Commentary: Partnerships with First Nations key to Canada’s mining resurgence

If you are reading this on a cell phone or a computer, you have fueled the demand for the dozens of minerals that go into those devices. Copper, nickel, zinc, cobalt, gold, silver — just to name a few — are the backbone of the ever-growing digital economy. The greater the Cloud, the more expansive the search for and production of the Earth’s bounty of minerals.

It’s the same in the technological progress in all fields. Minerals are essential. Copper, lithium and graphite are the foundation of the batteries that power electric vehicles.

And if you are one of the thousands reading this at the 2019 convention of the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada, you know there is a world of possibility.

It is fitting that the largest annual mineral exploration and mining event on the planet is in Canada — an ongoing global leader in the mining sector, with a production value of $44 billion in 2017, supplying 60 different varieties of mineral commodities to over 100 countries. Ontario’s mineral production boasted a value of $9.9 billion in 2017, and 90% of mining’s GDP stays within Ontario limits.

And unbeknown to many of those who call Toronto home, the bedrock of the well-known financial district of Bay Street is mining. Half of the world’s mining and exploration companies are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange.  Thirty per cent of mining capital is raised in Toronto.

When the Canadian mining sector is strong, the whole of Canada benefits.  And that is especially true in Ontario.

We need to operate more effectively and efficiently. Industry leaders are applying digital communications, laptops and smartphones to the gathering of real-time data through sensors to take advantage of Big Data applications. To give a simple example, let’s implement ventilation-on-demand to reduce energy use, blowing fresh air only to where people are actually working underground, again employing state-of-the-art sensors and communications technology.

We need to dig deeper and explore further than ever before to unearth the mineral wealth that is the backbone of the new economy.

And if we are to be successful in going further to ever-more remote locations, we need to address the infrastructure requirements and recognize that we need to partner with those who live on the land and have been there for centuries.

As the former Ontario Deputy Minister of Northern Development and Mines, I’ve spent a lot of time in our province’s North. I’ve been in the communities. I’ve spoken with the people.

The litany of sub-standard living conditions is made real every time I’ve travelled. Proper housing is scarce and crowded. Wood-fired stoves keep generations of the same families just warm enough from the extreme cold in the winter months.

Federally funded educational facilities lag far behind the standard for kids in the rest of the province. There are no hospitals, few services.

And most wrenching, there is often no hope.

Mining can provide that hope. It brings an economic foundation for a future of growth and participation by Indigenous people. It is often the only modern economic activity in remote regions. It is already the sector that employs more Indigenous people in Canada than any other.

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