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Noront Resources Ltd. NOSOF

Noront Resources Ltd is a mining company. It is engaged in the exploration, development, and acquisition of properties prospective in base and precious metals, which includes nickel, copper, platinum group metals, precious metals, chromite, and vanadium. The company's developmental project consists of Eagle's Nest nickel-copper-platinum-palladium deposit, deposits of high-grade chromite and copper-zinc volcanic massive sulphide deposits which are part of the company's McFauld's Lake Project. Its assets are located in the area known as the Ring of Fire in the James Bay Lowlands, Ontario.


OTCPK:NOSOF - Post by User

Post by surveyor2582on Apr 25, 2019 2:01pm
122 Views
Post# 29670551

(Financial Post – April 25, 2019)

(Financial Post – April 25, 2019)

How Bill C-69 will end up punishing Indigenous Canadians most of all – by Brian Schmidt

https://business.financialpost.com/

Opinion: The misconception that Indigenous communities are victims of the resource industry is paternalistic and out-dated

Across our country, workers, communities and businesses have been telling senators that Bill C-69, the proposed legislation on impact assessment, threatens to destroy the resource industry. Investment is fleeing, projects are being cancelled and jobs are being lost.

Often lost in the noise are the negative impacts C-69 will have on Indigenous peoples. I see those impacts firsthand as an energy CEO who works closely with First Nations. While the bill was drafted in part, as a response to Canada’s commitment to nation-to-nation partnership and reconciliation, it is First Nations who are being hurt first and foremost by C-69. Let me tell you how.

First, you need to understand that Indian Oil and Gas Canada, which regulates oil production on First Nations lands, has a policy of charging a higher royalty for oil produced on reserve lands than the royalties charged on Crown land in B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan.

So in times of a downturn, capital exits Indigenous lands first, in order to be deployed in areas with lower royalty payments. According to IOGC itself, new First Nations leases are down 95 per cent in the last four years. Simply stated, exploring on First Nations’ lands is essentially shut down.

Second, when prices are low, as they are now in Canada because of the lack of export pipeline capacity, First Nations must give back some of their royalties to the producer just to prevent a well from being taken out of production as uneconomic.

For the rest of this article: https://business.financialpost.com/opinion/how-bill-c-69-will-end-up-punishing-indigenous-canadians-most-of-all


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