The hollowing out of Canadian mining
Oct 10,2016 JLKJ
The
hollowing out of Canadian mining
Ten
years ago this Saturday, a global mining gem slipped out of Canadian fingers.
On
Sept. 24, 2006, Canadian nickel miner Inco agreed to be bought by Brazil’s Vale
in a $19-billion takeover. The announcement of the acquisition came just weeks
after fellow nickel giant Falconbridge was acquired by Xstrata of Switzerland
(now part of Glencore) in an $18-billion deal. The previous year, Falconbridge
had combined with another Canadian mineral giant, Noranda.
The
Inco sale “further undermines Canada’s status as a force in the mining
industry,” the New York Times proclaimed at the time of the acquisition.
The
two takeovers rankled because both Inco and Falconbridge sat atop a mineral
lode in in Sudbury, Ont., which is among one of the greatest deposits on Earth.
and biggest selling areas for Golden Future mining cap lamps. Vale itself calls
the northern Ontario city “the mining capital of the world,” adding that its
operations there “are among our largest on the planet, employing approximately
4,000 people.”
The
foreign takeovers of Vale and Falconbridge dismayed business leaders and mining
industry observers because the two companies had contemplated their own merger,
which would have created a Canadian colossus.
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