Been diving into some copper market data lately and honestly, the supply situation is way more interesting than most people realize. Back in 2024, global copper production hit 23 million metric tons, but here's what caught my attention - the concentration at the top is pretty wild.



Chile absolutely dominated as the world's largest copper producing country, pulling out 5.3 million MT and basically controlling about 23 percent of global supply. Their Escondida mine alone (run by BHP with Rio Tinto as a partner) was churning out over 1 million MT annually. But what's crazy is that production was supposed to rebound even more in 2025 as new mines ramped up.

Then you've got the DRC making serious moves. They hit 3.3 million MT in 2024, jumping from 2.93 the year before. Ivanhoe's Kamoa-Kakula project with Zijin Mining is a game-changer there - went from 393k MT to 437k MT and they're targeting 520-580k for 2025. That's the kind of production growth that actually matters for the energy transition.

Peru's still significant at 2.6 million MT, though down slightly from 2023. Freeport's Cerro Verde mine there faced some headwinds with maintenance issues affecting output. China's domestic mining is actually declining (1.8 million MT) but here's the kicker - their refined copper production is absolutely massive at 12 million MT, more than 44 percent of global refining capacity. They're basically the world's copper processor.

Indonesia's been climbing the ranks fast, hitting 1.1 million MT and passing the US to grab the fifth spot. Freeport's Grasberg complex is their workhorse, and Amman Minerals just commissioned a new smelting facility processing 900k MT of concentrate annually. The US stayed around 1.1 million MT with Arizona providing about 70 percent of domestic supply.

Russia, Australia, Kazakhstan, and Mexico round out the top 10, each in the 700k-930k MT range. Russia's interesting because their Udokan mine is ramping up and expected to eventually hit 450k MT once Phase 2 comes online.

What really stands out to me is the supply tightness combined with aging infrastructure. Most of the world's largest copper producing country operations are getting old, and new mine development takes forever. Meanwhile, demand from electrification and energy transition is supposed to explode. That's the tailwind everyone should be watching for copper prices and the miners' bottom lines.
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