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Association minière du Québec

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Association minière du Québec
NameAssociation minière du Québec
Formation1920s
HeadquartersQuebec City, Quebec
Region servedQuebec, Canada
MembershipMining companies, suppliers, consultants
LanguageFrench, English

Association minière du Québec is an industry association representing mining companies and related service providers in Quebec, Canada. The organization engages with provincial and federal institutions such as National Assembly of Quebec, Parliament of Canada, and Natural Resources Canada while interacting with regional stakeholders including Nunavik, Abitibi-Témiscamingue, and Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine. It plays a role in debates involving regulatory frameworks like Environmental Assessment Act discussions, resource development projects such as James Bay Project, and infrastructure initiatives tied to Trans-Labrador Highway corridors.

History

The association traces roots to early 20th-century trade groups active during developments like the Abitibi gold rush and the expansion of companies including Hudson's Bay Company, Noranda Mines, Inco Limited, and Canadian Malartic operations. Throughout the mid-20th century it advised policymakers during events such as the construction of the La Romaine Project and responses to the Quiet Revolution era resource policies driven by figures in the Quebec Liberal Party and the Parti Québécois. In recent decades it engaged in consultations around landmark projects including Raiziri (Nunavik nickel), the revitalization of properties formerly held by Bell Resources, and modern partnerships with multinational firms like Rio Tinto, Glencore, BHP, and Barrick Gold.

Organization and Governance

Governance structures mirror those of similar groups such as Mining Association of Canada and Canadian Chamber of Commerce, featuring a board of directors with representatives from companies like Agnico Eagle Mines Limited, Wesdome Gold Mines, Goldcorp (merged into Newmont Mining), and service firms comparable to Stantec and SNC-Lavalin. Executive leadership interacts with provincial ministries such as Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources (Quebec) and federal departments including Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada and Fisheries and Oceans Canada. Committees address technical issues citing standards from entities like Canadian Standards Association, International Organization for Standardization, and provincial regulators such as the Bureau d'audiences publiques sur l'environnement.

Mission and Activities

The association's stated mission aligns with stakeholder engagement practiced by groups such as Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada and Chamber of Mines chapters, focusing on promoting mineral development, attracting investment from markets like Toronto Stock Exchange and New York Stock Exchange, and supporting exploration tied to regions including Labrador, Northern Quebec, and the Canadian Shield. Activities include hosting conferences reminiscent of PDAC Convention, publishing technical reports paralleling work by Geological Survey of Canada and Ministère de l'Énergie et des Ressources naturelles du Québec, and facilitating workforce training initiatives comparable to programs by Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Quebec and Commission des normes, de l'équité, de la santé et de la sécurité du travail.

Industry Advocacy and Policy Positions

Advocacy efforts engage with policy debates involving legislation similar to amendments to the Environmental Protection Act and tax measures influenced by Ministry of Finance (Quebec). The association has taken positions on Indigenous consultation frameworks developed with organizations such as Assembly of First Nations, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, and provincial Indigenous bodies like Grand Council of the Crees (Eeyou Istchee). It lobbies on infrastructure financing related to programs modeled on Investissement Québec initiatives and participates in multi-stakeholder tables convened by institutions such as OECD and United Nations Environment Programme where climate and resource governance intersect.

Member Companies and Membership Services

Members include a range of corporate actors from exploration-focused juniors inspired by examples like Bacanora Lithium to large producers akin to IAMGOLD and Teck Resources. Services for members parallel those of Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters and Business Council of Canada with offerings in regulatory updates, technical workshops referencing Exploration and Mining Guide for Investors, insurance products comparable to those from Export Development Canada, and workforce development programs similar to partnerships with École des Mines-type institutions and regional colleges such as Cégep de l'Abitibi-Témiscamingue.

Environmental and Social Responsibility

The association promotes practices aligned with voluntary initiatives like the Towards Sustainable Mining program and reporting frameworks such as those from Global Reporting Initiative and Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures. It engages on reclamation guided by precedents from Joliet Mine Rehabilitation projects and biodiversity considerations comparable to work by Nature Conservancy of Canada and World Wildlife Fund Canada. Social responsibility work includes collaboration on impact-benefit agreements modeled after arrangements with James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement signatories and workforce inclusion initiatives paralleling programs by Indigenous Works.

Economic Impact and Statistics

Analyses produced or cited by the association draw on data sources such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Statistics Canada, and the Conference Board of Canada to quantify contributions to GDP, employment in regions like Abitibi-Témiscamingue, and export figures tied to commodities traded on Montreal Exchange, London Metal Exchange, and Shanghai Futures Exchange. Reports consider capital investment trends similar to those underlying projects like Goro Nickel Project and commodity cycles influenced by demand from markets such as China, United States, and European Union.

Category:Mining in Quebec Category:Industry trade groups