The Opportunity is Right Under Our Feet
BC has what the world needs. What happens next is up to us.
British Columbia sits on some of the most important mineral deposits on earth — the materials that go into batteries, electric vehicles, solar panels, and wind turbines. The question isn’t whether we have the resources. It’s whether we develop them.
17
World-class critical mineral projects
$800B
Long-term economic potential
120+
Indigenous-affiliated suppliers
#
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet
The Challenge
The world needs critical minerals. BC has them — and a lot to lose.
MABC commissions independent economic analysis to provide policymakers, media, and the public with a clear, evidence-based picture of what BC mining means for the province. The studies below are available for download.
Certain minerals are so essential to clean energy, aerospace, defence, and communications technologies that governments around the world — including Canada — have designated them as “critical.” That designation signals strategic importance, not just commercial value. BC is home to many on Canada’s list, including copper, nickel, cobalt, niobium, rare earths, zinc, and molybdenum.
BC is Canada’s largest copper producer, its top producer of steelmaking coal, and the second-largest producer of silver. We also host some of the largest untapped nickel and niobium deposits in the world. Critically, our operations meet some of the toughest environmental and safety standards globally — which matters to the countries looking for reliable, responsible suppliers.
BC currently has 17 advanced critical mineral projects in the pipeline. Their development alone could deliver $36 billion in near-term investment, 302,000 person-years of employment, and nearly $11 billion in tax revenues. The long-term economic impact of operating these mines over decades could reach $800 billion.
Mining is one of the largest sources of economic activity in many Indigenous territories across BC. Forty-six First Nations have received a combined $98 million in mineral tax revenue sharing to date. BC mines purchased $265 million in goods and services from 120 Indigenous-affiliated suppliers in 2018 alone. Expanding critical minerals development — done right — is one of the most tangible paths to Indigenous economic participation and equity in BC.
BC Is Positioned to Lead
BC mines critical minerals responsibly, under some of the toughest environmental rules in the world. Our operations have among the lowest carbon emissions globally. We have 17 major projects ready to move — the conditions just need to support them.

Resources
The research and data behind this campaign. Dig into the full reports or share what’s relevant.

Stay Informed
Mining affects more of BC than most people realize.
Sign up for updates on the issues, reports, and decisions that shape the industry.