Materials Dispatch
Au

Atomic #79

precious

OECD Due Diligence (Conflict Minerals)EU Conflict Minerals Regulation (3TG)Minamata Convention (ASGM Mercury)

Gold

The ultimate monetary metal — powering central bank reserves, high-reliability electronics, and the world's oldest store of value.

Overview

Gold is a dense, chemically inert transition metal prized for its conductivity, corrosion resistance, and bondability. While jewelry accounts for 44% of demand, gold is critical in electronics (bonding wire, connectors, PCB finishes) and aerospace coatings. Above-ground stock totals ~216,000–219,000 tonnes, with recycling providing 27.5% of annual supply. Artisanal mining in 80+ countries employs 14–20 million people and is the world's largest source of mercury emissions.

Global Mine Production

3,300 t

/year (2024)

Total Above-Ground Stock

~216,000 t

(end-2024)

Recycling Share of Supply

27.5%

(1,370 t of 4,975 t total, 2024)

Technology Demand

~330 t

/year (electronics, industrial, dental)

ASGM Miners Globally

14–20M

(in 80+ countries)

Official Sector Reserves

37,755 t

(~17% of above-ground stock)

Global Reserves (Underground)

64,000 t

(USGS 2024)

Recycling & Circularity

Current Rate

27.5% of total supply (1,370 t in 2024)

End-of-Life Rate

~90% of jewelry scrap is recycled; <20% of e-waste gold recovered

Economics

Recycled gold chemically identical to mined; 216,000 t above-ground stock mostly locked in jewelry and reserves

Purity Grades & Specifications

GradeSpecificationFormApplicationsImpurity Limits
LBMA Good Delivery≥99.5% Au (995+)400 oz bars (~12.4 kg)Central bank reserves, investment, tradingAg, Cu, Fe as main impurities
4N (99.99%)99.99% AuGranules, foil, wire, sputtering targetsElectronics bonding wire, connectors, PCB finishesTotal metallic <100 ppm
5N (99.999%)99.999% AuBonding wire (17–25 μm), thin film targetsSemiconductor die bonding, high-reliability interconnectsTotal metallic <10 ppm
Karat alloys (22K–14K)91.7–58.3% AuSheet, wire, casting grainJewelry, dental, decorativeAlloyed with Ag, Cu, Ni, Pd for hardness/color

Demand Breakdown

Where Gold Goes

Largest

Jewelry

44%

Jewelry

44%

~2,004 tonnes in 2024. Major consuming centers in China, India, Turkey, Middle East, and Italy. Karat alloys (22K, 18K, 14K) alloyed with copper, silver, and nickel for hardness and color variations.

Official Sector & Investment

39%

Central bank reserves (~37,755 t, 17% of above-ground stock), bars, coins, and gold-backed ETFs (~48,600 t, 22%). Record central bank buying 2022–2025 driven by de-dollarization and geopolitical hedging.

Electronics & Technology

7%

~270 t in electronics (bonding wire, connectors, PCB finishes, thin films) plus ~60 t in other industrial and dental. Gold's conductivity, oxidation resistance, and bondability are critical for high-reliability interconnects at 4N–5N purity.

Industrial, Dental & Other

10%

Aerospace coatings (IR reflection on satellites/spacecraft), catalysts, dental restorations (declining), decorative gold coatings, and specialty glass. Small volumes but high-reliability applications with long qualification cycles.

Supply Chain

From Source to Industry

Value Chain Process

Extraction Sources

Hard-rock mining (orogenic, porphyry, Carlin-type)

60%

China, Russia, Australia, Canada, US (Nevada ~70% of US output)

Open-pit and underground mining at grades from <1 g/t to several g/t. Cyanidation (CIP/CIL or heap leach) to dissolve gold, followed by carbon adsorption and electrowinning to produce doré.

Artisanal & small-scale mining (ASGM)

13%

80+ countries (Latin America 50–60%, Asia 25%, Africa 20%)

14–20 million miners, 80–100 million dependents. Gravity separation and mercury amalgamation. Largest global source of anthropogenic mercury emissions (~838 t, 38% of total in 2015).

Recycled gold (secondary)

27%

Global (Switzerland, UK, US, Middle East refining hubs)

1,370 t in 2024 (+11% YoY). Jewelry scrap, electronic scrap, and fabrication waste refined back to bullion purity. No loss of properties — recycled gold is chemically identical to primary.

