Purebase places produced silver (gold to follow in 2027) with the industries that depend on them — through a network of refiners, traders and end buyers. Here is who uses the metal, and how.
Two metals, many markets. Silver and gold move from production into a broad set of industries — part of what gives them such deep, liquid global demand.
Silver and gold are prized for conductivity and corrosion resistance — used in connectors, contacts, bonding wire and circuitry.
Silver paste is essential to most photovoltaic cells, making solar one of the fastest-growing sources of silver demand.
Modern and electric vehicles use silver across wiring, contacts and charging systems — more per vehicle than conventional cars.
The oldest and largest market for gold, and a steady channel for silver in adornment and fine silverware.
Bars, coins, ETFs and central-bank reserves — precious metals held as a store of value and a monetary asset.
Silver's antimicrobial properties in dressings and devices; gold in dentistry, implants and diagnostics.
Reliable electrical contacts and reflective coatings for satellites, spacecraft and defense systems.
Brazing and soldering, bearings, catalysts and water treatment all rely on silver's unique properties.
Purebase aggregates, markets and sells silver (gold to follow in 2027), placing it through an established network — the route from the mine to the industries above.