China casts more metal than the next nine countries combined.
More than 5 times US output.
That same industrial base feeds construction, vehicles, ships, weapons, and military production.
China’s shipbuilding capacity sits around 200 times the US.
The difference shows up when countries need to replace losses and expand production quickly.
China also controls around 90% of commercial drone production and 80% of drone components.
Some scary stats on China's militaro-industrail complex's capacity:
– China casts more metal products than the next nine countries combined and >5× the US.
– Its shipbuilding capacity is ~200× the US (a total-capacity figure, not per-ship speed).
– It makes ~90% of the world's… pic.twitter.com/RcxKN4SDZZ— Léo (@LeoKharon) July 13, 2026
Civilian factories can be switched toward military production much faster than countries starting from scratch.
Some estimates suggest China could use less than 1% of existing capacity and produce around 1 billion weaponized drones per year after retooling.
Europe moved in the opposite direction.
Net Zero policies pushed more manufacturing toward Asia while domestic factories disappeared.
The emissions did not disappear with them.
Many goods now travel farther and come from dirtier energy systems.
Europe lost factories.
Europe lost industrial jobs.
Europe lost parts of the supply chain needed for defense.
A country that cannot produce steel, ships, electronics, batteries, and drones at scale becomes dependent on whoever still can.
China spent years building capacity.
Europe spent years reducing it.
The irony keeps growing.
Lower domestic production.
More imported goods.
More dependence on foreign factories.
And in some cases, higher total emissions.
The argument now moving through defense circles is simple.
Cheap energy and industrial capacity matter.
Nuclear and solar expansion could help rebuild that foundation.
Without factories, even the strongest military plans eventually hit a production wall.