Industry Applications

Who Uses Gold

Industry SegmentForm ConsumedPurity RequiredKey CustomersConstraints
Jewelry manufacturingCasting grain, wire, sheet (karat alloys)22K–14K (91.7–58.3% Au)Chow Tai Fook, Signet Jewelers, Titan CompanyCultural preferences vary by region; hallmarking requirements
Central banks & investment400 oz Good Delivery bars, coins≥99.5% (LBMA)PBOC, RBI, Central Bank of Turkey, US Federal ReserveLBMA accreditation required; chain of custody documentation
Semiconductor packagingBonding wire (17–25 μm), thin films4N–5N (≥99.99%)TSMC, Intel, Samsung, ASE GroupLong qualification cycles; MIL-STD reliability testing
Aerospace & defenseFoil, coatings, thin films≥99.99%NASA, ESA, Lockheed Martin, Northrop GrummanIR reflective coatings on satellites; ITAR-controlled

Constraints & Risks

Structural Bottlenecks

Concentration Risk

Mining HHI

China + Russia + Australia produce 33%+ of global mine output

Refining HHI

Switzerland handles ~35% of global refining; highly concentrated in few facilities

Chokepoints

China 12% mining — largest single producerRussia 9% mining — sanctions riskASGM 13% of supply — traceability gapsSwiss refineries 35% — geographic concentration

Environmental Considerations

  • ASGM is the largest source of anthropogenic mercury emissions (~838 t, 38% of global total in 2015)
  • Minamata Convention targets 37% mercury reduction by 2025, 70% by 2030
  • 14–20 million ASGM miners with 80–100 million dependents; poverty-driven informal sector
  • Cyanide use in industrial mining requires strict tailings management (ICMC compliance)
  • Declining ore grades increase energy and carbon intensity of new gold production
1

Declining ore grades and rising energy intensity

As high-grade deposits are depleted, mining moves to lower-grade or more technically challenging ore bodies. Energy demand and emissions per ounce of gold rise with falling grades.

Impact

Higher production costs, greater carbon footprint, and increasing water consumption. New projects face longer development timelines and tighter economic margins.

Mitigation

Higher-efficiency comminution, ore sorting, and tailings reprocessing. Renewable power and electrified mining fleets to reduce emissions per tonne.

2

ASGM mercury use and informality

Artisanal mining in 80+ countries uses mercury amalgamation as a cheap extraction method. 14–20 million miners, many in poverty, lack access to mercury-free alternatives.

Impact

Largest source of anthropogenic mercury emissions (~38% of global total). Environmental contamination, health impacts, and supply chain traceability gaps when ASGM gold enters formal channels.

Mitigation

Minamata Convention National Action Plans (37% mercury reduction by 2025, 70% by 2030). Mercury-free processing technologies. Formalization programs and alternative livelihoods.

3

Conflict-area sourcing and due diligence

Gold is explicitly included in OECD and EU conflict minerals frameworks due to its role in financing armed groups and human rights abuses when sourced from conflict-affected areas.

Impact

Supply chain integrity risks for refiners and downstream users. LBMA, EU, and OECD require risk-based due diligence, third-party audits, and public reporting.

Mitigation

LBMA Responsible Gold Guidance (enhanced DG3 disclosure from Jan 2026). EU Conflict Minerals Regulation (mandatory since 2021). Traceability and chain-of-custody systems.

4

ESG and permitting delays for new mines

Expanding mining pushes operations into biodiverse and sensitive areas. Community opposition, environmental litigation, and governance challenges delay projects.

Impact

Mine production has grown only modestly (2,470 t in 2005 → 3,300 t in 2024) despite higher exploration spending. New large-scale projects face multi-year permitting timelines.

Mitigation

Stronger early-stage stakeholder engagement. Clear national land-use planning. Consistent permitting standards that maintain safeguards while reducing uncertainty.

5

Limited mobilization of above-ground stock

~216,000 t above-ground stock exists but 45% is in jewelry (long-held, culturally valued), 17% in central bank reserves (held for monetary policy), and 15% dispersed across industrial and decorative uses.

Impact

Despite enormous total stock, only recycling (~27.5% of annual supply) flows back into the market. Most above-ground gold is not economically or practically available for industrial use.

Mitigation

Urban mining and e-waste programs to increase recovery from electronics. Higher gold prices incentivize jewelry-to-scrap conversion. Improved collection infrastructure.

Substitution & Alternatives

What Could Replace Gold?

Copper bonding wire

Replacing in: Semiconductor die bonding

Partial

~95% cost reduction; requires palladium coating to prevent oxidation. Already >70% of wire bonding market by volume. Not suitable for ultra-high-reliability applications.

Trend: Rapidly adopted in consumer electronics; gold retained for automotive/aerospace/medical

Aluminum bonding wire

Replacing in: Power semiconductor packaging

Partial

Much cheaper; used in power modules and heavy wire bonding. Different mechanical properties require redesign. Not interchangeable with gold wire processes.

