Copper May Be the Color of Argentina’s Future

If I told you Argentina is the world’s hottest new market for copper, you might be likely either to scratch your head or just laugh.

This is, after all, a country better known for volatility and policy U-turns than the kind of political and financial long-term stability that mega-mining projects require. Argentina’s last major copper mine shut in 2018. Today, production is virtually nil. Despite vast reserves — particularly across the Andes mountains alongside Chile and Bolivia — much of Argentina’s mineral wealth remains untapped thanks to decades of hostile business conditions and economic chaos.

BB Argentina copper graph

That’s why the synchronized visit of executives from Rio Tinto Plc. and Glencore Plc. to Buenos Aires last week was so symbolic. On Aug. 20, just hours apart, the top brass of these two mining giants met with Javier Milei, the Libertarian president vowing to break Argentina’s cycle of economic failures. They are making bold bets: Rio Tinto is pushing ahead with a $2.5 billion lithium project, while Glencore is weighing two large copper developments that together would require $13.5 billion in investments.

Big Mining now sees the South American nation as a new great frontier just as the world braces for a severe copper shortage in the second half of this decade thanks to the significance of the red metal in the energy transition. Six world-class copper projects are on the drawing board, backed by the likes of BHP Group Ltd. and First Quantum Minerals Ltd., expected to start producing between 2028 and 2031. If they all come through, Argentina could produce more than one million metric tons of copper per year, vaulting into the ranking of top global suppliers.