Page added on December 20, 2011
We’ve all heard of peak oil — the notion that, because there’s a finite oil supply, production will one day begin to progressively diminish until there’s no oil left. Well, a similar thing may be happening with silver, one of the world’s most desired precious metals. That’s why we at StreetAuthority think silver may be one of world’s most coveted investments in the coming months and years.
Investors have been flocking to this metal for safety, just like gold. But that’s not the only thing behind the high demand, which has been so great some experts say supplies could actually run out completely in only nine years. Industry has been gobbling silver up, too.
Think about it. Silver is a crucial component in so many items considered essential to modern life. It’s in our flat panel TVs. It’s in our iPhones. It’s also in solar panels, the use of which has climbed by more than seven-fold in the past decade. All told, demand for silver in consumer electronics has more than doubled in the past 12 years. Total industrial demand is forecasted to rise to 666 million troy ounces per year by 2015, nearly a 40% jump from today’s level of industrial use.
Whether peak silver will actually come to pass is anyone’s guess. It’s just too difficult to predict these sorts of events with any kind of accuracy. But one thing seems certain: at this point, there isn’t enough silver to go around, and it doesn’t look like there’s going to be any time soon. The chart below provides an excellent illustration of this.

As the chart shows, total demand for silver — the amount demanded by investors and industry — has long outstripped what mining companies have been able to produce. This year, the estimated shortfall is about 120 million ounces, the difference between the 900 million ounces demanded and the 780 million ounces the mining industry will be able to supply. In other words, according to the chart, silver has been scarce for more than a decade, even though miners ramped up production 30% during that time.
Sounds pretty dire, doesn’t it? We could be facing an ongoing silver shortage or maybe even a peak-silver situation that plays out within a decade. It all depends on how you look at it. For investors, it could mean a long and profitable bull market in silver, since shortages typically mean higher prices in the long-term.
After all, there’s usually enough scrap silver — silver typically reclaimed from objects such as old silverware, coins, jewelry and even lithographic ink and X-ray films — to make up the shortfall. But this may not be the case for much longer. These traditional sources of scrap are rapidly depleting, and it’s much harder to reclaim silver from newer sources like solar panels and electronic devices such as TVs, cell phones and computers. In the case of solar panels, a big obstacle is the extremely long wait until scrap can be reclaimed, since solar panels usually last at least two or three decades. There’s a general lack of efficient methods to recover scrap silver from electronic devices, at least half of which end up in landfills anyway.
5 Comments on "Are You Ready for “Peak Silver”?"
BillT on Wed, 21st Dec 2011 12:56 am
*More silver is finding it’s way into home safes and other places of safe keeping along with gold. That can only make the value go up in the future, even if it is just a medium of exchange for necessities like food. It will also drive up the cost of everything that it goes into in industry until those items are no longer in demand. A shrinking economy is a terrible sight to behold, but, we are in a permanent one.
Roderick Beck on Wed, 21st Dec 2011 9:38 am
BillT,
You’re such a fear monger. Silver is a bubble.
Kenz300 on Wed, 21st Dec 2011 7:20 pm
We live in a finite world. The ever growing world population is coming head to head with the worlds limited resources. We have a food crisis, an oil crisis, an energy crisis, a water crisis, a silver crisis, a climate crisis, a financial crisis, a jobs crisis and an over population crisis going on in different parts of the world. All these problems will play out over time and impact us. Is our current consumption level sustainable? Will rising population growth and standards of living push the level of growth beyond what resources can supply?
Johny K. on Wed, 21st Dec 2011 11:30 pm
Expected to rise 666 million ounces
LOL 666
BillT on Thu, 22nd Dec 2011 1:10 am
Rod, are you a corporate shill? With silver needed to make most of the new electro-toys, renewables, and weapons everyone finds necessary, it will never go down in price as it too is getting more and more expensive to mine and process. It is actually better than gold as it has more industrial uses and poorer people can afford to own some. Prices will go up when the financial giants are ruined and cannot manipulate the value of gold and silver anymore.