At a glance
- A secure and consistent supply of critical minerals is fundamental to the energy transition and to achieving net-zero, but demand is putting pressure on supply chains and costs, and risks polarising sentiment around the energy transition
- Supply concentration in countries such as China and Indonesia is a key concern in understanding how the price dynamics and responsible attributes of mining will develop, with tariff tensions rising between countries
- The race for critical minerals presents both opportunities and risk for investors, with the sector at a crossroads: will we see transparent and responsibly sourced supply chains adhering to rigorous ESG criteria, or a fixation on securing critical mineral supplies at any cost?
- We look at the likely outcomes from the situation and the role investors have in facilitating responsible supply chains
The energy transition is a material transition
Decarbonising the economy requires a significant scaling up of green technologies such as electric vehicles (EVs), solar photovoltaics, wind turbines and grid-scale battery storage. All of which require significant mineral inputs. A deficit of these “critical minerals” – such as cobalt, copper, lithium, rare earth elements, graphite and nickel – raises supply risks that could constrain the pace and scale of the energy transition.
Demand scenarios, like those published by the IEA, have triggered a wave of speculation about near-term “super cycles” in critical metals. As a result, we have seen many governments, such as the US and in the EU, introduce tariffs, international partnerships and domestic policies to secure supply and support the development of domestic supply chains. However, buoyant demand sentiment needs to be moderated by short-term realities such as the slowdown in Chinese construction, which has seen exports of refined copper reach record highs from May-June 20243 . This indicates a crucial weakness in one of the key demand pillars – 30% of copper today is used in Chinese real estate.
However, we know that a secure and consistent supply of critical minerals is fundamental to achieving net-zero. Delaying investment in mines could lead to even more constrained supply chains if there is a surge in demand for critical technologies – for example, due to sudden policy shifts towards net-zero as climate change impacts bite. The development of new mines is already impeded by long permitting times in many regions, and is getting worse. According to S&P the average time for mines to come online has been steadily increasing from an average of 12.7 years from 2005-09, to 17.9 years in 2022-235.Greenfield projects are also considered expensive and risky by the sector, and even more so for critical metals as decreasing certainty on the timeframe of the energy transition and technology scale-up translates to price volatility. More recently the sector has been focusing on mergers and acquisitions and new technologies to increase ore grades rather than developing new assets to increase exposure to metals like copper.
This mismatch in timelines and market sentiment could result in a race towards critical metals supply at all costs – by, for example, redirecting more supply to regions with poor human rights and labour policies, leading to heightening social and environmental risk
The new geopolitics of critical minerals
Though commodity dependency has always been at the heart of trade dynamics, what is new is the focus on metals and minerals that have not previously driven trade relationships. Ensuring reliable, diversified supplies of critical metals has emerged as a strategic priority for the US and EU over recent years.
The responsible investor’s dilemma
The race for critical minerals presents both new opportunities and risk for investors. Higher demand for “transition minerals” coupled with constrained supply could have meaningful earnings impacts for miners as prices rise. Furthermore, what has previously been a sector seen as problematic to ESG-conscious investors could see a perception shift to being seen as responsible transition enablers, widening the investor base.
While we recognise the key role metals play in the energy transition we are mindful that the need for supply cannot override other social and environmental factors. More systemically, the negative externalities of intensified extraction, such as human rights violations, biodiversity loss, water contamination and greenhouse gas emissions, also pose risks that could undermine the energy transition’s core objectives of respecting human rights and avoiding undue costs to biodiversity and nature.
For responsible investors this presents a core dilemma: if we want to support investments into the energy transition, is it reasonable to not invest in mining? Here we argue that investors have agency in seeking best outcomes not by excluding companies, but rather by engaging with held companies on avoiding negative externalities and risks, as well as allocating capital to those miners that drive towards best outcomes.
The mining sector is at a crossroads
We think this period represents a crucial crossing point for the mining industry, which could define the role of miners in the energy transition. As a simple thought experiment, we imagine two scenarios as a starting point to how the sector could develop.
This scenario involves transparent and responsibly sourced supply chains adhering to rigorous ESG criteria. It could also see increased trust in the mining sector, allowing for more community buy-in for the development of new mines, which could reduce permitting and licencing time.
In this scenario we imagine a circular chain of events that eventually leads to smoother permitting and licencing, which can reduce risks of energy transition supply bottlenecks. For it to manifest the sector needs to build trust by, for example, investing in rigorous third-party auditing, such as via the Initiative for Responsible Mining Assurance (IRMA) standard; adhering to global principles, such as those set out by the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM); and ensuring community support and buy-in from the outset. With this in place, investors could become more confident that miners can be transition enablers.
We have seen some evidence of consumers’ willingness to pay premiums for responsibly sourced materials. As a simple rule of thumb, those companies closest to consumers are driving demand for responsible investment. Some carmakers, for example, are pursuing this path through direct offtake agreements with miners who can demonstrate best practice. BMW has secured lithium offtake from mines they deem as best practice on ESG11. This agreement also benefits the company in its ability to directly secure long-term demand. However, although we may see some positive initiatives in the EV-lithium supply chain, we do not yet see evidence of other commodities and supply chains being driven by such a level of customer scrutiny.
The alternative is a “race to the bottom” – a fixation on securing critical mineral supplies at any cost, with bifurcated governance regimes, lax oversight, and consumers unwilling to pay sustainability premiums. This scenario could, at worst, tarnish the social license of the energy transition while perpetuating human rights abuses and environmental degradation. It could also see an increasing price differential between materials mined in different geographies, as the EU and US move towards onshoring or “friendshoring” of supply chains.
Which scenario is the sector heading for?
Despite increasing regulation, the picture is complicated by the international nature of mining supply chains. As we saw in the case of nickel, where cheaper Indonesian production, which in many cases was tied to deforestation and people displacement14, flooded the market, not all operators are held to equal environmental and social standards. Increased regulation could also reduce appetite for projects in areas with higher social and environmental risks for US, UK and EU-listed miners who currently hold higher ESG standards. This risks driving perverse outcomes, as miners held to less scrutiny pursue these options. It remains to be seen how supply chain regulation drives harmonisation in ESG principles, but as it stands we could see the development of a bi-fractured mining sector held to very different standards, depending on to whom and where products are sold.
What role can investors have in facilitating responsible supply chains?
If investors want to enable Scenario 1, whereby transparent and responsibly sourced supply chains adhere to rigorous ESG criteria, then thorough due diligence and engagement should be the cornerstones of investment strategies and capital allocation frameworks. An exclusionary stance fails to acknowledge that mining is essential to the energy transition, and exclude those investors who want to incentivise best practice.
Regardless of investor intent, the increasingly geopolitical nature of the critical metals trade, coupled with new regulatory frameworks, is driving an increasingly complex outlook for the sector. As such, regardless of which scenario the sector takes, we see careful due diligence and purposeful engagement as core to minimising risk when investing in the mining sector.
Can the demand for critical minerals be met responsibly?