Amid the current accelerated reshaping of the global resource competition landscape, China's copper concentrate import pattern is undergoing a profound structural transformation. The latest trade data from 2025 clearly outlines this trend: China is significantly enhancing its capacity to acquire copper concentrate resources from neighboring countries. A resource supply network, connected by land transport and radiating to Central Asia and Southeast Asia, is rapidly taking shape.
Looking at import data, compared to seaborne ore which relies on ocean shipping, the rapid growth of land-transported ore indicates that China is extending its resource supply tentacles to surrounding countries. Countries such as Kazakhstan, Mongolia and others in Central Asia and Russia, as well as Laos, Myanmar and other Southeast Asian nations, are becoming important sources of incremental growth in China's copper concentrate imports. Land routes not only shorten transport cycles and reduce external risks like shipping lane disruptions, but also build a more resilient resource supply corridor for China against the backdrop of heightened geopolitical uncertainty.
It is noteworthy that the share of land-transported ore in the country's total imports has steadily increased from approximately 11.5% in 2019 to 15% in 2025. This seemingly small percentage change actually holds profound strategic significance. It signifies that China's copper resource imports are shifting from the past single model of heavy reliance on distant overseas sources like South America, Australia, and Southern Africa, towards a diversified pattern that "combines long-distance and short-distance sources, and emphasizes both sea and land transport." Although the individual supply volumes from neighboring countries may not match those of traditional major seaborne suppliers, their geographical advantage of being close to China's hinterland allows them to respond more flexibly to the demand changes of domestic smelters, acting as a "buffer zone" regulating market supply and demand.
Of course, acquiring resources from neighboring countries is not without challenges. Risks persist, such as frequent fluctuations in some countries' mining policies, lagging infrastructure, and geopolitical uncertainties. However, precisely because of this, the current trend of proactive diversification and multiple sourcing points in import sources is an important sign of the maturing of China's resource security system. China is using concrete trade flows to effectively transform the concept of "neighboring areas" from a geographical notion into a deep-seated support for its resource strategy.
In summary, the pattern of copper concentrate imports in 2025 is no longer simply about quantitative expansion, but rather a deep-seated adjustment centered on supply chain security. This resource acquisition model, which can be likened to "fetching water from a nearby source to quench immediate thirst," not only provides a more guaranteed raw material supply for the country's massive copper smelting capacity but also builds a strategic buffer zone for China—one that allows for both advancement and retreat—on the chessboard of global resource competition.


