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KWG Resources Inc C.CACR

Alternate Symbol(s):  KWGBF | C.CACR.A

KWG Resources Inc. is a Canada-based exploration stage company. The Company is engaged in the discovery, delineation, and development of chromite deposits in the James Bay Lowlands of Northern Ontario. It is focused on two projects, which include Black Horse Project and Big Daddy Project. The Company’s Black Horse Project is located approximately 280 kilometers north of Nakina, Ontario, which contains the Black Horse chromite deposit, including over 1,024 hectares covered by four unpatented mining claims. The Big Daddy Project is located approximately 280 kilometers north of Nakina, Ontario, which contains the Big Daddy chromite deposit, including over 1,241 hectares covered by seven unpatented mining claims. The Company also owns a 30% interest in certain mining property claims contiguous to McFauld’s Lake in Ontario. Its subsidiaries include Canada Chrome Corporation, SMD Mining Corporation, Canada Chrome Mining Corporation, and Muketi Metallurgical General Partner Inc.


CSE:CACR - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by jamesbayon Jan 11, 2017 9:08am
131 Views
Post# 25692799

Global Trade and the Ethical Supply Chain In High-Tech Marke

Global Trade and the Ethical Supply Chain In High-Tech MarkeI feel Trump will expand the US steel industry, and so he needs Chromite



Media outlets and activists episodically highlight the ethical complexities of mineral supply chains that lie behind producing everything from electric cars to iPhones. The U.S. imports nearly a half-trillion dollars worth of tech products – computers, TVs, integrated circuits, and batteries – and another half-trillion worth of cars and machinery. All of these goods begin with raw materials increasingly sourced from places like the Congo, China, or Argentina....snip...
For several years now, the Securities Exchange Commission has tried to enforce new rules requiring tech companies to disclose supply chain information. Turns out it is often not so easy and frequently complicated. A few companies have gone to great lengths to produce such reports, while others, notably Tesla, have pursued more vertical integration and direct sourcing of raw materials.

One beneficiary of attention paid to ethical supply sources – and perhaps the next best thing to “buy American” – could be “buy Canadian.” Canada has minerals and metals in abundance and is well equipped for and generally tolerant of expanding extraction. While Canada’s GDP, like that of the U.S. and most developed nations, relies predominately on the services sector, it has a much greater reliance on and thus vested interest in its primary (or extractive) sectors.

What’s more, Canada’s metal and mineral deposits are both particularly high-grade and geographically close, requiring less work to extract large volumes of product as well as lower shipping costs. There is an obvious opportunity for U.S. electronics producers to take greater advantage of relatively local and transparently conflict-free minerals, especially in light of China’s heavy investment in Africa as a source of cheap raw materials.

[url=https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2017/01/11/global_trade_and_the_ethical_supply_chain_in_high-tech_markets_102494.htmlhttps://]more here[/url]

Bullboard Posts