Want to know how the West could ease its mining hardware bottleneck? Australia, Canada, Japan, and Norway are stepping up. A new analysis from a leading think tank maps out the strategy: these allied nations could collectively reduce Western reliance on Chinese mineral imports, which matters big-time for anyone in the blockchain and crypto space. When supply chains for rare earths and lithium get diversified, hardware manufacturers gain breathing room—and that ripples through the entire mining ecosystem. The shift won't happen overnight, but geopolitical pressure is mounting, and these economies are ready to fill the gap. For the crypto community watching semiconductor and chip availability? This is a significant move to watch.

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LiquidationHuntervip
· 01-06 19:12
Mining hardware shortages are finally getting some relief, with Western countries joining forces. The monopoly on China’s mineral resources should have been broken long ago, otherwise we’ll always be held back. Diversification of supply chains is the trend, but don’t expect results next year; this is a long-term game. Will this help reduce chip prices? Can they become cheaper? If countries like Australia and Canada can truly develop their mineral resources, mining costs can decrease, and miners’ profits will be larger. Geopolitical games are escalating again; the crypto community needs to closely monitor chip developments. No matter how good the words, it all depends on execution—don’t just talk on paper again. This wave of supply chain restructuring will give ASIC miner manufacturers some breathing room, and partners should be happy.
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StakeWhisperervip
· 01-04 00:16
Are the West trying to break free from chip bottlenecks? Relying on Australia, Canada, Japan, Norway? Honestly, it's a bit unreliable; we still have to depend on our own strength.
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GweiTooHighvip
· 01-04 00:05
It's the same supply chain de-centralization narrative again. We've been hearing this for two years. Is it okay now?
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MergeConflictvip
· 01-03 23:55
There is finally some movement in the chip supply chain; it should have been done this way a long time ago.
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