PUBLICATION

Global Business Reports

AUTHORS

Margarita Todorova, Micah Lanez, Joshua Russell

Ontario Mining and Toronto's Global Reach 2025 Pre-Release

November 25, 2024

2024 has been a transitional year for Ontario's globetrotting prospectors and miners, as over 50 nations held elections this year and dozens of new heads of state were sworn in, with great repercussions for Canadian mining operations abroad. This, combined with changes to the Investment Canada Act and the closure of the Canadian-owned Cobre Panama mine has upended the status quo for Canadian mining activities overseas.

Back home, Ontario's two newest mines —Côté Gold and Greenstone Gold— achieved commercial production, while a wave of expansion projects swept the province as miners race to boost production and capitalize on the record gold price. While juggling a stringent permitting regime, Indigenous affairs and environmental concerns, Ontario's world-class ecosystem of service providers and innovators is supporting mine developers' efforts to meet the world's insatiable appetite for Ontario's metals.

Despite less favorable battery metal prices, the provincial government continues to pursue its critical minerals strategy. They have poured millions into subsidies and grants for downstream developments and infrastructure to solidify Ontario's place in North America's battery and green energy supply chain.

Featuring insights from over 70 mining industry leaders, the Ontario Mining and Toronto's Global Reach 2025 pre-release edition provides a panoramic view of this ever-changing sector, shining light on the most compelling mining stories from snowy Sudbury to the green hills of Guyana.

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MACIG 2025 - Mining in Africa Country Investment Guide

It is said that mining is a patient industry. Current demand projections are not. Demand for minerals deemed ‘critical’ is set to increase almost fourfold by 2030, according to the UN. Demand for nickel, cobalt and lithium is predicted to double, triple and rise ten-fold, respectively, between 2022 and 2050. The world will need to mine more copper between 2018 and 2050 than it has mined throughout history. 2050 is also the deadline to curb emissions before reaching a point of ‘no return.’ The pace of mineral demand and the consequences of not meeting it force the industry to act fast and take more risks. Mining cannot afford to be a patient industry anymore. The scramble for supply drives miners back to geological credentials, and therefore to places like the African Central Copperbelt.

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