Resource Cold War: States tighten control of energy and critical minerals
The central question in the Resource Cold War is no longer whether energy and critical minerals matter, but whether the global economy can still rely on markets alone to allocate them. The old regime assumed that higher prices would summon new supply, that supply chains could be optimized for cost without sacrificing resilience, and that geopolitical risk would remain a temporary disturbance rather than a permanent feature of industrial planning. That framework is breaking down. Energy security, rare earths, and the processing layers that turn raw ores into usable inputs have become instruments of state power, and the competition to control them is now shaping inflation, industrial strategy, defense readiness, and the feasibility of the next wave of technological buildout. This matters now because the systems being built over the next decade, from grid expansion and electrification to AI infrastructure and advanced manufacturing, are materially more resource intensive than the world economy they are replacing.