Since January 1, Chinese exporters need a government license for silver exports.

What sounds like bureaucracy is actually the birth of a new commodity weapon: China controls up to 70% of globally traded refined silver and is now elevating the metal to the same regulatory level as rare earths.

Musk is right: Without silver, the high-tech world grinds to a halt. A modern EV requires 25 to 50 grams, and a single solar panel needs around 20 grams of the metal.

Details

📈 Record chase: Silver had its best year since 1979 in 2025. The price more than doubled in 12 months (briefly exceeding $80 per ounce).

Indispensable for green tech: Silver is the most electrically conductive substance and is virtually irreplaceable in solar panels, EVs, and AI data centers.

🛡️ Defense: The precious metal is also critical for modern weapons systems. The US hastily added silver to its "critical minerals" list in November 2025.

🏭 China means business: Only 44 companies received export licenses for 2026-2027. Requirements: 80 tons of annual production capacity and a $30 million credit line.

⛏️ The supply trap: Silver is 70–80% a byproduct from copper or zinc mines.

Can silver be replaced?

Theoretically yes, but substitution takes years: Copper can replace silver in solar cells, but converting a single factory takes 18 months. With 300 factories worldwide, that's at least 4 years—too slow for acute shortages.

Sources: CNBC Economic Times SCMP
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