
Critical Materials: Why Supply Is the Story
Critical Materials: Why Supply Is the Story
For decades, critical materials were treated as inputs – sourced globally, priced efficiently and rarely questioned.
That approach is breaking down.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey (2025), the United States is 100% net import reliant for at least 12 critical minerals and more than 50% reliant for another 28. That level of dependence introduces real exposure across sectors that do not function without these materials.
Access is no longer assumed. It has to be secured.
From Efficiency to Security
Global supply chains were built for cost, not resilience. Production concentrated in a few regions, processing moved offshore and reliance on external supply became standard.
Now the risks are clearer.
The International Energy Agency continues to show that demand for critical materials is rising – driven by electrification, infrastructure expansion and industrial growth, while supply remains slow to respond. New projects often take 10–20 years to move from discovery to production.
Demand can accelerate in quarters. Supply cannot.
Why It Matters
Critical materials sit inside systems that define modern economies:
- Energy – grid expansion, nuclear fuel, electrification
- Healthcare – medical isotopes and targeted therapies
- Technology – semiconductors, data infrastructure
- Defense – aerospace systems, munitions, secure communications
These are not optional inputs. They are requirements.
When supply tightens, the impact is immediate – whether through cost, delays, or constrained output.
Copper: A Clear Signal
Copper is one of the clearest indicators of how supply constraints are developing.
In 2025, the U.S. Geological Survey recommended adding copper to the U.S. critical minerals list due to its economic importance and increasing supply risk. At the same time, global demand continues to rise, driven by grid expansion, electrification, and energy infrastructure.
According to the International Energy Agency, copper demand from energy-related sectors alone is expected to grow meaningfully over the next decade, while supply growth remains limited by long development timelines and declining ore grades.
This is where Midnight Sun Mining fits.
The company is advancing copper projects in Zambia’s Copperbelt — one of the world’s most established mining regions. At Dumbwa, recent drilling has extended mineralization to approximately 3.6 kilometers, with intercepts including 0.46% copper over 50 meters, alongside higher-grade intervals within that zone.
In a market where new supply is difficult to bring online, scale and continuity of mineralization matter.
If copper demand continues to outpace supply, projects with the ability to expand and develop over time become increasingly relevant.
Helium: A Less Visible Constraint
Helium receives less attention but is equally important.
It is used in:
- Semiconductor manufacturing
- MRI systems and medical imaging
- Aerospace and advanced engineering
It is also difficult to substitute and tied to a limited number of global sources.
Within ASP Isotopes, the exposure to Renergen highlights this dynamic:
- Phase 1 drilling completed approximately four months ahead of schedule
- Recent wells achieving up to 16x the flow rates of earlier wells
- The next phase is primarily engineering and production execution
In a constrained market, early and higher-than-expected production capacity can be meaningful.
Supply Is Not Just Geology
Access to critical materials is shaped by more than resource availability.
It depends on:
- Permitting and regulatory approval
- Processing and refinement capability
- Capital and infrastructure
- Geopolitical alignment
Even when resources exist, bringing them to market is complex and time-intensive.
That is why leadership and positioning matter.
At SKBL, the addition of Vuk Jeremić – former President of the UN General Assembly – introduces geopolitical and policy experience at the board level. In today’s environment, materials strategy is increasingly tied to global alignment and regulatory navigation, not just exploration.
The Throughline
Across positions, the same theme emerges:
- ASPI – exposure to isotopes, nuclear fuel, and helium-linked supply
- Midnight Sun – copper in a tightening supply environment
- SKBL – infrastructure with geopolitical awareness
Different sectors, same underlying question:
Who can reliably supply what the market requires?
Closing Thought
For years, markets rewarded efficiency, scale and global sourcing.
Now the focus is shifting toward control, reliability and supply security.
If demand continues to rise and supply remains slow to respond, value moves upstream, to those who can produce, secure and scale critical materials.
That shift is already underway.
Resources:
https://www.wilsoncenter.org/article/critical-minerals-strategy-under-trump-administration-p rogress-contradictions-and-road?utm_source
https://odi.org/en/insights/critical-minerals-geopolitics-in-2026-risks-supply-chains-and-glob al-power-shifts/?utm_source https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/taiwanese-chip-makers-call-on-government-tostockpile-helium-lng-tsia-pleads-for-strategic-supplies-as-us-and-iran-sign-ceasefire-in-middle -east?utm_source
