Canada is shifting decisively from policy frameworks to industrial execution in critical minerals development, with Nouveau Monde Graphite’s Phase-2 Matawinie Mine emerging as a concrete example of this transition. The project has secured a fully committed $335 million senior project-debt commitment from Export Development Canada and the Canada Infrastructure Bank, establishing a clear path to final investment decision for what is expected to become the largest graphite mine in the G7 once operational.
This financing milestone comes as Canada intensifies efforts to secure resilient critical-minerals supply chains, having recently announced a second wave of 30 partnerships and investments under the Critical Minerals Production Alliance that unlocks $12.1 billion in new project capital. The government’s approach reflects growing transatlantic coordination, particularly with Germany, where both countries have signed a joint declaration treating automotive, battery and critical-minerals capacity as strategic industrial infrastructure. This partnership serves as a blueprint for democracies navigating supply-chain vulnerabilities and reducing dependence on concentrated external sources.
Graphite represents a particularly strategic mineral within this framework, serving as a key input for lithium-ion batteries, industrial applications and advanced technologies. The financing structure for NMG’s project reflects a maturing Canadian approach, with public-finance institutions using long-tenor, flexible project finance featuring competitive rates and ESG credentials aligned with international standards. According to company reports, the project’s bankability is reinforced by long-term offtake agreements, with 75% of Phase-2 future production already earmarked for the Government of Canada, Panasonic Energy and Traxys, ensuring revenue visibility and anchoring the project within allied industrial supply chains.
Beyond financing, NMG reports that the Matawinie project is shovel-ready and substantially de-risked, with approximately 80% detailed engineering completed, site preparatory work executed, key permits secured and formal agreements in place with the Atikamekw First Nation of Manawan and the local community. The company has also awarded key construction packages ahead of final investment decision, securing civil works, concentrator equipment, structural steel, electrical substation and construction management contracts that collectively represent over 50% of Phase-2 capital expenditure.
Downstream development is progressing simultaneously, with NMG acquiring a brownfield industrial site in Bécancour adjacent to its greenfield property. This strategic location includes existing industrial facilities and logistics infrastructure, enabling a two-stage development that optimizes capital expenditure, reduces risk and shortens timelines to meet the 13,000 tonnes per year active anode commitment for Panasonic Energy. The site positions NMG at the heart of Canada’s emerging battery hub with direct road, rail and port access.
Canada’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Tim Hodgson framed the financing deal as evidence that the country’s critical minerals strategy is working, stating that this represents what execution looks like in practice. The project’s advancement demonstrates how policy architecture with G7-aligned alliances, public finance tools and bilateral industrial pacts is now explicitly geared toward delivery, moving from framework to financed asset in a sector where many projects struggle to reach construction readiness.
This news story relied on content distributed by NewMediaWire. Blockchain Registration, Verification & Enhancement provided by NewsRamp
. The source URL for this press release is Canada Advances Critical Minerals Strategy with $335 Million Financing for Graphite Project.
The post Canada Advances Critical Minerals Strategy with $335 Million Financing for Graphite Project appeared first on citybuzz.


