2026 Risk Radar: Political & Trade Forces Shaping Wire and Cable Supply Chains

27 January 2026

As the wire and cable industry enters 2026, geopolitical risk is no longer a background concern – it is a core operational reality. Trade policy, sanctions, carbon regulation and supply-chain […]

As the wire and cable industry enters 2026, geopolitical risk is no longer a background concern – it is a core operational reality. Trade policy, sanctions, carbon regulation and supply-chain security initiatives are now directly influencing raw-material availability, pricing volatility, investment decisions and customer demand across global wire and cable markets.

Below, we highlight ten key political and regulatory developments from 2025/26 that are expected to have the most material impact on copper rod, aluminium rod, steel wire, and HVDC/subsea cable supply chains in the year ahead.

Rather than treating these in isolation, businesses should view them collectively as a risk radar – where overlapping policies amplify both disruption and opportunity.

 

  1. EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) – Full Financial Impact from 2026

From January 2026, CBAM moves from a reporting obligation to a cost-bearing regime, requiring importers to purchase certificates linked to embedded carbon emissions.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Higher landed costs for steel wire rod and aluminium rod imported into the EU
  • Increased compliance burden for suppliers without verified emissions data
  • Competitive pressure on non-EU producers supplying EU cable plants

Strategic implication:
CBAM accelerates the shift toward low-carbon metals, favouring EU-based producers and non-EU suppliers able to demonstrate carbon transparency. You can read our article on CBAM overleaf.

 

  1. EU Sanctions on Russian Metals – Aluminium Supply Tightening

The EU’s phased ban on Russian primary aluminium introduces structural supply constraints, even with transitional quotas in place.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Reduced availability of competitively priced aluminium for power and overhead conductors
  • Higher regional premiums for aluminium rod
  • Increased reliance on Middle East and Asian supply

Strategic implication:
Cable producers may need to rebalance sourcing strategies or lock in longer-term supply contracts to manage volatility.

 

  1. United States Copper Tariffs – Section 232 Expansion

In 2025, the US introduced significant tariffs on certain copper and copper-derived imports, with effects continuing into 2026.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Distorted global copper trade flows
  • Higher costs for copper-intensive components and semi-finished products
  • Increased regionalisation of copper processing

Strategic implication:
Copper rod producers and cable manufacturers supplying North America face pressure to localise production or absorb margin erosion.

 

  1. US–China Trade Measures Affecting Energy Transition Materials

Further US tariffs scheduled for 2026 target materials linked to EVs, grids and renewable energy systems.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Indirect cost pressure on HVDC and high-performance cable systems
  • Delays or redesigns in large infrastructure projects
  • Increased uncertainty in long-term project pricing

Strategic implication:
OEMs and EPCs are likely to prioritise suppliers with secure, diversified sourcing and predictable delivery.

 

  1. China Export Control Volatility – Strategic Uncertainty Persists

Temporary easing of some export controls in late 2025 has reduced short-term pressure, but the underlying policy direction remains unpredictable.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Sudden restrictions on critical inputs used in specialised wire coatings, electronics and cable accessories
  • Heightened geopolitical risk exposure for single-source suppliers

Strategic implication:
Supply-chain resilience, stockholding strategies and alternative sourcing are now strategic necessities rather than optional safeguards.

 

  1. Canada’s Steel Derivative Surtaxes

Canada’s introduction of a 25% surtax on selected steel derivative products reinforces the broader trend toward protectionism.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Increased costs for downstream steel wire products
  • Trade friction affecting North American wire and fastener markets

Strategic implication:
Manufacturers serving North America must closely monitor tariff classifications and origin rules to avoid unexpected cost exposure.

 

  1. Strategic Stockpiling of Critical Minerals (Australia and Allies)

Moves by Australia and allied nations to establish critical mineral reserves reflect a global pivot toward resource security.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Long-term re-pricing of specialty materials
  • Increased government influence in raw-material markets

Strategic implication:
This trend supports investment in non-China supply chains, benefiting producers aligned with Western industrial policy goals.

 

  1. Red Sea & Suez Shipping Volatility

While shipping routes have partially reopened, geopolitical risk in the region remains unresolved.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Freight cost volatility
  • Longer lead times for machinery, components and metals moving between Asia and Europe

Strategic implication:
Logistics planning and buffer inventories will remain critical throughout 2026.

 

  1. India’s Quality Control Orders (QCOs)

India continues to refine product-specific quality and certification requirements for metals and industrial products.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Market-entry barriers for foreign wire and rod suppliers
  • Compliance costs and administrative delays

Strategic implication:
For suppliers aligned with India’s electrification and infrastructure growth, compliance is essential to accessing one of the fastest-growing cable markets globally.

 

  1. Forced-Labour and Supply-Chain Due Diligence Requirements

The EU and other regions are strengthening enforcement mechanisms tied to ethical sourcing.

Risk to supply chains:

  • Increased documentation and audit requirements
  • Risk of import bans or reputational damage for non-compliance

Strategic implication:
Transparency and traceability are becoming commercial differentiators, particularly for large-scale energy and infrastructure projects.

 

What This Means for 2026

Taken together, these developments point to a clear reality:
2026 will reward resilience, transparency and strategic alignment with regional policy goals.

For copper, aluminium, steel wire and HVDC/subsea cable supply chains, the key risks are not only price-related but structural – affecting where materials come from, how they are certified, and who ultimately bears the cost.

Companies that proactively assess exposure, diversify sourcing, and invest in compliance and sustainability will be best placed to navigate the year ahead.

 

2026 Risk Radar – Traffic-Light Assessment by Supply Chain

Risk key
🔴 High risk – direct cost, availability or compliance impact likely
🟠 Medium risk – indirect exposure or conditional impact
🟢 Low risk – limited or marginal impact

Political / Trade Risk (2025–26) Copper Rod Aluminium Rod Steel Wire / Rod HVDC & Subsea Cables
EU CBAM – cost-bearing phase (2026) 🟠 Medium 🔴 High 🔴 High 🟠 Medium
EU sanctions on Russian metals 🟢 Low 🔴 High 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium
US copper tariffs (Section 232 expansion) 🔴 High 🟢 Low 🟢 Low 🟠 Medium
US–China trade measures (energy transition inputs) 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🟢 Low 🔴 High
China export control volatility 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🟢 Low 🔴 High
Canada steel derivative surtaxes 🟢 Low 🟢 Low 🔴 High 🟠 Medium
Critical minerals stockpiling (Australia & allies) 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🟢 Low 🔴 High
Red Sea / Suez shipping instability 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🔴 High
India Quality Control Orders (QCOs) 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🔴 High 🟠 Medium
Forced-labour & supply-chain due diligence enforcement 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🟠 Medium 🔴 High

 

Key Takeaways for 2026

  • Copper rod risk is dominated by trade policy and tariffs, particularly in the US, rather than availability.
  • Aluminium rod faces the highest structural risk, driven by sanctions, CBAM costs and supply concentration.
  • Steel wire and rod are most exposed to CBAM, protectionist measures and national standards.
  • HVDC and subsea cables carry the highest cumulative geopolitical risk, due to reliance on complex, multi-country supply chains, specialist materials, shipping routes and regulatory scrutiny.

IWMA

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