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Clean Mines, Clean World?

China’s Top Solar Firm Makes Switch from Silver to Copper

China’s biggest solar maker, LONGi Green Energy, has started mass production of solar cells that replace silver with copper at a new plant in Shaanxi — a key step in…

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Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 10 July 2026

  Copper held near historic highs through the second week of July, but the market remained in consolidation mode rather than extending the sharp rally seen earlier in 2026. LME…

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Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 3 July 2026

  Market overview Copper remained elevated through the first days of July, but the market continued to consolidate rather than extend the sharp rally seen earlier in the quarter. LME…

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Material Movement – Haulage Electrification

ConnectOre Research Briefing, June 2026 Mine haulage is the single largest source of emissions at most open-cut operations — and the place where decarbonisation and cost discipline converge most forcefully.…

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August 10, 2021 · Clean Energy, General, John’s Blog, Mining

Recently Bernstein, a research company, estimated that the world’s offshore wind capacity could hit 254 Giga Watts by 2030, seven times what it is today.

That is world changing. Already many developed and developing countries, including Australia, are announcing new projects, some of them absolutely massive with towering, high tech turbines.

The cost of wind driven electricity to consumers—along with all renewables in fact—is fast approaching (or is there already) the cheapest energy they can use

But they’ll also need a hell of a lot of copper to make it happen. As the Economist recently pointed out “the veins and arteries of the green economy run with copper”.

The Economist also pointed out that investment in metals mining still lags woefully behind what it is for oil and coal. Investment in new projects for lithium, nickel and copper was under $25B in 2019, “only about 5% of the amount invested on upstream oil and gas”.

Financials aside, one of the biggest obstacles to new mines—which can take a decade to get up & running—is community (and by default government) opposition due to environmental concerns. In fact a U.S. Government review of a proposed copper & nickel mine in Minnesota picked out limited environmental impact as key.

The other issue is the availability of a grid network (also built around copper) suited to transporting intermittent & generally remote renewable energy like offshore wind. The International Energy Agency says annual spending on electricity grids will have to triple by 2030 to make them much smarter & bigger.

We need to tackle these issues if the world has any hope of meeting its carbon neutral goals in any realistic time frame. Without innovative solutions the green economy may get more distant & way more expensive to achieve.

Cheers, John Fennell

Featured

China’s Top Solar Firm Makes Switch from Silver to Copper

China’s biggest solar maker, LONGi Green Energy, has started mass production of solar cells that replace silver with copper at…

Read More

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 10 July 2026

  Copper held near historic highs through the second week of July, but the market remained in consolidation mode rather…

Read More

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 3 July 2026

  Market overview Copper remained elevated through the first days of July, but the market continued to consolidate rather than…

Read More

Material Movement – Haulage Electrification

ConnectOre Research Briefing, June 2026 Mine haulage is the single largest source of emissions at most open-cut operations — and…

Read More

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