Mining

Copper supply gap to emerge in second half of the decade, new report says

The report notes that world demand for copper will grow by 3.8% in 2022 to about 25 million tonnes. And while supply of the red metal over the next few years will be bolstered by new copper mines coming on stream such as Ivanhoe’s Kamoa-Kakula in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mina Justa in Peru and Timok in Serbia, along with new projects under development such as Teck Resources’ Quebrada Blanca Phase 2, it expects that “the current mine expansion wave will peak in 2024 and a large projected gap in required mine supply will open up in the second half of the decade.”

The report also points out that demand for copper “from renewable power projects, energy storage and electric vehicles could double by 2025 to 8.5 million tonnes,” and notes that “unlike recent years, prices will be driven less by short-term macro-economic developments in China and more by rising demand linked to global decarbonization.”

(This article first appeared in The Northern Miner)

Also read: Ivanhoe already has 162,000 tonnes copper in ore stockpiled

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