Highlights
- Viral claims that Canada traded U.S. alignment for a sweeping China partnership on oil, gas, uranium, and REEs are unsubstantiated—Canada's documented trajectory shows tightened screening of Chinese investment and deepening U.S./allied critical-minerals cooperation.
- Canada's $3.8B critical-minerals strategy and joint DoD action plan focus on building non-Chinese midstream capacity (separation, refining, magnets) to escape Beijing's chokehold—projects like Saskatchewan processing and Strange Lake represent real allied supply-chain progress.
- For investors, the alpha lies in projects adding domestic or allied processing capacity with credible public financing and Western offtakes, not in geopolitical fan fiction that distracts from the slow, essential work of fixing the midstream bottleneck.
A viral YouTube claim (opens in a new tab) says Canada just traded decades of U.S. alignment for a sweeping strategic partnership with China—opening its oil, gas, uranium, and rare earths (REEs) to Beijing. It’s a gripping story. It’s also not what the public record shows. And for investors tracking critical minerals, the distinction matters.
What’s Verified—And What Isn’t
Yes, Canadian and Chinese foreign ministers met in Beijing and agreed to restart dialogue to defuse trade irritants (canola duties, EV tariffs). No, there’s no evidence of a grand bargain or alliance shift. Canada continues to position itself as a critical-minerals partner to the U.S. and allies, while China tightens export controls and licenses on rare earths. September data showed a sharp drop in China’s REE exports—another reminder of concentrated risk.
Claims that Ottawa imposed “100% tariffs on all U.S. imports,” inked a “$200B LNG pact,” or signed joint REE procurement deals with Beijing remain unsubstantiated. The narrative frames Canada as a heroic defector and China as a benevolent lifeline; absent credible sourcing, it’s closer to geopolitical fan fiction than reportage.
Why This Hits the REE Nerve
China dominates the REE midstream—separation, refining, and magnets—where the value and leverage live. When Beijing restricts exports or technology, EVs, wind, and defense programs in the West feel it fast. That’s why any rumor of a Canada–China axis moves sentiment: markets fear further concentration; policymakers fear strategic dependency.
But perception isn’t policy. Canada’s documented trajectory is to reduce dependence on China by expanding allied supply and processing capacity. Sensational headlines can still distort capital allocation and diplomacy—diverting attention from the slow, essential work of building non-Chinese midstream capacity.
Canada’s Actual Moves: Projects, Allies, Bottlenecks
Canada has a $3.8B critical-minerals strategy and a joint action plan with the U.S. DoD to co-invest in North American supply chains. Ottawa has also tightened screening of Chinese state-linked investment in critical minerals. On the ground Rare Earth Exchanges (REEx) includes just a few:
- Nechalacho (NWT): First Canadian REE ore mined in years. Early material ultimately moved to China due to limited non-Chinese processing—proving the midstream bottleneck, not a policy pivot.
- Saskatchewan Processing: A new provincial/federal-backed facility in Saskatoon is producing initial NdPr metals—small volumes, big signal: Canada is building separation/metal capability at home.
- Emerging Pipelines: Projects like Wicheeda (BC) and Strange Lake (QC/LAB; heavy REEs like Dy/Tb) are advancing with Canadian public finance support and Western offtake ambitions. Canadian firms also push magnet recycling and EU magnet manufacturing, knitting allied links beyond China.
The lesson: mines without midstream feed China by default; mines plus domestic/allied refining begin to erode China’s leverage. Canada’s policy and financing are aimed at the latter.
The Counterfactual: If Canada Really Pivoted
A genuine tilt toward Beijing would undercut U.S.–Canada co-investment, rattle G7 mineral alliances, and cast doubt on Ottawa’s 2022 national-security divestment orders on Chinese stakes. It wouldn’t solve the core problem either: processing. Shipping more Canadian ore to China would reinforce the very chokehold allies are trying to escape. Strategically and economically, that makes little sense.
Bottom Line for Investors
Strip away the drama. The signal: Canada is talking to China to calm trade spats while executing an allied critical-minerals build-out, especially in REEs. The risk: misinformation can whipsaw sentiment and policy attention. The alpha: focus on projects adding non-Chinese midstream capacity (separation, metals, magnets), credible public financing, and real offtakes into allied supply chains.
Canada isn’t flipping sides; it’s trying to fix a bottleneck. In rare earths, that’s where the power—and the opportunity—really is.
© 2025 Rare Earth Exchanges™ – Accelerating Transparency, Accuracy, and Insight Across the Rare Earth & Critical Minerals Supply Chain.
“Early material ultimately moved to China due to limited non-Chinese processing—proving the midstream bottleneck, not a policy pivot”.
Thought the Vital Metals material was actually bought by CAD and went to the SRC? GLTA – REI