Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

Can copper hit $15,000 in 2026?

  • LME cash copper prices hit an all-time high of $13,300 per metric ton on January 6, 2026, marking a 50% year-on-year increase
  • The International Copper Study Group (ICSG) projects a 150,000-ton refined copper deficit for 2026, while J.P. Morgan estimates a deficit of 330,000 tons
  • AI data centers are projected to consume 500,000 metric tons annually by 2030, driven by mega-projects like the $500 billion OpenAI Stargate initiative
  • production at Codelco, the world’s largest producer, stagnated at 1.332 million tons in 2025, a marginal 0.3% increase following deep-level mining accidents

Benchmark copper prices on the London Metal Exchange (LME) breached $13,000 per metric ton on January 5, 2026 — with a 16% rise alone just since start of December 2025.

The record rally follows structural supply shortfalls and a surge in AI-driven infrastructure demand that has outpaced global mining output, as well as an institutional rotation from precious metals into base metals essential for digital and energy infrastructure.

Can it hit US$15,000 in 2026?

Copper price USDLbs 1 - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

While gold and silver reached record levels in 2025, copper has also emerged as a primary focus for funds seeking exposure to the “gigascale” build-out of AI factories, defence buildout, and the ongoing energy tranasition.

There’s good reason why copper made it onto America’s updated list of critical minerals in 2025.

Subscribe for Investment Insights. Stay Ahead.

Investment market and industry insights delivered to you in real-time.

[mepr-membership-registration-form id="4595"]

Primary demand drivers: sector breakdown

Global copper consumption is projected to increase by 8.2 million metric tons annually by 2035, driven by four primary disruptors: the energy transition, AI-driven data centers, defense spending, and rapid (re-)industrialization.

Global copper demand by sector 2025 2040 - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

1. AI and data centers

Data center demand is the fastest expanding demand sector for copper, with, for example, a hyperscale data center, built to run artificial intelligence (AI), requiring up to 50,000 tons of copper per facility

Copper demand for data centers is forecast to increase from 1.1 million metric tons in 2025 to 2.5 million metric tons by 2040

Data center copper demand by archetype 2020 2040 - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

2. Construction and industrial

Equipment manufacturing, followed by construction and infrastructure, are the largest end-uses for copper. Global use of refined copper rose from 10Mt in the late 1980s to 26.5Mt in 2023 as Asia became the largest consumer with a 70% share of consumption. 

Core economic demand globally is forecast to increase by 2% annually, from 18 million metric tons in 2025 to 23 million metric tons by 2040. For example:

  • rapid urban expansion in Southeast Asia and India is projected to add 3.3 million metric tons of demand by 2035
  • copper demand is expected to grow annually by 4.5% for refrigerators, 2.4% for washing machines, and 2.4% for TVs between 2025 and 2040, reaching a total of 1.5 million metric tons
Copper demand from construction by region 2010 2040 - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

3. Energy Transition

Despite recent setbacks across the renewable energy sector, the shift to clean energy continues, and is estimated to add 7.1Mt of annual copper demand by 2040:

  • electric vehicles: a battery-electric car requires 183 lbs of copper, x3.6 the intensity of internal-combustion models. EV-related demand is forecast to double by 2035, reaching 4.3 million metric tons annually
  • renewable power: wind and solar are all more copper intensive than fossil fuel energy sources, with an estimated 8,000kg of copper per MW for offshore wind turbines
  • grid expansion: 152 million km global electricity grid is forecast to be needed to meet net-zero targets by 2050 (double the size of grid today) needing around 427 million metric tons of the red metal between now and 2050
Mineral requirements for clean energy transitions - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

4. Defense

In 2022, Russia’s 11 million shells fired against Ukraine contained the same amount of copper as 10% of UK’s total wind turbine capacity. 

And, across the world, production of copper-containing 1550millimeter shells are ramping up with, for example, the US planning to increase from 93,000 to 1.2million in 2025; Germany’s Rheinmetall will soon be able to produce 1.5 million 155mm artillery shells a year, more than the combined US defense industry.

