Sunday, November 17, 2024

New Indigenous-owned mining royalty company a first in Canada

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In June of this year, a new company called Nations Royalty Corp. began trading on the TSX Venture Exchange.

With minimum fanfare, the new company quietly hit a milestone on the road to Indigenous economic reconciliation in this country, becoming the only mining royalty company in the world that is majority-owned by Indigenous people.

Backed by billionaire Canadian mining financier Frank Giustra, Nations Royalty aims to lure investors with the promise of exposure to Indigenous-owned royalties, which company executives say is the last untapped pool in Canada.

But for the Nisga’a Nation — the self-governing B.C.-based First Nation that owns 77 per cent of the company — Nations Royalty is also a key part of the path to economic independence.

“One of the goals of our Nation is financial independence,” said Charles Morven, secretary-treasurer for the Nisga’a Nation.

“We still haven’t broken away from the Indian Act, like we would like to … We want to be accountable to ourselves. (Nations Royalty) will allow us to manage our own wealth, instead of relying on government funding.”

The concept of Nations Royalty is simple. Virtually all mining projects in Canada are located on Indigenous territory. For reasons that include legal requirements as well as corporate social responsibility, mining companies seeking licence to operate in a region typically sign “benefit agreements” with affected First Nations.

In most cases, these benefit agreements include royalties — a regular payment that the mining company commits to making to the First Nation based on the mine’s production or net profit.

By pooling multiple royalties into a single publicly-traded, dividend-paying company, Nations Royalty aims to give investors diversified exposure to the Canadian mining space and create a revenue stream for its Indigenous owners and shareholders.

“We do have a vision to build a top-five royalty company, and the path is there — because the number and scale of Indigenous royalties across Canada are very impressive,” said Nations Royalty CEO Rob McLeod.

Nations Royalty holds Nisga’a-owned royalties from five different mining projects within B.C.s “Golden Triangle” in its current portfolio. But McLeod said there are more than 400 individual benefit agreements between mining companies and First Nations across Canada.

He said the Nisga’a are currently seeking other First Nations royalty-holders to join them and become shareholders in the new venture.

Typically, mining royalty companies appeal to investors because they are less risky than investing in a single mining project.

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