or domestic policy shifts could affect refined copper availability to other regions. China also dominates secondary (scrap-based) refining.
Mitigation
New smelter/refinery capacity in other countries. Policies encouraging regional processing. EU CRMA 40% processing target. Scrap utilization closer to source.
What Could Replace Copper?
Aluminum
Replacing in: Overhead power lines, large cables
61% conductivity of copper; requires 1.6× cross-section. Lighter weight is advantage for overhead lines. Not suitable for dense applications (motors, PCBs).
Trend: Aluminum already dominant in high-voltage transmission; limited further substitution potential
Fiber optics
Replacing in: Telecommunications cables
Higher bandwidth, longer distance, lower weight. Already replacing copper in telecom backbone. Copper retained for last-mile and power delivery.
Trend: Fiber-to-the-home rollout accelerating globally
Carbon composites
Replacing in: Heat exchangers
Emerging for specialized applications; cannot match copper's thermal conductivity and formability at scale. Very early stage.
Key Events
Nov 2023
Panama Supreme Court & Government
Mine closure removes ~330–350 kt copper/year (~1.5% of global supply). Government initiates multi-month closure plan. Highlights governance and social license risks for large copper projects.
May 2024
European Union
Copper listed as strategic raw material (not critical, but strategic). 2030 targets: 10% EU extraction, 40% EU processing, 25% recycling. Import dependency capped at 65% from any single third country.
2023–2024
Copper Development Association (US)
Applying USGS methodology, copper's supply risk score rose from 0.334 (2018) to 0.488 (2023), exceeding the 0.40 threshold. Argues copper should be added to the 2025 USGS Critical Minerals List.
Ongoing
European Commission
60 strategic projects approved from 170 applications in 2024 (first round). Includes processing and recycling projects. Fast-track permitting for designated projects.
Leading Indicators
Large mine disruptions and ESG litigation — Cobre Panamá-scale closures remove 1–3% of global supply per event
Refined output and scrap share in ICSG data — secondary copper at 16.9%; growth signals recycling absorbing demand
EU CRMA implementation — whether copper projects receive 'strategic' designation and fast-track permitting
USGS Critical Minerals List revision — potential copper inclusion based on supply risk score exceeding threshold
Electrification demand indicators — grid expansion, EV sales, data center buildout driving >26 Mt/year consumption
End-of-life recycling rate trajectory — currently ~23% of demand; academic models cap at 33–50% by 2050
China refining capacity and scrap import policies — shifts in 43% refined output share affect global availability
Energy and water intensity of new projects — declining ore grades increase exposure to carbon pricing and water scarcity
Urban mining mobilization — EU in-use copper stock recovery, collection infrastructure investment
Climate policy copper linkages — explicit mention of copper in national climate plans signals strategic stockpiling
Frequently Asked Questions
Roughly half of all mined copper goes into electrical wire and cable, including building wiring, power distribution, motors, and transformers. Mechanical engineering accounts for about 32% and construction for around 26%, with the remainder in transport, consumer goods, and other uses.
In the EU, copper is listed as a strategic raw material under the 2024 CRMA but is not on the critical list. In the US, it is not on the USGS Critical Minerals List, but an industry study using USGS methodology finds copper's supply risk score (0.488 in 2023) now exceeds the 0.40 threshold for inclusion.
Refined secondary copper was about 4.5 Mt in 2023, around 16.9% of global refined output. End-of-life recycling alone covers about 23% of demand. Modeling shows primary mining must keep growing at least until 2040 even in high-recycling scenarios — recycling moderates but cannot eliminate the need for new mines.
Chile (~5.3 Mt), DR Congo (~3.3 Mt), and Peru (~2.6 Mt) together produce nearly half of the 23 Mt global mine output (2024). China mines only ~1.8 Mt but refines 43% of the world's copper. Over 60% of output comes from porphyry copper deposits.
Cobre Panamá produced about 330–350 kt of copper in 2023 (~1.5% of global supply) before Panama's Supreme Court ruled its mining contract unconstitutional in November 2023. Its shutdown tightened global supply and highlighted governance and social license risks for large new copper projects.
Aluminum can substitute in many overhead lines and some cables, but requires larger cross-sections for equivalent conductivity. For dense equipment like motors, transformers, and PCBs, copper's conductivity, formability, and reliability make large-scale substitution challenging and typically requires significant redesign.
Three converging pressures: declining ore grades increasing energy and cost per tonne; over 25% of global supply trapped by ESG roadblocks (permitting, litigation, community opposition); and surging demand from EVs, renewables, grids, and data centers pushing consumption above 26 Mt/year.
Recycling copper uses substantially less energy than mining from ore. As ore grades decline, primary production's energy demand and carbon footprint per tonne rise. Recycled and primary copper are chemically identical at equivalent purity — recycled copper can be reused indefinitely without loss of performance.
Related Analysis

Executive pre-brief for Q2 2026 on critical minerals: rare earths, copper, nickel, lithium, graphite and cobalt. Key risks, scenarios and actions for…
27 février 2026
Anna K.
MOFCOM paused select export controls, easing gallium and graphite licensing, but dysprosium spot gains and sub‑average exports signal continued heavy…
27 février 2026
Anna K.
Which 12 materials are most exposed to China’s 2026 export controls? Data-led ranking of risks, quotas and real supply options for industry.
27 février 2026
Anna K.