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The World's Top 10 Tin-Producing Countries Redefining Global Supply in 2024
The landscape of global tin production continues to evolve, shaped by major tin-producing countries that collectively determine prices and supply stability. In April 2024, tin prices reached an annual peak of US$35,575 per metric ton, driven by interconnected supply and demand dynamics across the world’s leading tin producers. Although prices retreated to approximately US$28,000 per metric ton in subsequent months, the market has stabilized with strong fundamentals supporting long-term growth. Increased semiconductor manufacturing, expanding electric vehicle investments, and accelerating solar energy adoption are poised to drive sustained demand across all major tin-producing regions. Critically, production interruptions in Southeast Asia—particularly among the top tin-producing countries Myanmar and Indonesia—have prompted analysts at BMI Research to raise their 2024 price forecast to US$30,000 per metric ton.
China: Maintaining Its Crown as the World’s Largest Tin Producer
Production: 68,000 metric tons Reserves: 1.1 million metric tons
China remains the undisputed leader among global tin-producing countries, having generated 68,000 metric tons in 2023, though this represents a gradual decline from 71,000 MT in 2022. The country’s dominance extends to reserves, controlling more than 1.1 million metric tons—the largest stockpile globally. Geopolitical tensions have intensified the strategic importance of tin-producing nations, as China implemented new export restrictions in December 2024 on critical minerals including gallium, germanium, and antimony. Industry analysts suggest tin could soon be added to these export controls, reflecting broader competition between China and Western nations over supply chains in semiconductors and renewable energy sectors.
Myanmar: The Rising Force in Tin Production
Production: 54,000 metric tons Reserves: 700,000 metric tons
Myanmar has emerged as the world’s second-largest tin producer, surpassing Indonesia to secure 54,000 metric tons of output in 2023—a significant jump from 47,000 MT in 2022. The nation’s Wa state hosts the majority of production, anchored by the Man Maw tin mine, one of the globe’s most prolific operations. However, a production halt implemented in August 2023 due to a mining suspension and subsequent audit of tin industry practices has created substantial market disruption. As of September 2024, Man Maw remained offline, constraining supplies and elevating prices. The pause in Myanmar’s tin-producing capacity illustrates how individual nations’ policy decisions ripple across global markets, particularly affecting exports to major importers China and Indonesia.
Indonesia: Production Pressures Amid Strategic Repositioning
Production: 52,000 metric tons Reserves: Not publicly available
Indonesia, once the second-largest tin-producing nation, recorded 52,000 metric tons in 2023 following a substantial 26% decline from 2022’s 70,000 MT output. The country came close to China’s production levels just a year earlier but has ceded ground to Myanmar, highlighting the volatility inherent in tin-producing sectors. In recognition of tin’s critical role in advanced technology, Indonesia’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources officially designated tin as a critical mineral in 2024, acknowledging its supply importance and significance to high-tech manufacturing ecosystems.
Peru: Primary Latin American Tin Producer Under Pressure
Production: 23,000 metric tons Reserves: 130,000 metric tons
Peru, South America’s dominant tin-producing nation, saw output decline to 23,000 metric tons in 2023 from 28,200 MT previously, yet maintains strategic importance as the primary tin supplier to the United States. The country’s San Rafael tin mine, operated by Minsur, ranks among the world’s largest operations. This production compression underscores regional challenges facing tin producers in adapting to market fluctuations while maintaining operational efficiency.
Democratic Republic of Congo: Emerging Production Powerhouse
Production: 19,000 metric tons Reserves: 120,000 metric tons
The Democratic Republic of Congo produced 19,000 metric tons in 2023, marking modest growth from 18,600 MT in 2022. Alphamin Resources’ Bisie tin complex, housing the world’s highest-grade mines—Mpama North and the newly commissioned Mpama South—exemplifies Africa’s growing role as a tin-producing region. The operator is ramping production toward 20,000 MT annually, positioning Congo as an increasingly significant contributor to global supply.
Brazil & Bolivia: Tied as Secondary Producers
Brazil Production: 18,000 metric tons Brazil Reserves: 420,000 metric tons
Bolivia Production: 18,000 metric tons Bolivia Reserves: 400,000 metric tons
Brazil and Bolivia each contributed 18,000 metric tons in 2023, with Brazil showing modest year-on-year growth from 17,000 MT. Brazil’s significance as a tin-producing nation intensified in 2024 when Minsur agreed to divest its Brazilian subsidiary Mineração Taboca—Brazil’s sole fully integrated tin producer—to China Nonferrous Trade for US$340 million. The Pitinga mine in the Amazon region holds the world’s largest tin resource, with 279,000 MT of reserves expected to sustain operations for three decades. Bolivia’s production capacity, meanwhile, faced operational challenges when its state-owned Vinto smelter declared force majeure in March 2023 due to coal shortages, compounded by payment defaults totaling US$90 million that disrupted concentrate deliveries from domestic mines.
Australia: Strategic Expansion Signals Long-Term Commitment
Production: 9,100 metric tons Reserves: 620,000 metric tons
Australia’s tin-producing sector generated 9,100 metric tons in 2023, maintaining stability versus 9,000 MT in 2022. More significantly, Metals X, co-owner of Tasmania’s Renison mine, invested AU$4.64 million in First Tin in 2024, acquiring a 23% stake to accelerate the Taronga project in New South Wales—targeting production by 2027. This capital commitment reflects confidence in sustained demand from major tin-producing regions’ growth.
Nigeria: Artisanal Mining Boom Amid Regulatory Gaps
Production: 8,100 metric tons Reserves: Not publicly available
Nigeria’s tin production surged 15.71% to 8,100 metric tons in 2023 from 7,000 MT, driven by rising global prices exceeding US$30,000 per metric ton—a tenfold increase from early-2000s levels. Plateau State concentrates most activity, yet the sector remains substantially unregulated, with artisanal operations dominating the landscape and contributing minimal government revenue. Between 2018-2022, Nigeria’s solid minerals sector contributed just 0.17% to GDP, per the National Bureau of Statistics, signaling significant untapped potential for formalized tin production.
Malaysia: Completing the Global Top 10
Production: 6,100 metric tons Reserves: Not publicly available
Malaysia rounds out the world’s top 10 tin-producing countries with 6,100 metric tons in 2023, up from 5,000 MT, demonstrating incremental gains. Malaysia Smelting, the world’s second-largest tin producer by company, has posted stronger-than-expected margins in mid-to-late 2024, positioning it to capitalize on favorable market forecasts.
Market Outlook: The Strategic Importance of Global Tin Producers
Tin remains indispensable across renewable energy, semiconductors, and consumer electronics, with nearly half of global consumption concentrated in soldering applications critical to mobile phones, integrated circuits, and electric vehicles. The convergence of supply constraints from major producing regions and rising technological demand has prompted industry analysts to project bullish long-term forecasts, with tin prices potentially reaching US$45,000 per metric ton by 2033. As the world’s top tin-producing countries navigate geopolitical tensions, regulatory shifts, and operational challenges, their collective output and strategic importance to global technology supply chains will only intensify in the years ahead.