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A hidden vulnerability in the copper supply chain has been exposed: the reliance on sulfuric acid for mining. With 50% of the global seaborne supply originating from the Middle East, geopolitical conflict in the region directly threatens the production of a key industrial metal, linking copper's fate to events in the Persian Gulf.
Beyond oil, the conflict disrupts supply chains for materials like sulfur and helium, which are essential for producing copper, cobalt, and components used in semiconductor manufacturing. This creates a significant, non-obvious risk to the global tech industry.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz exposed unexpected global dependencies on the Gulf region. Beyond oil and LNG, the disruption hit supply chains for fertilizer, petrochemicals, sulfur, and even helium, which is critical for the Taiwanese semiconductor industry. The crisis underscored the Gulf's broad economic integration.
The Hormuz crisis reveals fragile, non-obvious supply chains. About 30% of the world's helium, essential for making semiconductors and launching SpaceX rockets, comes from Qatar. This illustrates how critical modern technologies depend on materials from politically unstable regions, extending far beyond well-known resources like oil.
Geopolitical conflicts create ripple effects beyond obvious commodities like oil. They disrupt foundational materials like aluminum and fertilizer, which are critical, yet often overlooked, components in everything from cars and cans to the food supply, revealing hidden supply chain vulnerabilities.
Over 90% of the world's sulfur is a byproduct of oil refining. This sulfur is crucial for producing sulfuric acid, a key chemical in semiconductor manufacturing. Therefore, disruptions to oil shipping or refining create a hidden material supply chain risk for the tech industry, beyond just energy costs for power.
Energy disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz create a cascade effect far beyond fuel prices. The resulting shortages impact petrochemical and fertilizer production, threatening key inputs for everything from manufacturing and electronics to agriculture and basic services like cooking gas for restaurants.
The conflict's impact extends far beyond crude oil, disrupting refined products, and energy-intensive commodities produced in the Middle East. This includes aluminum, fertilizers (affecting agriculture), helium (for chips), and even the sulfuric acid needed for copper mining, creating broad, underappreciated supply chain risks.
The disruption in the Persian Gulf affects not just the headline commodities of oil and gas, but also crucial dry bulk goods. Outbound fertilizers and aluminum, along with inbound raw materials for production, are significantly impacted, causing spikes in global markets for these specific goods.
While markets focus on oil prices and de-escalation timelines, they are underestimating second-order effects of geopolitical conflict. Significant risks exist from supply shortages in less-discussed industrial commodities like helium and sulfur, which can have a tangible, negative impact on the broader business cycle.
The major outage at the Grasberg mine, which supplies 3% of the world's copper, is turning a previously balanced market into a significant deficit for 2025 and 2026. This highlights supply chain fragility, as there were no existing surpluses to absorb the shock.