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FROM HANSARD: MLA digs for mine info

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The following is an edited exchange taken from Hansard in the legislative assembly March 7. Kam Lake MLA Kieron Testart is questioning Minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment Wally Schumann about the investment climate for the mining industry in the territory. You can read more about this issue in the April 4 issue of Yellowknifer.

TESTART: I would like to ask the (minister of Industry, Tourism and Investment) what he is doing to address the ongoing concerns about the perception of investors that the Northwest Territories is not as ideal a climate for mining investment as other jurisdictions in Canada.

SCHUMANN: We are doing quite a bit. We get a lot of heat sometimes for going to some of the shows that we go to in the press. We have been to Mineral Roundup.
The premier and I have just been to the (Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada convention), but it is one of the reasons that this government has developed a Mineral Development Strategy, and that is to address some of these inconsistencies that people have about the Northwest Territories.
We get out there and continue to pound the pavement to promote the Northwest Territories as a great jurisdiction.
We know that we have the mineral potential that is here, and just as we have done today here in the Great Hall, signed a deal with the minister of infrastructure of Canada on how we can invest in the Northwest Territories to alleviate some of these things so that we can draw some more international dollars to our territory to invest in the mineral potential that we have.

TESTART: The issue in this most recent Fraser Institute report that is primarily the holdup for investment from the survey respondents, and this is a direct quote, is that "ongoing disputes over land claims and protected areas create uncertainty for investors."
I would like to ask the minister what his plan is to address those specific concerns. Let's start with land claims.

SCHUMANN: As the member knows, we have all sat down with all of the Indigenous governments in the Northwest Territories, and one of the number one priorities of this premier and this assembly is to address land claims in the Northwest Territories. The premier has done a tremendous amount of work on this file.
We have made substantive offers to two of the three outstanding land claimant groups in the Northwest Territories, and we are working on getting something with the third one. There is some significant progress being made there.
The recent announcements with the federal government on how they are going to approach some of these things is certainly going to help us, I think, move some of these files along. I'm with the premier. Hopefully, we can settle some of these in the life of this assembly.

TESTART: The issue with land claims is, of course, much more complicated than we can get to today, so I am going to move on to protected areas and conservation.
Concern is, that because of the size of conservation areas in the Northwest Territories, they cut off potential exploration and mineral development. Is the minister cognizant of that, and is he bringing forward some clarity on that issue to investors that we are a friendly jurisdiction for mining?

SCHUMANN: Early in the life of this government, I was the minister of Environment and Natural Resources, so I am quite aware of the protected area strategies moving forward. This was something that was under the federal legislation, and now it has been switched over to the Northwest Territories, and we are moving on those fronts.
It is a complicated file. It's not like we can just shelve all of the protected area strategies that the federal government was working on. These are led by a number of Indigenous governments, the areas that they want to protect, and it is a complicated issue.
In the coming years as we move forward, and we will be working with our Indigenous governments to ensure that the areas that they want to protect, and maybe carve out some areas that they want to consider for mineral development as they participate in these mineral mining shows that we are participating in, they realize that mining is a big part of our economy, and they want to be able to participate and contribute to their members as well.

TESTART: I appreciate the minister is dedicated to a charm offensive at these trade shows and industry events and mining conferences, but I would like to know what we have to show for it. How much mining investment has been attracted to the Northwest Territories since this government took office?

SCHUMANN: I can't give you an exact number, but I can tell you that we have met with a number of stakeholders and interested parties that want to invest in the Northwest Territories, and the ones that are investing here are glad to see the hard work that this government is doing on a number of these files, as I have said, since devolution.
We have taken over the ... land and resource part of this from the federal government. It is going to create more certainty for the mining industry to come to the Northwest Territories, and we will continue to engage all residents, stakeholders, and industry on how we can promote mining in the Northwest Territories and move this file along.