Skip to content

Mining panel offers no “crystal ball”

Solid answers, it's what mining professionals are looking for in the downturn, but they may not exist.
Dumais
Sudbury’s Andre Dumais moderated a Feb. 25 mining panel at Dynamic Earth.

Solid answers, it's what mining professionals are looking for in the downturn, but they may not exist.

The current bust has dominated conversations in the mining industry and it loomed large, despite optimistic attitudes, at a mining panel held by the Sudbury and Ontario Chambers of Commerce, Feb. 25.

As Andre Dumais prepared to moderate the panel, he expressed concerns that have come up again and again over the last few months.

“I'd like to get an idea of how long this is lasting, but no one has a crystal ball,” said the business development officer for Black Rock Engineering. “I was lucky, I came into this business when it was in the middle of a supercycle, a boom, and it was going to go on forever. And in my short decade, this is already my second significant downturn.”

The panel centred on findings in the Ontario chamber's report “Digging Deeper: Strengthening Ontario’s Mining Advantage.” The report touches on regulatory, infrastructure and cost challenges faced by today's industry.

“I think people are hoping to get a sense of where the industry is going, and what they need from senior levels of government,” said Sudbury chamber president Debbi Nicholson.

The panel was comprised of: Stephen Lindley, vice-president of Aboriginal & Northern Affairs at SNC Lavalin; Doug Morrison, president and CEO at the Centre for Excellence in Mining Innovation (CEMI); Hans Matthews, president and co-founder of the Canadian Aboriginal Minerals Association; and Chris Hodgson, president of the Ontario Mining Association.

“Yes, the global situation isn't great, but there are things within Ontario within our control,” said

Scott Boutilier, a senior policy analyst at the Ontario chamber.

Boutilier and the panelists focused on topics like innovation in the downturn, and the benefits of strengthening partnerships with Aboriginal communities.

No questions followed the presentation, and Dumais felt he didn't get to press industry as hard as he would have liked. Panelists deflected his questions speculating whether a partnership between Falconbridge and Vale in 2005 would have changed the current climate, or whether a downturn is the right time to invest in the Ring of Fire.

There were no solid predictions on how long the downturn would last, panelists maintained that a boom will follow, and the key is preparing for it.