Just looked at the latest silver demand breakdown and there's some interesting stuff worth paying attention to. Global physical silver demand hit 1.16 billion ounces in 2024, which is solid but still below the 2022 peak of 1.28 billion ounces. Here's what's driving silver demand right now and why it matters.



The biggest story is industrial demand, which keeps climbing. We're talking 680.5 million ounces in 2024 alone, and it's expected to hit 677.4 million ounces in 2025. The real growth engine? Solar panels and electric vehicles. Silver is literally the best conductor of heat and electricity among all metals, so it's perfect for photovoltaic cells. Solar installations reached 2.2 terawatts by end of 2024 and are projected to triple to over 7 terawatts by 2030. That's massive for silver demand.

Electronics is the biggest chunk of industrial use at 456.6 million ounces expected in 2025, with photovoltaics alone accounting for 197.6 million tons in 2024. Every EV also contains between 25 to 50 grams of silver depending on the model, compared to 15 to 28 grams in traditional gas vehicles. The automotive industry is expected to demand 90 million ounces by 2025 as EV adoption accelerates.

Now, the investment side is getting interesting too. Silver bullion, coins and bars saw demand reach 204.4 million ounces expected in 2025, up 7 percent from 190.9 million ounces in 2024. This uptick is being driven by financial uncertainty. Silver ETFs are a big part of this story. After heavy outflows in 2022-2023, investors started flowing back into silver ETPs in 2024 with 61.6 million ounces of inflows. The Silver Institute is forecasting 14 percent growth to 70 million ounces in 2025, citing Federal Reserve rate cuts, concerns about US debt, and Middle East instability as drivers.

Jewelry demand is expected to decline 6 percent to 196.2 million ounces in 2025 after a modest 3 percent uptick in 2024. Silverware is also seeing pressure, dropping to an expected 46 million ounces in 2025 from 54.2 million ounces in 2024. But these are smaller pieces of the overall silver demand picture.

The broader takeaway is that industrial demand from renewable energy and tech infrastructure is the real growth story, while investment demand is picking up again as financial markets get choppier. If you're watching commodity trends or thinking about where capital flows next, silver demand across these sectors is definitely worth monitoring.
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