A Stop Spike Event

 | Sep 29, 2014 01:59AM ET

As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information

Population growth reports say we can expect, barring WW lll or a virus like Ebola going airborne, upwards of 11.4 billion people on the planet by the 2060s. There’s just over 7 billion of us now. A possible 50 percent plus gain in our numbers over such a short time is going to put enormous strain on our abilities to source the needed inputs for survival let alone bring those in the developing world up to the same level of amenities that we in the developed world have or expect to obtain.

Rising global scarcity of minerals – the metals our industrial and connected society uses every day to sustain its lifestyle - is a subject we will all become very familiar with. That’s because there’s no getting around the fact we live on a planet with a finite resource base and a growing population.

Lets state the obvious:

For over the last twelve years supply has struggled to keep pace with demand

Metal supply is finite and subject to compounding demand from developing nations

Metal production is highly cyclical, with intermittent peaks and troughs which are closely linked to economic cycles - declining production has historically been driven by falling demand and prices, not by scarcity

Rates of production and amounts of reserves continually change in response to movements in markets and technological advances

Most mineral resources will not be exhausted in the near future

If energy was cheap and unlimited then recoverable resources would be unlimited

But

Discovery and development is increasingly becoming more challenging and expensive

Average ore grades are in decline for most minerals, yet production has increased dramatically

Our most important metals are suffering from declining ore quality and rising extraction (ore is a different and inferior chemical or structural composition) costs

Our prosperity has always been based on the fact that producing resources yielded more resources than it cost. However the cost of *energy is climbing, the amount used is climbing but the returns from energy expended is declining. Eventually the quantity of resources used in the extraction process will be 100% of what is produced

Most older existing mines, the foundation of our supply, have increasing costs with production rates stagnating or even declining

The rate of discovery is not keeping pace with the rate of depletion, let alone being higher

*Energy can be thought of as a proxy for labor, materials, energy and externalities – environmental, community impact etc.

The Global Middle Class

The newly emerging middle class are a major contributing factor to the fundamental demand shift in global commodity markets and per capita consumption of commodities in developing countries is still only a fraction of the level it is in developed countries.

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Infrastructure spending and increased discretionary spending by consumers are the key factors driving this rising demand – as more and more people in emerging markets move from rural areas to the cities, consumption will increase putting massive upward pressure on commodities.