Business

Critical Minerals Demand to Surge 75 Times by 2050

Fuelled by digitalisation, AI and the global energy transition, the demand for critical minerals is shooting up and reshaping the international trade and investment landscape with projections that the ‘insatiable demand’ for certain minerals could surge to 75 times current levels by 2050.

In its special edition entitled “The Critical Minerals Race: Trade, Supply and Transition,” Dubai Multi Commodities Centre (DMCC) said that the unprecedented demand for resources such as lithium, cobalt, nickel and rare earth elements to meet production needs of electric vehicles, renewable energy and next-generation technologies.

The report also outlined the structural vulnerabilities in critical minerals supply chains, including geographic concentration of resources, notably in China, Russia, Australia and Latin America, that is compounding trade regionalisation and risks such as geopolitics, resource nationalism and supply bottlenecks.

Against this increasingly competitive global landscape, the MENA region is emerging as an increasingly important hub in the supply chain, DMCC report said.

With an expansive trade network and infrastructure, access to low-cost energy and significant investment capital, countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia are making strategic moves to invest in global mining projects, expand refining capacity, and forge new trade partnerships. These efforts place the region at the centre of a rapidly evolving critical minerals market which has significant bearings on the future of energy and global digital transformation.

DMCC Executive Chairman and CEO Ahmed Bin Sulayem said that the demand for critical minerals such as copper, cobalt, lithium, manganese and graphite has reached unprecedented levels, driven by the accelerating need to power key industries – from electric vehicles and semiconductors to energy storage and artificial intelligence.

This demand is profoundly reshaping global trade flows, supply chains, and government industrial policies. Within this global race for critical minerals, DMCC’s latest Future of Trade report highlights the UAE and Dubai’s growing role, underpinned by our world-class infrastructure, strategic trade partnerships and ease of doing business that will drive resilience, innovation and growth for global businesses, he added.

DMCC’s Chief Operating Officer Feryal Ahmadi said that amid intensifying trade tensions and growing industrial competition, the report highlights the pivotal role critical minerals play in shaping the global economy.

With cutting-edge insights, expert analysis, and strategic policy and business recommendations, this report offers actionable insights to empower all stakeholders involved in the critical minerals trade. As DMCC continues to build an environment optimised for business growth, we look forward to working closely with our members to navigate these challenges, unlock growth opportunities and strengthen global trade resilience overall, he said.

Key Recommendations                   

The report outlines several key recommendations for governments and businesses to drive the evolution of the critical minerals industry and secure future growth and they include leverage Public-Private Partnerships, collaborate with private sector partners to unlock mineral reserves, enhance technology capabilities and attract investment, support research into alternative technologies, such as sodium-ion batteries, to reduce reliance on scarce minerals.

The other recommendations include capitalising on access to low-cost energy to develop domestic refining capabilities and support industrial growth, use futures markets, long-term contracts and partnerships with suppliers to reduce exposure to price volatility and supply shocks, invest in battery manufacturing, solar cells and renewable technologies to strengthen demand and build industrial ecosystems and work with policymakers to foster competitive, clear regulations that encourage critical mineral investment.

Global Business Magazine

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