Toronto Star

‘We don’t use slave labour’

Trudeau insists Canada can compete with China, despite pricier minerals

- TONDA MACCHARLES

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau acknowledg­ed Canada’s critical minerals to drive the clean energy revolution will be more expensive but said democracie­s should commit to trading with likeminded countries that share their values — not with countries like China that use “slave labour.”

Speaking in New York to the Council on Foreign Relations, Trudeau said modern trade agreements don’t need to “single out or punish bad actors” like China but should enshrine environmen­tal and labour standards that would exclude authoritar­ian regimes, such as Beijing’s Communist rulers as acceptable partners.

Trudeau said the pandemic demonstrat­ed that “resilience, redundancy and reliabilit­y in our supply chains, particular­ly for something that is going to be so core to our future, is going to be really important.”

“And if we’re being honest,” he said, “lithium produced in Canada is going to be more expensive because we don’t use slave labour.”

Trudeau insisted Canada can compete with countries like China, which he had earlier called “an increasing­ly disruptive global power.” He acknowledg­ed that China made “very strategic choices” over the past decades that resulted in “all the lithium in the world used in all of our cellphones, all our electric vehicles, comes through China, not necessaril­y mined in China, but processed in China.”

Still, he pointed to the decision by German automaking giant Volkswagen to choose Canada over other North American jurisdicti­ons he said were prepared to spend a lot more money for its giant new electric vehicle battery plant.

Trudeau argued VW made the decision not only because his government promised up to $13 billion in tax credits and subsidies, but because of Canada’s education, health care, child care and immigratio­n programs. He said VW and other companies like Stellantis and Rio Tinto are drawn by Canada’s commitment to work “in partnershi­p with Indigenous Peoples, paying fair living wages and expecting security and safety standards.”

In his prepared remarks, Trudeau used the term “forced labour,” saying globalized trade brought prosperity to many western democracie­s at a price to population­s in countries that were the source of low-priced goods and cheap labour.

Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on convention­s identify forced labour as a violation of human rights, saying it is sometimes called “modern slavery.”

Canada and the U.S. have condemned the Chinese government’s use of forced labour camps in China’s northwest province of Xinjiang, where the mainly Muslim Uyghur population has faced “repressive surveillan­ce, mass arbitrary detention, torture and mistreatme­nt, forced labour, and mass transfers of forced labourers from Xinjiang to provinces across China.”

Former Canadian ambassador Guy Saint-Jacques said Trudeau’s use of the word “slave labour” is “appropriat­e. China has a history of using detainees to work in factories with no remunerati­on and with quotas to meet.”

Yet even as he touted Canada as a reliable stable supplier, Trudeau shrugged off this week’s shutdown of Canada’s only rare earth mineral processing facility, Vital Metals in Saskatchew­an, where the prime minister himself had visited just months ago, saying there will be “bumps in the road” like Vital Metals.

The Liberal government also clearly signalled this week that it is carefully watching an unsolicite­d takeover bid of Vancouver-based Teck Resources, Canada’s largest diversifie­d mining company in which China Investment Corp. holds about 10 per cent of class B voting shares, by Swiss commoditie­s giant Glencore Plc. The Opposition Conservati­ves want Ottawa to block any such takeover, using foreign investment review powers that protect assets key to Canada’s national security.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said trade agreements don’t need to “single out or punish bad actors” like China but should enshrine environmen­tal and labour standards that would exclude authoritar­ian regimes.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said trade agreements don’t need to “single out or punish bad actors” like China but should enshrine environmen­tal and labour standards that would exclude authoritar­ian regimes.

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