Federal government moves to cut China out of Canadian critical mineral industry

Originally posted on Cbc.ca


By Mia Rabson

Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry François-Philippe Champagne rises during question period in the House of Commons in Ottawa on Thursday. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

After a national security review, Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne is ordering three Chinese resource companies to sell their interests in Canadian critical mineral firms.

Champagne's order comes less than a week after he said Canada would be limiting the involvement of foreign state-owned companies in the industry.

Critical minerals and metals, such as lithium, cadmium, nickel and cobalt, are essential components of everything from wind turbines and electric cars to laptops, solar panels and rechargeable batteries.

China is the dominant player in critical mineral refining and processing, and in the manufacturing supply chain of battery cell components.

But China does not produce a lot of the minerals, and has instead invested heavily in overseas mines in places like Canada to acquire the raw materials it needs.

Canada and its allies are desperately trying to upend China's dominance in the field and create a supply chain that relies on what are deemed more stable and reliable partners.

An electric vehicle being charged in Ottawa in July. Manufacturing EV batteries requires certain so-called critical minerals, few of which are found in North America. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

"While Canada continues to welcome foreign direct investment, we will act decisively when investments threaten our national security and our critical minerals supply chains, both at home and abroad," Champagne said in a written statement late Wednesday.

The Investment Canada Act subjects foreign investments to review for national security concerns and Champagne said critical mineral investments get "enhanced scrutiny."

He said a "multi-step national security review process" by national security and intelligence agencies concluded three companies must divest their holdings in Canadian critical mineral companies.

The order requires Sinomine (Hong Kong) Rare Metals Resources to sell its investment in Vancouver-based Power Metals Corp., which has exploration projects for lithium, cesium and tantalum in northern Ontario.

Chengze Lithium International Ltd. is required to divest its interests in Lithium Chile Inc., a company headquartered in Calgary with more than a dozen lithium projects underway in Chile.

And Zangge Mining Investment is ordered to sell its investment in Ultra Lithium Inc., a Vancouver-based resource development firm with lithium and gold projects in both Canada and Argentina.

Canada and the U.S. have both identified dozens of minerals and metals they deem essential to their future economic success.

They point to the instability created by Europe's reliance on Russia for oil and gas after the Russian invasion in Ukraine last winter, and growing tensions with China as reasons to ensure supply chains rest mostly in the hands of friends and allies.

In June, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen referred to it as "friend-shoring" during a trip to Ottawa.

"So friend-shoring is the idea that countries that espouse a common set of values about international trade, conduct in the global economy, should trade and get the benefits of trade so we have multiple sources of supply and are not reliant excessively on sourcing critical goods from countries where we have geopolitical concerns," Yellen said.

The new rules for critical mineral investments announced by Champagne last week mean investments by state-owned firms will only be approved on "an exceptional basis" and will apply to investments of any size, from small stakes all the way to outright takeovers.

It will affect everything from exploration and development to mining, refining and processing.

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