https://www.goldbuzz.com/p/silver-is-now-officially-a-national-security-asset
. . . This is interesting! On Thursday, the Pentagon changed silver's status forever.
After evaluating 1,200 supply disruption scenarios across 84 minerals, the US government officially designated silver as a critical mineral. This means that Silver now sits alongside rare earths, lithium, and cobalt on America's strategic resource list.
This wasn't a symbolic gesture.
The designation followed a comprehensive government risk assessment concluding that silver supply vulnerabilities pose substantial risks to defense capabilities and industrial production. When the Department of Interior makes this call, it unlocks tangible federal support mechanisms most investors are unaware of.
Three criteria determined Silver’s critical mineral status.
First, economic essentiality. Silver powers solar panels, electric vehicles, electronics, and defense systems. Industrial demand hit a record 680.5 million ounces in 2024, driven primarily by green economy applications.
Second, supply chain vulnerability. The US imports 64% of its silver needs, primarily from Mexico, Canada, and Peru. That concentration creates exposure most policymakers finally recognized as unacceptable.
Third, no viable substitutes exist for silver's unique properties. Its thermal conductivity, electrical conductivity, and reflectivity remain unmatched in critical applications.
The Profound Supply Problem
I think what’s interesting here is the timing.
Silver markets have run supply deficits for five consecutive years from 2020 through 2024. The cumulative shortage totals 678 million ounces, equivalent to roughly 10 months of global mine supply.
. . . The Stockpile That Disappeared
The US strategic silver stockpile was completely depleted by 2002.
The Defense Logistics Agency received 165 million ounces from the Treasury in 1968. By 1976, they determined the stockpile exceeded defense requirements and began sales. The remaining silver minted American Silver Eagles from 1986 onwards until nothing remained.
Today, the National Defense Stockpile lists zero silver holdings.
When you're importing 64% of a critical mineral with zero strategic reserves while running five consecutive years of market deficits, you've created a vulnerability that eventually demands policy response.
What The Designation Actually Does
. . . For instance, streamlined permitting for domestic mining projects cuts years from approval timelines. Tax incentives for US mineral processing facilities make domestic operations economically viable. Direct federal investment in mining operations provides capital that markets alone won't supply.
Most significantly, the designation enables government stockpiling programs.
China installed 886.66 GW of solar capacity in 2024, a 46% year-over-year increase.
Their solar industry consumed massive amounts of silver, with photovoltaic applications accounting for 17% of total silver demand globally. China controls 57% of global refined copper production, added 97% of new copper smelting capacity since 2019, and dominates rare earth processing.
They're actively securing silver supplies while deploying technology that consumes it at unprecedented rates.
The Timing Tells Us Everything
This policy shift arrives while industrial demand hits record levels, markets run consecutive deficits, and geopolitical competition for strategic resources intensifies.
Look, Washington doesn't add minerals to this list for fun. They do it when they're scared. Scared of running out. Scared of depending on countries that might cut them off. Scared of losing the tech war to China.
The Pentagon ran 1,200 disruption scenarios. They didn't like what they saw. Five straight years of deficits. Import dependence at 64%. Zero strategic reserves. China controlling the processing. It’s a grim situation.
When the federal government starts writing checks for a commodity already in shortage, things can get interesting fast. We're about to find out what happens when Uncle Sam goes shopping in a market that's already picked clean.
At $48, silver might look expensive by last year's standards. By next year's? That's the trillion-dollar question.
time to collect spoons