Trend: Standard for IGBT power modules; growing with EV power electronics

Palladium plating

Replacing in: Connector contacts

Limited

Can replace gold in some connector applications but prone to fretting corrosion. Often used as gold-over-palladium composite to reduce gold thickness.

Trend: Palladium price volatility limits adoption; gold flash over Pd-Ni common

Policy & Regulation

Key Events

Dec

Dec 2010

OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains adopted (with Gold Supplement)

OECD

Five-step framework for risk-based due diligence covering mines, traders, refiners, and downstream companies. Becomes the reference standard for EU and LBMA rules.

2012

2012

LBMA Responsible Gold Guidance first issued

London Bullion Market Association

Requires Good Delivery refiners to implement OECD-aligned due diligence against human rights abuses, conflict financing, money laundering, and mercury use. Multiple iterations since.

Aug

Aug 2017

Minamata Convention on Mercury enters into force

UNEP & Parties

Global treaty requiring countries with significant ASGM to develop National Action Plans to reduce mercury use. ~46 ASGM countries covered. Targets: 37% reduction by 2025, 70% by 2030.

Jan

Jan 2021

EU Conflict Minerals Regulation takes effect (Regulation 2017/821)

European Union

Mandatory due diligence for EU importers of tin, tantalum, tungsten, and gold (3TG) from conflict-affected areas. Requires risk assessment, mitigation, third-party audits, and annual reporting.

Jan

Jan 2026

LBMA Disclosure Guidance Version 3 (DG3) takes effect

LBMA

Enhanced public reporting requirements for Good Delivery refiners on sourcing from red-flag locations. Strengthens transparency in gold supply chains.

Signals to Watch

Leading Indicators

Mine supply vs recycling share — recycling at 27.5% of supply; sustained rise above 30% signals stronger circularity

Concentration of mine output in top 3 producers (China, Russia, Australia = 33%+) — disruptions affect global supply

ASGM formalization and mercury reduction — Minamata NAP implementation progress vs continued mercury use growth

OECD/EU due diligence enforcement quality — audit rates, LBMA DG3 red-flag disclosure, EU enforcement actions

New large-scale deposit discoveries vs 'peak gold' dynamics — exploration spending vs declining grades at existing mines

Mining land-use and biodiversity conflicts — overlap between new projects and protected/high-biodiversity areas

Technology substitution in electronics — copper/aluminum bonding wire adoption in advanced semiconductor packaging

Central bank gold buying patterns — record purchases 2022–2025 as de-dollarization and geopolitical hedging indicator

E-waste gold recovery infrastructure — urban mining programs and collection systems for electronics scrap

Gold's role in green finance taxonomies — whether ESG frameworks treat gold mining as excluded or conditionally included

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

In 2024, about 44% of gold demand (~2,004 t) came from jewelry, around 39% from investment and central bank reserves, and about 7% from technology (primarily electronics at ~270 t plus industrial and dental uses). Total demand was approximately 4,975 tonnes.

Total above-ground gold stock at end-2024 is estimated at 216,000–219,000 tonnes. Roughly 45% is in jewelry, 22% in bars/coins/ETFs, 17% in central bank reserves, and 15% in industrial, dental, and decorative uses.

Global mine production was about 3,300 tonnes in 2024. China (~380 t), Russia (~310 t), Australia (~290 t), and Canada (~200 t) are the largest producers. Global identified reserves total about 64,000 tonnes, with Australia and Russia each holding ~12,000 t.

Recycled gold supplied about 1,370 tonnes in 2024 (+11% year-on-year), representing 27.5% of total supply. However, most of the 216,000+ t above-ground stock is in long-held jewelry and central bank reserves, not easily mobilized into scrap.

ASGM operates in 80+ countries, employing 14–20 million miners with 80–100 million dependents. It is the largest source of anthropogenic mercury emissions (~38% of global total). The Minamata Convention requires countries to develop plans to reduce and eliminate mercury use in ASGM.

Bonding wire for semiconductor packaging requires 4N–5N purity (≥99.99%). Soft gold plating for wire bonding and critical contacts is standardized at ≥99.9% (IPC-4556, MIL-G-45204). These high-reliability applications impose strict qualification cycles that make material substitution slow and costly.

The OECD Due Diligence Guidance (with Gold Supplement) sets the five-step framework. The EU Conflict Minerals Regulation (in force since 2021) mandates due diligence for 3TG imports. The LBMA Responsible Gold Guidance applies these standards to Good Delivery refiners, with enhanced DG3 disclosure from January 2026.

Partially. Copper and aluminum bonding wire are used in some semiconductor packaging. However, for ultra-reliable interconnects, high-reliability connectors, and aerospace/medical components, gold's conductivity, inertness, and bondability make substitution difficult. Any switch requires major redesign and requalification.

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