Rethinking global supply chains for the energy transition

(Credit: Unsplash)

This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration of The European Sting with the World Economic Forum.

Author: Joisa Saraiva, Professor, Fundação Getulio Vargas & David G. Victor, Professor, University of California, San Diego (UCSD)


  • We need to rethink global supply chains in order to support the energy transition.
  • There are lessons from the development of the global oil markets that can be applied to markets for critical energy transition materials such as lithium, cobalt and copper.
  • Setting global standards and supporting innovation to boost supply diversity will help to eradicate potential choke points as global demand for these commodities continues to increase.

Alarm bells are ringing about the future of the energy transition. These bells are getting loudest just as the world contemplates shifting away from oil—the commodity for which dependence on foreign resources and vulnerable supply routes defined energy insecurity for more than a century.

Many of the same problems that affected global oil markets are already affecting the markets for critical energy transition materials such as lithium, cobalt, copper, and rare materials used to manufacture solar panels, batteries and other clean energy technologies. As with oil, the whole world depends on these materials, but geologically they are concentrated in just a few places.

While logic points to the need for bigger and more diverse suppliers, since the middle of 20th-century governments have often sought security by onshoring and tinkering with supply chains, or restricting import quantities. Neither approach has worked, and fragmenting markets in this way often undermines security. https://open.spotify.com/embed/episode/12Y16wYmot74ZDAX18kMBk

Building a global market

The real solution comes from treating global commodities as a global market. Transparency of data, stockpiles in case of emergency, and coordination across major users (and, to some degree, suppliers) have made the oil markets a lot more robust. Similarly, it was globalization that helped drive down the cost of solar power technology. And where globalization has faltered, costs have risen and progress towards the energy transition has slowed.

The same can and should be done for the materials that are critical to the energy transition. For resources that are truly essential and inconveniently allocated around the globe — lithium is the leading example — we need the equivalent of joint market oversight and management.

Growing attention is being paid to the role of government policy in creating new markets and technologies. That same logic can apply to policy innovation that can help create new supplies for materials that are critical to the energy revolution such as polysilicon, for which supply is currently tight.

Another lesson from oil is that the biggest dangers of dependence on overseas suppliers hinge on the methods of production. If suppliers harm the environment or human rights, they harm everyone and undermine social justice for the sake of the energy transition. An especially pernicious problem is that vast revenues earned from mining can be channeled to nefarious purposes, including corruption.

“For resources that are truly essential and inconveniently allocated around the globe — lithium is the leading example — we need the equivalent of joint market oversight and management.”—Joisa Saraiva, Fundação Getulio Vargas & David Victor, UCSD

Setting standards for markets

The solutions to these problems depend on the development of clear long-term standards by importers — the actors that are most motivated to develop remedies and that are in the strongest position to demand change. This means implementing extraterritorial pollution standards (e.g. carbon regulation and border adjustments) and red lines for intolerable activities such as human rights abuses.

When those standards are clear, markets can perform better. For example, western abhorrence to cobalt mining practices has put pressure on innovators to find ways to make clean energy batteries without cobalt.

Here, too, oil offers a lesson: data reporting systems such as the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) are having measurable impacts on how money from mineral supplies gets spent. EITI is not perfect, but marrying that programme with globalized commodity markets, rather than fragmented onshored systems, gives buyers more leverage. Other programmes are working with the same goal: more just, less corrupt markets built on greater transparency and oversight.

Innovating to boost diversity

The big difference between oil and the new mineral dependencies is the potential for radical, rapid innovation in supply and demand. For all the talk about moving past oil, by some measures the world’s dependence on oil hasn’t budged.This isbecause it is so hard to find cost effective and reliable alternatives even when there are strong incentives to switch. Innovations in supply such as shale oil have reinforced demand for the commodity, for example.

What’s the World Economic Forum doing about the transition to clean energy?

Moving to clean energy is key to combating climate change, yet in the past five years, the energy transition has stagnated.

Energy consumption and production contribute to two-thirds of global emissions, and 81% of the global energy system is still based on fossil fuels, the same percentage as 30 years ago. Plus, improvements in the energy intensity of the global economy (the amount of energy used per unit of economic activity) are slowing. In 2018 energy intensity improved by 1.2%, the slowest rate since 2010.

Effective policies, private-sector action and public-private cooperation are needed to create a more inclusive, sustainable, affordable and secure global energy system.

Benchmarking progress is essential to a successful transition. The World Economic Forum’s Energy Transition Index, which ranks 115 economies on how well they balance energy security and access with environmental sustainability and affordability, shows that the biggest challenge facing energy transition is the lack of readiness among the world’s largest emitters, including US, China, India and Russia. The 10 countries that score the highest in terms of readiness account for only 2.6% of global annual emissions.

To future-proof the global energy system, the Forum’s Shaping the Future of Energy and Materials Platform is working on initiatives including, Systemic Efficiency, Innovation and Clean Energy and the Global Battery Alliance to encourage and enable innovative energy investments, technologies and solutions.

Additionally, the Mission Possible Platform (MPP) is working to assemble public and private partners to further the industry transition to set heavy industry and mobility sectors on the pathway towards net-zero emissions. MPP is an initiative created by the World Economic Forum and the Energy Transitions Commission.

Is your organisation interested in working with the World Economic Forum? Find out more here.

When it comes to cobalt or lithium, however, if supplies run short or buyers get worried about poor production methods, recycling or switching to rival materials is an option. Innovation in mining can also turn abundant occurrences into reserves. The world is actually awash in lithium; today’s dependencies reflect the lack of much incentive to open mines in places where it is harder (but not impossible) to do business.

Rising prices for critical minerals are a powerful motivator for innovation, but cost must be kept in perspective. New research has shown that extraction of non-renewable mineral resources such as lithium and copper has risen by a factor of 6,000 since 1700. In the same period, global real GDP has increased by a factor of 190, while average per capita real GDP grew by a factor of 15. Prices have bounced around—better oil-like commodity management can dampen the most harmful price shocks—but stayed roughly flat (see figure 1).

Line graph showing change in non-renewable resource prices versus extraction, 1700-2018.
Figure 1: Per capita primary production and average real prices (log) of non-renewable resources, 1700-2018. Image: Schwerhoff & Stuermer, May 2019

Former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill said of oil security that the solution was diversity and diversity alone. The same is true today for lithium and other essential energy transition minerals. We must encourage supply diversity — more globalization, greater flexibility, production standards where essential and powerful incentives for innovation — for the materials that are truly critical to the energy transition.

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