The Battery Show
Recording date: 25th June 2026 Copper is rapidly transitioning from a cyclical industrial metal to a strategically critical resource, driven by structural shifts in global demand and geopolitics. While historically tied to economic growth and urbanisation, copper is now central to defence systems, electrification, renewable energy, and the expansion of AI-driven data infrastructure. These emerging demand drivers are policy-backed and significantly more durable than traditional cycles. In this episode, we're joined by Barry O'Shea, CEO of Highland Copper, to discuss what this shift means for the industry and for his company's flagship Copperwood development in Michigan. In the United States, this shift has exposed a structural vulnerability: insufficient domestic mine supply combined with limited refining capacity. For decades, the US has relied on imports, while China has systematically secured global copper supply chains. As geopolitical tensions reshape trade dynamics, the US is increasingly prioritising domestic production through financial incentives, including grants and concessional debt from agencies such as the Department of Defense and EXIM Bank. However, supply cannot respond quickly. New mining projects in the US often take up to 20 years to reach production due to lengthy permitting, financing, and construction timelines. This creates a structural bottleneck that higher prices alone cannot resolve. As a result, advanced-stage, fully permitted projects have become scarce and strategically valuable. One such project is Highland Copper’s Copperwood development in Michigan. With an estimated capital cost of $400 million and a relatively high ore grade of 1.5%, the project is targeting a construction decision in early 2027. It has secured strong local support and is progressing through state-level regulation, avoiding more complex federal processes. Meanwhile, copper prices are reflecting tightening supply. Long-term price expectations have risen to around $5 per pound, up from $3.75–$4 in recent years, while spot prices are trading between $6 and $6.50. This improving price environment, combined with rising institutional and government backing, positions advanced copper projects to benefit from a market increasingly defined by scarcity rather than surplus. Sign up for Crux Investor: https://cruxinvestor.com
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