Copper already gained 44 % in 2025, but S&P Global’s new numbers show the real squeeze hasn’t even started—AI data centers, national stockpiles and aging mines are locking in a 10-million-ton deficit by 2040.
The deficit in one sentence
Global demand hits 42 million metric tons by 2040—up 50 % from today—while mine output plateaus in 2030 and falls short by 10 million tons, according to S&P Global’s January 2026 study.
Why AI is the new price driver
Each new hyperscale data center contains up to 150 tons of copper across cables, busbars, heat exchangers and chip substrates. Multiply that by the 700-plus facilities planned worldwide and you get a stealth metal order book larger than the annual consumption of Germany. Governments are labeling copper a “critical metal” because without it, sovereign AI clouds—and the defense systems that rely on them—can’t be built.
Supply physics: no quick fixes
- Existing mines are aging; ore grades have fallen 30 % since 2000.
- Permitting a greenfield mine now averages 16 years from discovery to first cathode.
- Recycling could add 4–5 % to supply, but scrap flows lag price spikes by half a decade.
Price floor vs. volatility
Interactive Brokers’ chief economist José Torres flags a “permanent risk premium” as nations stockpile strategic reserves. Even if macro headwinds spark a short-term pullback—gold and silver already face forecast profit-taking—copper’s industrial bid sets a higher floor than any previous cycle. Traders are pricing $12,000-per-ton as the new baseline, double the 2010s average.
What developers and buyers should do now
- Lock long-term contracts: 2027–2029 cathode is still trading below the projected deficit curve.
- Design for substitution: Aluminum wiring can shave 20 % of weight, but only where codes allow.
- Track mine-project milestones: Every 6-month delay at Panama, Peru or Congo projects tightens 2028–2030 supply by ~400 k tons.
Bottom line
The 2025 record run was not a speculative fluke—it was the opening act. With demand compounding at 4 % a year and supply growth flat-lining, copper becomes the structural bottleneck of the AI era. Budgets for data centers, EV charging corridors and defense electronics must now start with one question: where is our copper coming from?
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