The Elements of Power: A Story of War, Technology, and the Dirtiest Supply Chain on Earth Nicolas Niarchos Penguin & William Collins (2026)
You probably don’t think about the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) when scrolling on your phone. Or about the millions of people worldwide whose job it is to dig up and sell vast quantities of metals such as cobalt, copper or tungsten. But you ought to. Electronic devices have turned the metals used in batteries into strategic resources; green technologies such as electric vehicles have accelerated the scramble for them. Metal-rich nations, from Chile to Indonesia, have been pulled into a contest between governments, multinational corporations and armed groups.
In The Elements of Power, journalist Nicolas Niarchos refuses to let the realities of the critical-mineral supply chain be overlooked. He weaves together many seemingly disparate threads, from the DRC’s colonial history to how the mineral-extraction industry has grown in several nations to battery development in leading laboratories around the world. He lays out clearly the emergence of resource nationalism and superpower competition to secure dependable supplies. Rather than a dull account of business deals, Niarchos shares a vivid story of how the greed of a handful of high-ranking individuals has hurt millions of people.