And that’s just shells. Copper is critical across a range of defence technologies, from missiles to munitions and navy platforms. Although quantities of copper used by militaries are state secrets (although Simon Hunt Strategic Services estimates global military demand accounts for nearly 9% of refined copper output in 2021 and is growing at 14% per year through 2026), to give some perspective: in 2024, global military expenditure reached $2.718 trillion, an increase of 9.4% from 2023 — the steepest one-year surge since the Cold War.

 5. Robots

And potentially robots will add a fifth demand driver. Although we are far from mass market adoption, the 10 billion humanoid robots that Elon Musk has suggested will be in the world by 2040 would need about 1.6 million tonnes of copper a year, or roughly 6% of current global consumption.

Supply constraints

The (big) challenge is supply.

As demand scales, supply growth remains constrained by declining ore grades and recurring disruptions in key producing regions. For example, Chile and Peru — which together account for roughly one-third of global mined copper — are struggling not only to grow output, but to sustain current levels.

Copper demand outlook - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

In total, an estimated 6.4 million tonnes of copper production capacity, equal to more than 25% of global mine output, is stalled or suspended due to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues, a recent study by GEM Mining Consulting reveals.

Copper production halted by projectoperation - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

And geopolitics and trade policy is not helping either: 

US COMEX inventories hit a record 503,400 metric tons on January 20, 2026, as traders built stocks ahead of expectations that the Trump administration may introduce a tariff on refined metal — potentially leaving the rest of the world short as miners struggle to boost output.

“Inventories used to act as a buffer, but now they’re locked in the US,” Li Xuezhi, head of research at Chaos Ternary Futures Co., told Bloomberg. “So the buffer is gone and everyone will have to scramble.”

Also, as major currenies (especially the dollar and Yuan) face sustained debasement pressures, investors are rotating towards scarce, strategic, policy-supported assets. Copper may not be a monetary asset but is increasingly treated as part of the wider “safe-haven” trade. 

In a macro environment defined by structurally higher fiscal deficits, aggressive industrial policy, and persistent geopolitical friction, copper stands apart from many other investments.


Troilus Mining: leverage to copper scarcity, with permitting and financing momentum

Troilus Mining Corporation (TSX: TLG; OTC: CHXMF) sits against this backdrop of structurally constrained copper supply, offers scale and near-term production in a Tier-1 jurisdiction.

The company’s flagship copper-gold Troilus Project in Quebec, Canada, is one of the largest undeveloped gold-copper systems in North America, with 13.0Moz AuEq of resources and 7.3Moz AuEq of reserves, underpinned by a 22-year mine life and expected average production of >300koz AuEq per year.

Just as the copper provides the strategic upside, linking Troilus directly to electrification, grid expansion, and industrial policy in North America and Europe, so the gold matters in an environment of elevated fiscal deficits and currency debasement.

Crucially, Troilus is no longer an early-stage optionality story. Basic engineering is complete, detailed engineering is advancing, and the ESIA has been submitted at both federal and provincial levels, with permits expected in H2 2026. The company has secured indicative LOIs totalling US$1.3bn from export credit agencies, mandated a syndicate led by Société Générale, KfW IPEX-Bank and Export Development Canada to arrange up to US$1bn in senior project debt, and established preliminary long-term concentrate offtake terms with Aurubis and Boliden.

troilus mining map - The Oregon Group - Critical Minerals and Energy Intelligence

Troilus sits squarely at the intersection of copper scarcity, electrification demand, and Western industrial policy


This is not to say there might be headwinds.

For example, Goldman Sachs Research’s base case is that a 15% tariff will be announced in mid-2026 and implemented in 2027, but any delay in either its announcement or implementation could dramatically impact the direction of copper prices this year.

“We do not expect the price above $13,000 to be sustained,” says Goldman Sachs Research analyst Eoin Dinsmore.

