Thank you for the opportunity to speak today, Mr. Chair.
My name is Trevor Walker. I am the CEO of Frontier Lithium, a Sudbury-based, Canadian-owned pre-production mine development targeting to become a manufacturer of battery-quality lithium to support vehicle and battery supply chains in North America.
We are developing the PAK lithium project, located in the Oji-Cree Treaty 5 region of northwestern Ontario. The resource was originally discovered by the Government of Ontario through the OGS in the late 1990s. I have personally been working on advancing the project since early 2010.
I am supported by a strong Canadian leadership team and board of directors who see the importance of building a strong northern Ontario-based company feeding supply chains that will benefit Canadians, including indigenous peoples. It is worth noting that our board representation includes a member of an Oji-Cree community located near our project.
To give you an idea of our current size, our recent preliminary economic assessment released in 2021 indicates a 26-year mine life—enough lithium chemicals to support the production of roughly 500,000 electric vehicles annually. It contains a net present value—or NPV—of $1.25 billion post-tax. We are currently growing our resource, and we are undertaking a pre-feasibility study of the project, which will be released in 2022.
The PAK project is a tier one global lithium resource here in North America, and it is a top-three resource in the world by quality. It is a resource that has attracted international interest. Perhaps more importantly, due to its size and purity, it is the key to attracting cathode and battery production to Canada and will support the battery electric vehicle supply chain on both sides of the border. It is by all definitions a strategic resource for Canada.
It's important to acknowledge that in the advancement of our business, we have been the fortunate recipients of government innovation funding, namely through Ontario's invest north program, to help in the advancement of the chemical-processing portion of our planned business.
I understand that the Standing Committee on Industry and Technology produced a comprehensive report on the development of critical mineral supply chains last year. I am hoping that my experience in bringing the PAK lithium project towards production will be helpful to you in advancing at least some of your current areas of study so that we can enhance Canada's response to this critical and important issue.
Canada is blessed with an abundance of critical minerals and is well positioned to be a world leader in green technologies. To realize our competitive advantage on the world stage, however, we must answer one question: How do we use our advantages and overcome a myriad of domestic and business complexities, all within a time frame dictated by the market, while preserving value to shareholders and the strategic interests of Canadians more broadly?
To do this, we have to understand what our advantages are, be honest about the complexities we face, understand the markets we're working within, revise our plan as required and expedite its implementation.
Given the time I have, I will explore this question and walk through what I see as possible solutions.
In my mind, the advantages that Canada has are as follows: an abundance of natural resources, including minerals, water, energy and renewable energy; critical minerals like lithium, on which the battery supply chains are dependent; proximity to supply chain end-users and markets, such as car manufacturing in Ontario and Michigan and the North American market; mature resource and financial sectors; a skilled workforce; the low relative costs of mining inputs such as land, power and water; rule of law; political will; business-minded indigenous peoples; entrepreneurial spirit; and resolve.
Complexities I see include the fact that our critical mineral deposits are often remote, not proximal to infrastructure, and we have become reliant on industry to permit, design and fund their development. Additionally, mine development and processing, though predominately a provincial jurisdiction, can be regulated federally and municipally and require strong relationships and input from indigenous people; it is very complex.
Our regulatory systems, by their complexity and lack of time limits, inhibit us from achieving the first-to-market advantage and jeopardize our ability to be leaders and, in some cases, even players. Unpredictable permitting timelines needed to permit the development of a mine, the infrastructure, and to locate and build chemical-processing plants are a barrier and can leave mine developers financially weakened and at risk of being taken over by larger, often foreign-owned, entities. We're facing that now.