Sample Sidebar Module

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Sample Sidebar Module

This is a sample module published to the sidebar_bottom position, using the -sidebar module class suffix. There is also a sidebar_top position below the search.
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According to the NWT & Nunavut Chamber of Mines, the latest Federal statistics from Natural Resources Canada (NRCAN) predict 2024 exploration spending to increase in the NWT and Nunavut but drop in Yukon. 

 To summarize NRCAN’s Mineral Exploration and Development, Data Tables released in February: 

$143.7 million in NWT, a $30.8 million (27%) increase from $112.9 million in 2023.

$267.7 million in Nunavut, a $50.6 million (23%) increase from $217.1 million.

$147.1 million in Yukon, a $17.2 million (10%) decrease from $164.3 million.

$4,112.3 million in Canada, a $199.0 million (5%) increase from $3,913.3 million.

 “Along with an increase in exploration nationally, both NWT and Nunavut are projected to see more exploration this coming year than last,” said Kenny Ruptash, NWT & Nunavut Chamber of Mines President. “We believe the increase in NWT exploration is due to significant interest in critical minerals, particularly lithium, to address climate change, while in Nunavut we have seen an increased interest in precious metals and uranium. Unfortunately, both territories continue to capture a lower share of Canadian investment considering the NWT and Nunavut combined are 34% of Canada’s land mass but attract only 10% of its investment. This needs to be improved and a federal Northern Mineral Exploration Tax Credit (N60METC) could help us compete with the provinces. We are hopeful Canada will finally address this gap in the upcoming Federal budget.”

 NRCAN also found the following: 

Nunavut will see almost twice the exploration investment as the NWT.

In both NWT and Nunavut, exploration is largely early-stage vs deposit appraisal.

NWT exploration is dominated by junior companies, while senior companies play a stronger role in Nunavut.

NWT exploration is focused mainly on base metals, diamonds and other (lithium, rare earths, etc.), while Nunavut exploration is largely focused on base and precious metals, iron, and uranium.

Nearly $450 million is projected for mine complex development in Nunavut vs only $17 million in NWT. 

Recently, the Mining Industry Human Resources Council (MiHR) allocated two million dollars in funding to Northern College to help address drastic enrolment decrease in mining related post-secondary programs in Canada, creating a one-time Financial Scholarship Support Program for students enrolled in the Fall 2023 to Winter
2024 semester.