Close Menu
Metals Weekly
    TRENDING -
    • Dominican Republic has over 150 million tons of rare earth deposits, president says
    • Public-Private Collaboration Crucial for Critical Minerals Security
    • US mining company Alcoa hit with ‘unprecedented’ $55m penalty for illegal clearing of WA jarrah forests
    • India, Canada ink pacts on critical minerals, uranium ore; eye free trade deal
    • Salt of the Earth: Vast Underground Salt Caverns Are Preserving Our History—and Just Might Power Our Future
    • Malaysia Extends Australian Mining License But Demands End to Radioactive Waste
    • From Policy to Permit: The Path to Regulatory Clarity in Mexico
    • Montana honors men who died in state’s worst coal mining disaster 83-years ago
    Metals Weekly
    • Home
    • Critical Materials
    • Environment
    • Global Policy
    • Mining
    Metals Weekly
    Home»Global Policy»In boost to mining industry, Canada commits to stockpile critical minerals as a national security priority

    In boost to mining industry, Canada commits to stockpile critical minerals as a national security priority

    Global Policy 4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    In boost to mining industry, Canada commits to stockpile critical minerals as a national security priority
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Move would set price floors, long-term sales to help Canadian companies compete with China

    Canada is officially designating certain critical minerals as a national security priority under the Defence Production Act, a move that would allow the federal government to support the mining industry by guaranteeing it a buyer and a minimum price.

    The move was announced at a G7 energy and environment meeting in Toronto on Friday, where countries discussed countering China’s overwhelming dominance of critical mineral production. Those minerals are essential for modern technologies like electric vehicles and clean energy, and Western nations have been growing increasingly anxious over China’s control of their supply chain.

    “We need to create the certainty of demand and the certainty pricing so that those mines and processing facilities can get built,“ said Canada’s Energy Minister Tim Hodgson at a news conference at the G7 meeting on Friday.

    Hodgson announced that G7 countries were investing $6.4 billion into 26 critical mineral projects across Canada to support the domestic mining industry and build alternatives to Chinese minerals.

    Projects getting funding include Nouveau Monde Graphite’s Matawinie mine near Montreal, Rio Tinto’s Scandium production plant (rare earths used in aerospace and defence) in Sorel-Tracy, Que., and Torngat Metals’ Strange Lake project in Quebec, which involves rare earths. The price floor being set for buying these minerals is confidential due to security and commercial reasons, according to the government.

    Trying to counter China’s dominance

    Without state intervention, Canadian companies trying to get off the ground would have their prices undercut by Chinese suppliers, industry experts say.

    “Some commodities where China dominates, you can’t get a project off the ground. We have projects across the country that can’t get financing because they’re seen to be too vulnerable,” said Pierre Gratton, president of the Mining Association of Canada.

    “China can swoop in tomorrow, lower prices, and the project is dead on arrival.”

    In boost to mining industry, Canada commits to stockpile critical minerals as a national security priority

    Hodgson has been holding talks with his G7 counterparts — the group of industrialized economies that includes the U.S., U.K., Germany, Japan, France, Italy and Canada — for months over co-operating on a new critical minerals production alliance — or a “buyers club,” as he calls it.

    The idea is for G7 countries to invest in critical minerals projects within the bloc — agreements that will help set price floors or long-term buying agreements, helping build up critical minerals production in Western countries.

    It taps into growing anxiety over China’s global dominance of the critical minerals supply chain. China is the leading refiner of 19 out 20 important strategic minerals, with an average market share of 70 per cent, according to the International Energy Agency.

    In the past few years, China’s share of the market has continued to grow at the same time as the need for these critical minerals becomes more important — in a wide range of growing technologies, like battery-electric vehicles and solar panels.

    “Canada is blessed with a lot of these critical minerals, and it represents a multi-billion dollar opportunity for Canada to responsibly develop these minerals,” said Eyab Al-Aini, senior research associate at the Canadian Climate Institute.

    But, he said, Canada’s resources are untapped. His team has analyzed six priority minerals — copper, lithium, graphite, cobalt, nickel and rare earths — all of which, they found, could grow in demand dramatically. Canada’s domestic demand for critical minerals alone could be $16 billion per year by 2040, driven largely by a local battery production industry, according to the analysis.

    “In 2025, two-thirds of all global energy investments is going to clean technologies, and a lot of those technologies that the world will need depend on critical minerals.” Al-Aini said, referring to investments in clean technologies like solar and wind outpacing fossil fuels.

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/critical-minerals-g7-mining-9.6962604

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Standard Uranium details drill plans for Rocas uranium project

    Standard Uranium details drill plans for Rocas uranium project

    Canada’s Critical Minerals Push: Meeting the Capital Gap

    Don't Miss

    Standard Uranium details drill plans for Rocas uranium project

    Global Policy 2 Mins Read

    Standard Uranium Ltd (TSX-V:STND, OTCQB:STTDF, FRA:9SU0) revealed it has locked in plans for the first-ever…

    Standard Uranium details drill plans for Rocas uranium project

    Canada’s Critical Minerals Push: Meeting the Capital Gap

    West needs its own pricing to escape China’s rare earths grip

    Top Stories

    Precious metals miners well bid as Iran strikes stock safe haven gold demand

    Mining stocks are the new market darlings, fueled by geopolitical risks and AI demand

    U.S. House voted to repeal mining ban near Boundary Waters

    New report raises alarm on massive toxic hazard — here are the details

    Our Picks

    Zambians pay price amid Copperbelt mining boom

    Zambia mine regulator lifts suspension of operations at Mopani’s Mufulira mine

    Zambia dismisses US health warning after toxic spill in copper mining area

    Don't Miss

    From Failure To Flow | World Coal

    Alaska project poised to deliver antimony

    BHP Results: Big Australian’s profit drops to lowest in five years, but dividend beats forecasts and copper grows

    Weekly Newsletter

    Subscribe to our weekly Newsletter to keep up to date on the latest news in the metals, minerals and mining industry

    Copyright © 2025 - Metals Weekly. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.