Critical Minerals Go to War: Why Toronto May Host One of 2026’s Most Important Resource Conferences

May 29, 2026

4 minute read.

Highlights

  • The Critical Minerals for Defense Conference convenes June 9–10 in Toronto, bringing together mining executives, defense contractors, NATO advisors, and Indigenous leaders.
  • Every modern weapons system—from missiles to drones—depends on rare earths, cobalt, lithium, and specialty metals that must be secured through resilient supply chains.
  • Speakers from Lockheed Martin, Vale Base Metals, Talon Metals, and Canada's Department of National Defence will address financing, permitting, processing, and offtake strategies.
  • Rare earth recycling is highlighted as one of the fastest paths to reducing allied dependence on geopolitically concentrated mineral sources.
  • The conference signals a structural shift where defense ministries, miners, financiers, and policymakers are merging into a single strategic industrial ecosystem.

A profound shift is underway in global resource markets. Critical minerals are no longer merely industrial commodities; they are becoming strategic assets tied directly to national security, defense readiness, and geopolitical power. The upcoming Critical Minerals for Defense Conference, June 9–10 in Toronto, brings together mining executives, defense contractors, government officials, investors, Indigenous leaders, and allied stakeholders to address one of the defining questions of our era: who will build and control the supply chains behind modern defense? For investors, policymakers, and industry leaders, this forum offers a front-row seat to one of the most important structural shifts reshaping the global economy.

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Toronto downtown skyline featuring the CN Tower rising above glass skyscrapers along the Lake Ontario waterfront on a clear d

Before the Missile Flies

Every missile, fighter jet, radar system, drone, satellite, and guided munition begins in the same place: the ground.

Before a pilot takes flight or a missile leaves its launch tube, someone must secure the rare earths, graphite, nickel, cobalt, lithium, antimony, and specialty metals that make modern military systems possible.

That reality sits at the heart of Critical Minerals for Defense, taking place June 9–10 at the Marriott Downtown CF Toronto Eaton Centre (opens in a new tab). The event's mission is straightforward but increasingly urgent: connect mining, defense, government, finance, and industry around the challenge of building resilient allied supply chains.

The New Defense-Industrial Ecosystem

The speaker roster reflects how rapidly critical minerals have moved from the margins of mining policy to the center of national security discussions. Participants include senior representatives from Canada's Department of National Defence, Natural Resources Canada, Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, NATO advisory organizations, the European Union, U.S. national laboratories, institutional investors, and major industrial players. Industry representation includes executives from Lockheed Martin, VAC, Talon Metals, Avalon Advanced Materials, Vale Base Metals, Fortune Minerals, First Phosphate, and numerous emerging critical mineral developers.

Equally notable is the participation of First Nations leadership, reflecting the increasingly important role Indigenous partnerships play in advancing strategic resource projects across Canada.

What the Industry Will Be Talking About

The agenda reads like a blueprint for the next decade of critical mineral development.

Sessions will explore defense-driven demand forecasts, financing pathways, allied cooperation among Canada, the United States, Europe, Germany, and South Korea, processing and refining capacity, recycling, procurement strategies, and Indigenous partnerships. Rare earth recycling will receive particular attention, including perspectives from Cyclic Materials CTO

Alexander Forstner, who argues that recycling may provide one of the fastest routes toward strengthening allied supply chains while reducing dependence on geopolitically concentrated sources.

Most importantly, the conference focuses on execution rather than aspiration. The discussion is shifting from why critical minerals matter to how projects get financed, permitted, processed, qualified, and connected to long-term defense and industrial offtake agreements.

Great Powers Era 2.0 in Action

Rare Earth Exchanges™ has theorized that we have entered Great Powers Era 2.0, where supply chains increasingly function as instruments of national power. This conference represents that thesis in real time. Defense ministries, miners, processors, financiers, manufacturers, and policymakers are no longer operating in separate spheres. They are becoming part of a single strategic ecosystem organized around resilience, security, and industrial capability.

As defense budgets expand across NATO countries and geopolitical competition intensifies, demand for defense-critical minerals is emerging as one of the most important drivers of capital allocation in the resource sector.

For anyone serious about critical minerals, defense supply chains, industrial policy, or long-term investment opportunities, this conference deserves close attention. The future battlefield may begin in a mine, a refinery, or a magnet plant. Toronto offers a chance to see where that future is being built.

Conference Website: https://criticalmineralsfordefence.com/ (opens in a new tab)

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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The Critical Minerals for Defense Conference in Toronto, June 9–10, unites mining, defense, and government leaders to build resilient allied supply chains. (read full article...)

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