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LONDON — The global transition to renewable energy faces a formidable new hurdle this morning as silver prices shattered historical records, trading above $100 per ounce. The surge, described by analysts as a "textbook silver squeeze," has sent shockwaves through global markets, with solar panel manufacturers bearing the brunt of the volatility. Search interest for "silver price" has spiked over 1,000% in the last 24 hours, reflecting widespread anxiety among investors and industrial buyers alike.
The crisis, which has been building for months, reached a breaking point following the implementation of strict new export controls by China earlier this month. Combined with insatiable demand from the photovoltaic (PV) sector and the booming artificial intelligence hardware industry, the market has entered what the Financial Times describes as a "perfect storm" of supply deficits. Solar manufacturers, who rely on silver for its unrivaled conductivity, are now grappling with soaring production costs that threaten to derail installation targets for 2026.
In early trading on Thursday, spot silver prices surged past the psychological barrier of $100 per ounce, a milestone that seemed distant just a year ago when the metal traded near $28. According to data from BullionVault, the metal has rallied more than 40% since the start of the year. The catalyst for this latest leg up was the confirmation that China’s new export licensing system, effective January 1, 2026, has severely bottlenecked flows to Western markets. With only 44 companies authorized to export silver from the world’s largest producer, global inventories have plummeted.
Philip Newman, managing director of Metals Focus, noted in an interview with PV Magazine that the market is witnessing a structural repricing rather than a speculative bubble. "We are seeing the collision of geopolitical trade restrictions and a fifth consecutive year of supply deficits," Newman stated. "The $100 threshold was inevitable given the math: you cannot expand solar capacity to 665 GW annually while simultaneously choking off the primary supply of the essential conductive metal."
The solar industry, which consumed approximately 20% of the world’s industrial silver supply in 2024, is facing an existential margin squeeze. While manufacturers have successfully reduced the amount of silver per cell—a process known as "thrifting"—by roughly 20% over the last two years, the physical limits of current technology have largely been reached. According to Forbes, the sheer volume of new installations has outpaced these efficiency gains. With silver now constituting a double-digit percentage of the module cost, major PV producers are seeing their stock prices slide as investors fear a hit to profitability.
Industry experts warn that this cost inflation could be passed on to consumers, potentially raising the price of solar energy projects for the first time in a decade. This reversal comes at a sensitive time for the global economy, where central banks are still battling pockets of sticky inflation. If green energy infrastructure becomes significantly more expensive, it could dampen GDP growth projections in regions heavily reliant on aggressive decarbonization targets, such as the European Union.
Compounding the pressure on solar manufacturers is the emergence of a new, voracious consumer of silver: the AI data center sector. High-performance computing chips and the complex electrical infrastructure required to power them demand silver for its superior thermal and electrical conductivity. According to a report by the Silver Institute, the market faced a deficit of nearly 230 million ounces in 2025 alone. The addition of AI-driven demand has exacerbated this shortfall, creating a tug-of-war between two critical future industries.
"Silver is no longer just a precious metal; it is a strategic technology metal," noted a commodities strategist cited by the Financial Times. "The finance sector is waking up to the reality that silver is the new oil for the digital and green economy. We are seeing a scramble for physical bars that is draining vaults in London and New York."
As the "silver squeeze" intensifies, the implications extend far beyond the commodities trading pits. For solar panel makers, the era of cheap inputs appears to be over, forcing a rapid rethink of supply chains and pricing models. With stocks in the renewable sector under pressure and silver prices discovering new highs, the coming weeks will be critical in determining whether this is a temporary dislocation or a permanent upward shift in the cost of the energy transition. For now, the heat is on, and the solar industry is sweating.
The dramatic rise in silver prices is primarily driven by a combination of supply deficits and geopolitical trade restrictions. Specifically, strict new export controls from China have bottlenecked supply while demand from the photovoltaic sector and the booming artificial intelligence hardware industry continues to skyrocket. Analysts view this not as a speculative bubble but as a structural repricing due to five consecutive years of global supply shortages.
Solar manufacturers are facing a severe margin squeeze because silver is a critical component for conductivity in photovoltaic cells. Although companies have tried to use less silver per cell, the sheer volume of new installations has outpaced these efficiency gains. Consequently, these soaring production costs may force manufacturers to pass expenses onto consumers, potentially raising the price of solar energy projects for the first time in a decade.
The AI sector has emerged as a major new consumer of silver, exacerbating existing supply deficits. High-performance computing chips and the complex electrical infrastructure needed for data centers require silver for its superior thermal and electrical conductivity. This creates intense competition for resources between the green energy sector and the digital economy, effectively turning silver into a strategic technology metal comparable to oil.
Market experts suggest that the current price levels represent a permanent structural shift rather than a temporary fluctuation. With global inventories plummeting and major producers restricting exports, the market is reacting to physical scarcity rather than speculation. Given the essential nature of silver for both decarbonization targets and digital infrastructure, the era of cheap industrial silver appears to have ended.
As the largest producer of silver globally, the implementation of a strict export licensing system by China has severely disrupted international flows. By authorizing only a limited number of companies to export the metal, China has created a bottleneck that prevents adequate supply from reaching Western markets. This policy change has acted as a primary catalyst for the recent price rally by tightening availability during a period of peak industrial demand.