Canada aims to become a major player in rare earth mining for chips and batteries

zohaibahd

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In a nutshell: Canada is attempting to position itself as a production hub for critical minerals that face supply chain risks. These elements are essential for economic security, attaining net-zero emissions, and maintaining a competitive position in global supply chains.

The nation's latest Critical Mineral Strategy Annual Report for 2024 outlines plans to expand domestic mining of more than 30 minerals designated as critical. There's particular emphasis on six of them: lithium, graphite, nickel, cobalt, copper, and rare earth elements.

The impetus is both economic and geopolitical. As US-China tensions escalate, there are growing concerns about overreliance on Chinese suppliers for crucial technology inputs like rare earth magnets. At the same time, the global push for clean energy is supercharging demand for battery metals, solar materials, and other strategic resources that Canada apparently has in abundance. The country needs these resources to hit its net-zero target.

"It is believed Canada has very large quantities of these materials, even if they have not yet begun processing them in significant quantities," James Edmondson, research director at IDTechEx, told EE Times.

Edmondson adds that Nechalacho, a rare earth mining project in the Northwest Territories of Canada, aims to be a globally relevant supplier, targeting annual production of at least 5,000 tons of rare earth oxides by 2025.

On the battery front, IDTechEx analysts view Canada as a potential leader in nickel production outside of China and Indonesia. Nickel is a key component of the nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) cathodes used in 63% of electric vehicle batteries globally last year.

There's no doubt that Canada has substantial mineral resources; however, some industry insiders believe the nation's environmental regulations could hinder the rapid development of new mines, which typically require 10-15 years to get online. They suggest other countries such as the US, China, and Australia may move faster on mineral projects, and that Canada's efforts might already be too late.

There are also looming technology risks, with the possibility of a game-changing new battery chemistry rendering some of these efforts obsolete.

Still, with global rivalry over critical minerals intensifying, most analysts see Canada's strategy as a necessary and overdue move to assert its voice in these strategically vital supply chains.

The International Energy Agency predicts that demand for critical minerals could skyrocket over 30-fold by 2040 amid the global energy transition. Lithium demand is expected to see the fastest growth, increasing by more than 40 times by 2040.

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Canada has great potential. They are rich in many resources, if only the socialists get out of the way.
 
Remember it's ok to pollute via strip mining resources as long as it can somehow be linked to reducing carbon emissions somewhere later in the value chain.
 
Aiming and Actually are two different worlds. Also, lets double down on those tariffs and make it 50% more costly for the buyers!
 
And when things become much more costly people might decide that they don't need to send their devices to landfill as soon as a new model comes out.
 
Canada aims to be a lot of things but falls short on everything. Our leaders are nothing more American puppet play things. Who knows maybe we will become the 51st state. The US has been trying for a long time and we have enough incompetence in the country to just make it happen.
 
We only have traces of certain rare earth elements. Only enough to make China laugh.
For a reason. Developed country hate everythign associated with these undistries. Did China reach leadership in mining REE alone or did it come from the West like everything else that made it the country it is today?
It is, or most of it is about environment.
 
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Feeding our society is going to turn every major country into a mining powerhouse. We need to organize and optimize before we anger the Earth. Aggressive mining is how extinction level events are triggered. What if some creature is burrowing into your leg, you would definitely kill it wouldn't you?
 
Uh-oh. Now Trump is really going to be drooling over Canada. 🤣 I wonder if he will invade them?
Given that they're firing their prime minister in the wake of the crippling inflation and a housing crisis brought about by the utter failure of his ultra-lliberal diktats, I imagine its far more likely they petition to join on their own. The sensible provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan, at least ... which are the only ones worth having.
 
Given that they're firing their prime minister in the wake of the crippling inflation and a housing crisis brought about by the utter failure of his ultra-lliberal diktats, I imagine its far more likely they petition to join on their own. The sensible provinces like Alberta and Saskatchewan, at least ... which are the only ones worth having.
Ah yes. More people convinced Lions and Tigers and Bears really exist and that one man is responsible for those fictitious creatures and/or one man can fix those fictitious creatures(even if they are dolts). 🤣

Time will tell, but thanks for the propaganda dose! ;)
 
Ah yes. More people convinced Lions and Tigers and Bears really exist and that one man is responsible for those fictitious creatures....🤣

Time will tell, but thanks for the propaganda dose! ;)
So your contention is that the Prime Minister of Canada does not enact policies which affect the entire country? Or that, as titular head of his political party, he also strongly influences what measures they promote in Parliament?
 
So your contention is that the Prime Minister of Canada does not enact policies which affect the entire country? Or that, as titular head of his political party, he also strongly influences what measures they promote in Parliament?

I come back here after a long while and see it's still nothing but extreme right wing old men with a disturbing man-love obsession with Justin Trudeau. What will you guys b!tch about when he's no longer in power? 🤔 Let me guess...the Conservatives will save us! 😂 Politicians are nothing more than a reflection of the population at large...we get the government that we deserve. I live in Saskatchewan, and I for one am very glad we don't have any influence in Canada. Alberta and Saskatchewan are basically Texas and Mississippi-north. Hee-haw rednecks. I don't want to be the US...you couldn't pay me enough to live there.
 
I wonder if Canada realises that mining creates huge amounts of CO2 emissions. I doubt that industry would run on renewables. Hypocrisy?
 
Ahhhh, now I understand why Trump is persistently hinting and perhaps planning a little Anschluss on Canada.
 
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