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Is Our Future Copper Critical?

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 29 May 2026

  Copper ended the week at historically elevated levels, with pricing still shaped more by tariff expectations, geopolitical tension and tight physical availability than by any single clean supply-demand signal.…

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Glencore Australia: Long-Term Copper Leadership, Regional Investment and Processing Strength

    As a long-term member of the International Copper Association Australia, Glencore Australia holds an important place in the nation’s copper value chain and broader resources sector. Across Queensland,…

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Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 22 May 2026

Copper ended the week elevated but below its mid-May peak, with the market correcting from the earlier spike above US$14,000/t before stabilising in the low-to-mid US$13,000s/t range. Trading Economics shows…

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Sandfire Resources – A great Australian copper story

    Sandfire Resources is a powerful example of how Australian copper producers are stepping up to meet the challenges of decarbonisation, supply security, and innovation – and how collaboration…

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June 5, 2023 · General, John’s Blog, Mining

Late last year Australia joined an international group called the Sustainable Critical Minerals Alliance, committing us to the highest standards in the mining and processing of critical minerals.

Critical Minerals are defined pretty much globally as metals or minerals “essential for modern technologies, economies or national security, and has a supply chain at risk of disruption”. 

Copper didn’t make the list. Like me you might be slightly confused. Last time I looked copper was at the heart of nearly every process in the modern world, from electrification to de-carbonisation, digital transformation, infrastructure and clean energy—the list goes on. 

Copper is also facing a supply crisis according to most industry experts. Soaring demand faces a supply shortfall due to falling output at established mines combined with a lack of new deposits and particularly projects that are geographically accessible, mineralogically feasible and in countries politically stable enough to guarantee mines can operate for the long term.

Naturally enough some people and groups are now asking for copper to be included as a critical metal. One of the most vocal is the campaign by the American Copper Development Association (CDA) that has built a network of politicians and industry organisations who agree. They’ve even produced a booklet on it.

The American Government has so far resisted. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) published their list of 50 critical minerals last year—the next list is now 3 years off—but declined to include copper due to what the USGS said was insufficient risk to copper supply in the near future.

Australia hasn’t included copper on its 26 strong list either, but the Europeans call copper a “strategic raw material” rather than a critical one.

Does it make any difference? The CDA says making copper a critical metal “allows for streamlined regulations and faster development of new supply sources to meet future demand”. That all sounds worthwhile, and certainly it seems giving copper ‘critical status’ provides it with added policy and investment priorities.

But I think its time we had that debate here too and would be interested in hearing from anyone with an opinion.

Cheers, John Fennell

Featured

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 29 May 2026

  Copper ended the week at historically elevated levels, with pricing still shaped more by tariff expectations, geopolitical tension and…

Read More

Glencore Australia: Long-Term Copper Leadership, Regional Investment and Processing Strength

    As a long-term member of the International Copper Association Australia, Glencore Australia holds an important place in the…

Read More

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 22 May 2026

Copper ended the week elevated but below its mid-May peak, with the market correcting from the earlier spike above US$14,000/t…

Read More

Sandfire Resources – A great Australian copper story

    Sandfire Resources is a powerful example of how Australian copper producers are stepping up to meet the challenges…

Read More

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