Canada and Germany have signed a declaration of intent to strengthen cooperation on critical minerals, with a focus on midstream technologies, including mineral processing, refining, and recycling. The new partnership will focus on
- lithium
- rare earths
- copper
- tungsten
- gallium
- germanium
- and nickel
The strategic pivot comes as China curbs exports of critical minerals like rare earths, tungsten and antimony, and swelling global stockpiles.
Tariff Turbulence and the China Factor
China’s April ban on rare earth exports sent shockwaves through global supply chains, leaving automakers, aerospace firms, and semiconductor producers scrambling. Germany’s push to reduce reliance on single sources now converges with Canada’s drive to leverage its resource base, as both nations eye resilience in defense and clean energy sectors.
Surging Stockpiles, Strategic Shifts
The timing is critical. Copper, a linchpin mineral for both economies, faces a whiplash of its own: record U.S. warehouse inventories and a tariff reversal have eroded speculative premiums, while Asian supply remains tight. Germany and Canada’s partnership aims to counteract these swings by advancing joint projects through public and private investment, and by encouraging commercial partnerships that could rebalance global flows.
From Mine to Market—A New Blueprint
German Economy Minister Katharina Reiche and Canada’s Energy and Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson underscored the importance of midstream supply chain development. The pact, while not legally binding, sets the groundwork for coordinated R&D, streamlined permitting, and infrastructure upgrades—steps designed to unlock investment and future-proof supply chains against geopolitical shocks.
Outlook—Resilience Amid Uncertainty
As global mineral markets digest tariff shocks, surging stockpiles, and shifting trade dynamics, Germany and Canada’s alliance signals a new era of strategic cooperation. The bottom line: supply chain security is now a national priority, and the push to diversify sources and strengthen processing capacity could reshape the competitive landscape for critical minerals worldwide.

