You are absolutely right.
The difficulty is that the company that will mine this will be able to find ten buyers for their product. We, for example, have one of the largest graphite mines in the world, which is in Africa. Six customers buy all the production from us, and they are Chinese. Twenty other customers are waiting for production to become available, and we are being asked to increase our production.
The future owner of the mine, whether they are Chinese or Australians, will have their clients in their country. Since we don't have anode and cathode manufacturers in this country, they could invest the $200 million needed to start lithium hydroxide production and sell the products at home, in China or Korea. The sale could be done under 10- or 5-year contracts.
That's the reality, and I always say it's because of that reality that the mine owner has to be Canadian. We need, for example, Lion Electric to be able to call Benoit La Salle and ask him if he can increase his capacity to provide the 10,000 tons he needs next year or two years from now. We need to be able to talk to each other and welcome the people who come to us in Abitibi. That is the power of being together.
If we were to go to Hong Kong or Beijing for supplies, we would find that these cities are chronically short of resources. If we wanted to, we could sell everything to China right away. We could sell them our graphite, nickel and cobalt mines. They buy everything at a high price. If we refuse to sell them the mines, it means we refuse their offers.
In two weeks, China will close a nearly $1-billion deal with South America. It will buy a lithium mine from it. Why? All that ore is going to go out of South America and into China.
What Mr. Vegh was saying is absolutely true. We need to work on making anodes and cathodes. We need to work on producing components so that when Lion Electric says they have significant demands for their chips, we don't have to ask China to meet their needs. The reality...