AI data-centre buildout pushes copper toward shortages, analysts warn — only 70% of 2035 demand could be met, 2025 deficit thought to be 304,000 tonnes

Copper smelting
(Image credit: Getty / Andrej Ivanov)

Copper producers and market analysts are starting to outline a supply gap that arrives just as hyperscale AI campuses ramp toward record power draws. The International Energy Agency’s latest critical minerals outlook places copper on a path where existing and planned mines meet only about 70% of projected 2035 demand.

Wood Mackenzie expects shortages to appear far earlier, with a 304,000-tonne refined-copper deficit forecast for 2025 and a wider gap in 2026. That trajectory converges with a wave of AI-driven electrical infrastructure, turning a long-standing industrial metal into a practical bottleneck for data-centre expansion. According to Wood Mackenzie, Charles Cooper, speaking to the Financial Times, the “hyperscalers” building data centers are “outbidding grid suppliers on things like transformer units,” piling significant pressure on producers.

Large AI campuses are now routinely designed around blocks of 50 megawatts to 150 megawatts, and industry estimates place copper use at roughly 27 to 33 tonnes per megawatt of installed capacity. A single 100-megawatt site can therefore absorb several thousand tonnes of copper before accounting for the upstream grid reinforcements required to supply it. BHP’s own case studies cite more than 2000 tonnes for an 80 megawatt-class deployment.

Unfortunately, these projects are arriving at the same time many legacy mines are reporting lower ore grades — which have fallen by around 40% since 1991 — and reduced output, leaving operators to either extend decades-old sites or navigate lengthy permitting battles to reach newer deposits.

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Luke James
Contributor

Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist.  Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory.