Energy Transition 101

What are Critical Minerals?

The Canadian and United States governments have signed a Joint Action Plan on Critical Mineral Collaboration to enable greater North American production of minerals identified as critical to economic and national security.

Canada is primed to capitalize on the rising global demand for critical minerals, driven in large part by their role in the transition to a low-carbon and digitized economy. Essential for renewable and clean technology applications (batteries, permanent magnets, solar panels and wind turbines), they are also required inputs for advance manufacturing supply chains including defense and security technologies, consumer electronics, agriculture, medical applications and critical infrastructure.

Examples of Canada’s list of critical minerals include: Cobalt, Manganese, Nickel, Vanadium, Zinc and Uranium.

 

What are Energy Transition Metals?

Energy transition refers to the global sector shift from fossil-based systems of energy production and consumption (including oil, natural gas, and coal) to renewable sources like wind, solar as well as lithium-ion batteries. The increasing penetration of renewable energy into the energy supply mix, the onset of electrification and improvements in energy storage all all key drivers of energy transition.

Energy transition will continue to increase in importance as investors prioritize environmental, social and government (ESG) factors. To support this shift, metals such as copper, cobalt, lithium, nickel, manganese, PGEs, silver and other commodities will continue to be in strong demand.

Energy Transition Metals Significance

StrategX’s Elements Top 10: