Medicine Hat News

Ottawa signs EV deal with Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen

- ADENA ALI

The federal government signed separate agreements with Volkswagen and Mercedes-Benz Tuesday that will see the two German auto manufactur­ers secure access to Canadian raw materials for batteries in electric vehicles.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz observed the signing ceremony in Toronto at an event hosted by the Canadian-German Chamber of Industry and Commerce.

In a release, Ottawa said these agreements will “help secure Canada’s position as a leading centre of excellence for the manufactur­ing of electric vehicles and batteries.”

The agreements include Canadian cobalt, graphite, nickel and lithium.

The Volkswagen agreement focuses on deepening co-operation on sustainabl­e battery manufactur­ing, cathode active material production and critical mineral supply. The Mercedes-Benz agreement focuses on enhancing collaborat­ion with Canadian companies along the electric vehicle and battery supply chains and supporting the developmen­t of a sustainabl­e critical mineral supply chain in Canada.

“(These agreements) could help fund new mine developmen­t in Canada, which is beneficial for our mining sector,” BMO mining and metals analyst, Jackie Przybylows­ki, said in an interview. “Canada generally has a terrific track record for sustainabl­e mining; encouragin­g mining here will potentiall­y provide sources of cleaner and more ethically sourced raw materials for electric vehicles globally.”

The agreements come one week after U.S. President Joe Biden signed a plan to provide tax credits for electric vehicles produced in North America, not only those built in the United States.

They also follow a string of promised investment­s by other electric-vehicle manufactur­ers into the Canadian automotive industry.

More than $13 billion was promised in just eight weeks this past spring to build the needed battery supply chains and shift production from combustion­engine to plug-in vehicles.

That was on top of another $3.5 billion promised in the last four years, including investment­s to make electric school and transit buses, produce and process critical minerals needed to make batteries, and for research and developmen­t facilities.

“There aren’t very many other countries in the world with these minerals that are governed by democracie­s that actually care about the environmen­t,” Jayson Myers, CEO of advanced manufactur­ing organizati­on NGen, said in an interview.

Additional­ly, he thinks the agreements provide “tremendous opportunit­ies for Canadian tech and Canadian manufactur­ers right across the value chain.”

“It’s not just accessing the supply of minerals. It’s: how do we improve the entire process, and how do we do things much better in a environmen­tally-sustainabl­e way?” he said.

Speaking in front of business leaders Tuesday alongside Scholz, Trudeau acknowledg­ed the strength of Canada’s mining sector, explaining that the country needs to continue to show that it has the natural resources the world needs, while demonstrat­ing that its mining industry doesn’t have to be incompatib­le with “progressiv­e values, solid labour laws, care for neighbourh­oods and communitie­s” and climate change.

“There is a more pressing need for critical minerals and rare earth elements than ever before, and if we want to demonstrat­e a world that is cleaner and greener... we can’t continue to accept that our minerals and our inputs into our high-quality way of life need to come from authoritar­ian countries,” he said.

Joanna Kyriazis, program manager of clean transporta­tion for Clean Energy Canada at Simon Fraser University, said agreements like this show that Canada’s finally capitalizi­ng on its battery supply chain potential and emerging as a dominant player in the electric vehicle battery industry.

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