On a fundamental basis, Goldman Sachs Research estimates that copper’s price will average around $11,500 per tonne, close to their price forecast of $11,200 per tonne for the fourth quarter of 2026.

However, while $13,000-$15,000 per tonne generates record earnings for established players (for example, Southern Copper reporting operating margins exceeding 60%, in January 2025), the range easily exceeds BlackRocks estiamted incentive price of $12,000 for new mines.

Structural deficits: outlook for 2026-2040

The copper market is shifting into a period of structural deficit as current mine production peaks and secondary supply (recycling) fails to close the gap. Some estimates suggest the world needs 80 new, sizable copper mines by 2040

Demand growth is now largely policy-driven, tied to national security and massive electrification projects, making it difficult to reverse regardless of economic cycles. Conversely, new supply is capital-intensive, slow to scale, and increasingly politically constrained by resource nationalism. 

As traditionally copper-rich nations like Chile and Peru struggle with production plateaus, their constraints have created a multi-billion-dollar opportunity. And the path to US$15,000 copper is now paved with these structural constraints, transforming the metal from a cyclical commodity into a long-term tech-enabled premium asset.

Subscribe for Investment Insights. Stay Ahead.

Investment market and industry insights delivered to you in real-time.

[mepr-membership-registration-form id="4595"]

Disclaimer

The Oregon Group maintains full editorial control over all content published on this website. While sponsored and advertised placements may be featured, the content remains the sole opinion of The Oregon Group. The author may receive compensation or remuneration for providing content, but all statements and expressions are made independently and are not influenced by sponsors or advertisers. From time to time, The Oregon Group and its directors, officers, partners, employees, authors, or members of their families, as well as persons who are interviewed for articles on this website, may have a long or short position in securities or commodities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities or commodities in the open market or otherwise. By accessing and using this website, readers are cautioned to assume that each of the foregoing persons may have a financial interest in all companies and sectors mentioned on this website. Any projections, market outlooks or estimates herein are forward looking statements and are inherently unreliable., and any such statements are based upon certain assumptions and should not be construed to be indicative of the actual events that will occur.  Other events that were not taken into account may occur and may significantly affect the returns or performance of the securities or commodities discussed herein. The information provided herein is based on matters as they exist as of the date of preparation and not as of any future date, and The Oregon Group undertakes no obligation to correct, update or revise the information in this document or to otherwise provide any additional material. The information provided on this website is for informational purposes only and is not, directly or indirectly, an offer, solicitation of an offer and/or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or commodity, and the information provided on this website should not be construed as any advice or an opinion as to the price at which the securities of any company or commodity may trade at any time. The Oregon Group is a publisher of financial information, not an investment advisor.  We do not provide personalized or individualized investment advice or information that is tailored to the needs of any particular recipient, and the information provided on this website is not and should not be construed as personal, financial, investment or professional advice. Readers are cautioned to always do their own research and review of publicly available information and to consult their professional and registered advisors before purchasing or selling any securities or commodities and should not rely on the information contained herein. Neither The Oregon Group nor any of its affiliates accepts any liability whatsoever for any direct or consequential loss howsoever arising, directly or indirectly, from any use of the information contained herein. By using the Site or any affiliated social media account, you are indicating your consent and agreement to this disclaimer and our terms of use. Unauthorized reproduction of this newsletter or its contents by photocopy, facsimile or any other means is illegal and punishable by law.

Share this article

about the author

Picture of The Oregon Group

The Oregon Group

The Oregon Group is an investment research team focused on critical minerals, mining, energy and geopolitics.

Our Podcast

Tags

Subscribe Now

Subscribe and get market and industry trends delivered to you in real-time.

SUBSCRIBE FOR INVESTMENT INSIGHTS

Welcome to The Oregon Group, an investment research team focused on critical minerals, mining, energy and geopolitics.

Our independent capital markets experts are sharing their boardroom expertise and institutional experience to help you profit and hedge your investment exposure during this time of unmissable opportunity.