Streamlining mine permits alone won't cut it—the real squeeze is happening downstream. Processing and refining capacity for copper remains the critical choke point, and that's not getting solved overnight. Here's the thing: even with faster government approvals, the metal's structural supply constraints aren't budging. Expect prices to stay elevated for the foreseeable future. Those betting on quick relief are likely to be disappointed.
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WalletManager
· 01-19 18:18
Basically, the mining license system can't fundamentally address the core issues... The copper refining stage is the bottleneck, and no one can fix it in the short term. I have repeatedly analyzed on-chain data, and the supply-side constraints are unchangeable; maintaining high prices has become a settled matter. Those expecting a quick correction should be prepared for significant losses; I have already calculated this scenario in my multi-signature wallet.
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BetterLuckyThanSmart
· 01-17 07:31
Basically, having a mining license quickly doesn't help much; the real bottleneck is the backend smelting capacity. This thing can't be rushed.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-16 23:04
Ultimately, it's still a capacity bottleneck that is stuck. Rapidly relaxing mining permits is basically useless.
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GweiObserver
· 01-16 22:49
The downstream is the real bottleneck; even if mining permits are expedited, it's useless.
Streamlining mine permits alone won't cut it—the real squeeze is happening downstream. Processing and refining capacity for copper remains the critical choke point, and that's not getting solved overnight. Here's the thing: even with faster government approvals, the metal's structural supply constraints aren't budging. Expect prices to stay elevated for the foreseeable future. Those betting on quick relief are likely to be disappointed.