A common assumption is shaping the current thinking on refining capacity of a nation. It assumes that rising demand will naturally lead to increased investment, and domestic refining capacity will expand accordingly. The reality does not conform to this assumption. However, as the importance of critical minerals has become more widely recognized, this belief has only strengthened. Governments, industry, and financial institutions increasingly operate on the premise that as demand intensifies, capital will move to meet it, and the necessary infrastructure will follow. The logic is straightforward and widely accepted. Yet despite sustained demand across critical minerals and growing emphasis on domestic production, this expansion has not occurred at the required scale. Demand does not guarantee matching capacity.

Refining capacity is not built only in response to demand. Investment is directed towards projects where timelines are sufficiently understood, costs can be anticipated, and risks can be managed within acceptable limits. In refining, these conditions are inherently vague and difficult to maintain. Development timelines are long, upfront capital requirements are significant, and returns depend on margins that can shift over time. These characteristics do not disappear in the presence of strong demand. Demand may signal the need for capacity, but it does not shorten timelines, reduce capital exposure, or stabilize returns. Projects are evaluated under these conditions, not under the level of demand they are expected to meet.

Under these conditions, refining capacity does not expand evenly across locations. It tends to develop where projects can be scaled, operated continuously, and integrated into existing systems. Over time, this favors larger facilities, where production can be concentrated and costs reduced through scale and shared infrastructure. As capacity accumulates in fewer locations, operations become more efficient, and duplication is minimized. This structure reinforces itself: expanding existing facilities is often more predictable and less costly than building new ones in parallel. As a result, investment is more likely to flow toward the expansion of existing capacity rather than the creation of new, independent operations, reinforcing a system that favors continuity and concentration over distribution, where fewer but larger facilities carry an increasing share of production. As this concentration deepens, so does the influence of existing operators within the regulatory and industrial environment, contributing to conditions that can make new entry more complex and difficult to achieve.

The expectations now being placed on refining have shifted. Capacity is no longer assessed only by its ability to operate efficiently, but by its ability to remain available under disruption, to exist across multiple locations, and to reduce reliance on any single system. These requirements imply duplication as redundancy and a condition for resilience. This introduces a fundamental tension: A system designed to remove duplication in order to reduce cost is now expected to produce excess capacity for resilience. As a result, refining capacity might continue to expand, but not in a way that would simply reduce dependency on external supplies efficiency, but to deliver resilience.