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British Columbia capitalizes on advantage in mining

Vancouver annually draws more than 6,000 industry professionals to the AME鈥檚 annual Roundup conference. Image: Nelson Bennett.

Given the importance of US institutional and retail investor capital for the province鈥檚 mining industry, it鈥檚 always instructive to hear what American investors like Rick Rule, president of Sprott US Holdings, think about the province of British Columbia as a place to build mines.

At a CEO breakfast at the opening of the Association for Mineral Exploration Roundup conference last week, Rule, a retail broker specializing in mining and exploration investments, said Vancouver has proved itself as a mining centre of excellence and is well poised to benefit from the convergence of mining and technology.

He said it needs to do just one thing: 鈥淛ust. Don鈥檛. Screw. It. Up.鈥

For a region that is only 鈥渞easonably well endowed geologically,鈥 B.C. punches well above its weight as a mining industry player, he said.

The financing, legal, accounting, engineering, environmental and other professional services that have developed around mining in Vancouver have made it a global 鈥渙ne-stop shop鈥 for the mining and minerals exploration sector

Rick Rule, president, Sprott US Holdings

The financing, legal, accounting, engineering, environmental and other professional services that have developed around mining in Vancouver have made it a global 鈥渙ne-stop shop鈥 for the mining and minerals exploration sector.

鈥淰ancouver has become a city that has one of the largest population bases of mining professionals on the planet,鈥 Rule said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have a lot of 鈥 institutional capital in Vancouver, but Vancouver has been unusually good at mobilizing capital from other places. And in that you have a real advantage 鈥 you have us. You have access to U.S. retail.鈥

Sprott Capital Partners, for instance, led a series of private placements totalling more than $20 million in 2019 in Vancouver鈥檚 Sun Metals Corp. (TSX-V:SUNM), which is developing the Stardust copper-gold project northwest of Fort. St. James.

Rule said cities around the world strive to become 鈥渉ubs鈥 or centres of excellence for a variety of industries such as biotech, artificial intelligence, clean technology and aerospace. Vancouver is already a mining centre of excellence, and its digital and clean-technology sectors provide a natural opportunity for synergy.

鈥淭he convergence in technology and mining is going to occur 鈥 and what better place for it to occur?鈥

Even environmental 鈥渕esses鈥 and disasters like the Mount Polley tailings pond collapse in 2014 present business opportunities, Rule said.

鈥淭here is going to be a monster, monster opportunity 鈥 how do I put this politely? 鈥 in cleaning up the messes that we鈥檝e made historically,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he opportunities that are going to become available to issuers, to consultants, to everybody in environmental remediation, environmental underwriting and environmental stewardship, while they impose a cost, also have the opportunity to impose substantial benefits. And I think Vancouver has the ability to be absolutely at the forefront of that.

Vancouver is already a mining centre of excellence, and its digital and clean-technology sectors provide a natural opportunity for synergy

鈥淰ancouver has amazing and, I believe, durable competitive advantages in the mining business. Durable enough that it actually doesn鈥檛 need to be improved on, except in the sense that if you don鈥檛 continue to improve, you degrade.鈥

Both the John Horgan government in B.C. and the Justin Trudeau government have taken steps recently that suggest they are not taking mining in Canada for granted, and are making efforts to support it and grow the sector.

It is an industry that accounts for 19% of Canada鈥檚 exports and 5% of Canada鈥檚 gross domestic product. It is also the single largest sectoral employer of First Nations, many of which say jobs and prosperity are important components of reconciliation.

Last year, the Trudeau government produced the Canadian Minerals and Metals Plan, in collaboration with the provinces, which acknowledged how important mining already is to the Canadian economy, and set out six areas of action to bolster the sector. They are:

鈥ax reform and financial incentives;

鈥ddressing regulatory burden and overlap;

鈥ncreased funding for geoscience;

鈥ettling Indigenous land claims;

鈥orking with Indigenous communities in remote regions to address infrastructure deficits; and

鈥ncouraging processing and smelting.

In the last budget, the federal government extended the mineral exploration tax credit out to 2024, and the Trudeau government also recently signed a collaboration agreement with the U.S. on critical metals.

Paul Lefebvre, parliamentary secretary to the minister of natural resources, said the critical metals plan aims not only to secure the supply of rare earths and other critical metals in North America through new mines, but also to develop the advanced manufacturing that uses these metals.

Lefebvre cited a battery manufacturing plant for electric vehicles as an example of the kind of manufacturing Canada has in mind.

鈥淗ow do we secure all those minerals that support that industry?鈥 Lefebvre said.

Provincially, the John Horgan BC NDP government struck the Mining Jobs Task Force, agreed to adopt all 25 recommendations and bumped up the budget of the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources by $20 million to reduce permitting backlogs.

But it also enacted changes to the B.C. Environmental Management Act in a way that some fear could kill projects before they even enter the environmental review process.

鈥淭he new environmental assessment process 鈥 adds a tremendous amount of costs,鈥 John Rustad, BC Liberal MLA for Nechako Lakes, said during a political panel discussion at the conference. 鈥淏ecause under the new environmental assessment, you鈥檝e got to cover off all the First Nations costs 鈥 which quite frankly is open-ended.鈥澛

(This article first appeared in )


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