World Silver Production
Here is a great article; and charts; on how much silver has been mined/produced since the time of Columbus. The really interesting thing is; Silver is STILL a STRONG BUY for all the reasons I've mentioned in my previous blog posts.
Enjoy the read and Happy Holidays.
CYA: SE:
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Enjoy the read and Happy Holidays.
CYA: SE:
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WORLD SILVER PRODUCTION: 3 Charts You Won’t See Anywhere Else
Steve St Angelo
Steve St Angelo
The
rate at which global silver production increased over the past century
is quite astonishing. When Columbus arrived in America (1492), the
world was only producing 7 million oz of silver a year.
Today, the world’s largest primary silver mine,
Fresnillo’s Sauicto Mine, produced three times that amount in just one
year (22 million oz, 2016). Yes, we have come along way in 500 years.
Just think about that for a minute. One silver mine last year produced three times the global amount in 1493.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Mines 1930 Report on
Summarized Data of Silver Production, the average annual silver
production in the world from 1493 to 1600 was 6.9 million oz (Moz).
If we look at the following chart, we can see how world silver production increased over the past 500+ years:
As we can see, average annual world silver production
increased from 6.9 Moz during 1493-1600, to 13 Moz from 1600-1700, 18
Moz from 1700-1800, 51 Moz from 1800-1900, 274 Moz from 1900-2000 and a
stunning 722 Moz from 2000-2017. Again, these figures represent the
average annual silver production for each time period.
In the current period, 2000-2017, the world has produced 103 times more silver per year than from 1493-1600.
However, the next chart shows the total silver production for each
period. From 1493-1600, the world produced a total of 747 Moz of
silver, compared to 13,000 Moz (13 billion oz) in just 18 years from
2000-2017:
Now, the reason the last silver bar on the right of
the chart is lower than the previous one has to do with comparing 18
years worth of silver production (2000-2017) versus 50 years
(1950-2000). It took 50 years to produce 17,061 Moz during 1950-2000 versus 13,000 Moz in the 18 years from 2000-2017.
If we compare world silver production from the different periods, here is the result:
Percentage Of World Silver Production (1493-2017)
2000-2017 = 26.4%1950-2017 = 61%1900-2017 = 82%
While a little more than a quarter of all world
silver production (1493-2017) was produced in the past 18 years, 82% was
produced since 1900. That is a lot of silver. It turns out that 40.4
billion oz was produced from 1900-2017 out of the total 49.3 billion oz
produced since 1493. Interestingly, more than half of that silver was
consumed in industrial silver applications. I will be writing more
about that in future articles.
The last chart I find quite interesting. If we go
back a little more than a century, the United States was the largest
silver producer in the world. In 1915, the U.S. produced 75 Moz of
silver out of the total 189 Moz mined in the world that year:
Thus, in 1915, the U.S. produced 40% of all world silver production.
Mexico came in second in 1915 by producing 39.3 Moz. However, U.S.
silver production in 2017 will only be 34 Moz versus the estimated 870
Moz globally. Thus, U.S. silver production only accounts for 4% of world mine supply versus 40% back in 1915. What a change in 100 years.
Lastly, the U.S. imports approximately 22% of world
mine production each year. That is 193 Moz of the total 870 Moz in
2017. While domestic mine supply is only 34 Moz, the United States has
to import more than a fifth of global mine production to meet its silver
market demand.
The Indian equities ended lower in volatile trade on Thursday, tracking mixed cues from Asian peers, as gains in metal and realty stocks were offset by selling across PSU and oil&gas space.CapitalStars
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