Thank you very much. Good afternoon, Chair and committee members.
I want to first acknowledge that I come to you from the traditional lands of the Huron, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee, Wendat and Oneida peoples, the Anishinabe and the Mississaugas of the Credit, and all the indigenous first nations who lived on these lands over the centuries.
My name, as you mentioned, is Jeff Killeen, and I am the policy and program director for the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada. Thank you for inviting me to appear today on behalf of Canada's mineral exploration industry.
As you know, or I hope you know, PDAC represents thousands of members, both corporations and individuals, that work in mineral exploration and mining in Canada and around the world.
PDAC operates through a committee structure. Industry professionals and stakeholders with real on-the-ground experience in industry collaborate to inform our recommendations and the points of advocacy that we bring to governments.
In recent years, PDAC has engaged with the government in developing the Canadian minerals and metals plan and Canada's critical minerals list, and in efforts to improve the efficiency of targeted programs and incentives that can accelerate critical mineral discoveries within Canadian borders.
We are certainly encouraged to see the Government of Canada recognize our potential to become a supplier of choice for the minerals needed to transition to a low-carbon future, and we support a number of the commitments noted in the Prime Minister's recent mandate letters to cabinet.
We share this committee's enthusiasm towards critical minerals, and I offer recommendations that aim to both spur exploration for critical minerals in Canada and bolster our capabilities to conduct science- and evidence-based processes for infrastructure and development, land management and conservation decision-making.
From previous testimony, I understand this committee has had some questions about the efficacy of the mineral exploration tax credit, or METC, which combines with flow-through shares to incentivize early-stage mineral exploration within Canadian borders.
I can tell you definitively that this mechanism is a foundational reason that Canadian mineral exploration companies and projects attract more capital than any other country. In 2021 alone, flow-through and the METC were the source of more than $1 billion of investment into Canadian projects.
The impact of this economic activity is magnified in rural and remote regions of the country, where our sector typically operates, and places the mineral industry in a unique position to help accelerate economic recovery in parts of Canada where few alternatives exist.
While record-high gold prices and base metal prices trending higher have boosted exploration activity in Canada over the last two to three years, the amount of exploration spending directed towards critical minerals such as cobalt, lithium, graphite or rare earths represents less than 3% of domestic activity in 2021. That's based on NRCan estimates.
For Canada to be successful in efficiently transitioning to a low-carbon future and becoming a supplier of choice for the minerals and metals needed by the world to effect such a change, we must increase our inventory of economic and socially viable critical mineral deposits here in Canada.
That's why PDAC has called for an expansion of the mineral exploration tax credit. This is to help spur grassroots exploration activity in Canada, and we support the call by government to double the METC for critical minerals exploration.
We're certainly keen to offer ways to implement and administer this expansion effectively. Furthermore, we recommend permanent adoption of the METC incentive, rather than letting that incentive expire in 2024, as it is currently set to do. We feel that a permanent adoption is essential in order to provide long-term certainty for investors and a competitive advantage to generating viable critical mineral discoveries here in Canada.
This step is crucial, particularly given the low odds of exploration success. Typically, only one in 10,000 prospects turns into a mine, and, as mentioned, there is a decade or sometimes a multi-decade path that a project will undergo from first discovery to an operating mine.
We also support the government's call for the use of science and evidence-based decision-making. This dovetails directly with our recommendation to increase public geoscience funding and establish a mechanism to assist provinces and territories in undertaking comprehensive mineral assessment models.
This is evidence that's necessary to inform decision-making in future infrastructure development, energy production, conservation, and advancing indigenous reconciliation, both at the regional and national levels.
Enhancing our geoscientific knowledge base will support effective policy development. It will attract stable industry investment and drive long-term exploration and the infrastructure required to fill the upstream gaps that currently exist in Canada's mineral supply chain.
These are the necessary steps to identify future domestic sources of critical minerals, expand our processing capacity to reduce our reliance on foreign sources, and capture more value-added activities within the Canadian economy.
These strategic choices can also ensure that Canada has greater self-determination in our future carbon footprint and our ability to export sustainable practices and minerals to the rest of the world.
Thank you very much for your consideration and time today.