Canada Just Made Two Big Moves... And the “Nothing Gets Built” Crowd Is Out of Excuses
A lithium refinery, a $4B pipeline expansion, and a whole lot of political noise getting exposed.
You can tell a lot about a country by what it actually builds… not what people say it can’t.
And right now? Canada just made two moves that punch straight through the “we don’t build anything anymore” narrative.
Let’s start with the one most people will miss… but shouldn’t.
British Columbia has approved North America’s first electrochemical lithium refining facility. That matters more than it sounds.
Here’s the reality: China refines roughly 65–70% of the world’s lithium chemicals, while only mining about 17–22% of the raw supply.
In plain English?
They don’t just dig it up… they control what happens after.
And that’s where the money… and the leverage… lives.
Canada’s move says… we’re done exporting raw potential and buying it back at a premium.
We’ve got lithium. Now we’re keeping more of the value chain here.
That’s not just an energy play… that’s a power shift.
Now the second move…
A $4 billion natural gas pipeline expansion got federal approval.
This one runs through BC, connects supply from Alberta, adds 139 km of new pipeline loops, and boosts capacity by 300 million cubic feet per day.
Translation?
More flow. More exports. More control over where Canadian energy goes.
Construction starts this summer.
The impact…
~2,500 jobs
~$3 billion added to GDP
Partnerships with 38 First Nations communities
That last point matters… because projects don’t move in this country without buy-in anymore. And this one has it.
Now here’s where it gets interesting…
Because while all this is happening in the real world, the political theatre is still stuck in fantasy land.
You’ve got folks like Pierre Poilievre pushing the idea that “nothing gets built” and pipelines are being blocked at every turn.
Problem is… the receipts don’t match the script.
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room…
The Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion… one of the biggest infrastructure projects in Canadian history… was just completed in 2024.
Connects Edmonton to the West Coast
Capacity: ~1 million barrels per day
Built through the Rockies
Government-backed
And it’s already generating serious revenue… about $1.8 billion in 2024, with tolls of roughly $11 per barrel.
That’s not theory. That’s cash flow.
There’s also a major gas pipeline tied to LNG exports out of Kitimat… another massive private-sector build that didn’t exactly happen in secret.
So where does the “nothing gets built” line come from?
Simple.
It’s easier to sell outrage than explain process.
Take the whole “approve a pipeline instantly” talking point.
Sounds great… until you realize there’s no actual project sitting on a desk waiting for a signature.
No company.
No finalized proposal.
No application.
You can’t approve something that doesn’t exist.
Even if you handed the pen to Mark Carney tomorrow… there’s nothing to sign.
That’s not a political opinion… that’s how reality works.
Meanwhile, in the background…
Canada is quietly doing something much more important:
Expanding energy infrastructure
Moving up the value chain in critical minerals
Building export capacity beyond the U.S.
Working with provinces and First Nations instead of bulldozing over them
That’s not flashy.
But it’s how countries actually get stronger.
And here’s the kicker…
One of the biggest buyers of refined lithium going forward?
The same country that loves to say it doesn’t need Canada.
Funny how that works.
The Recap…
Canada just approved a lithium refinery and a $4B pipeline expansion…
While some are still shouting “nothing gets built.”
Reality check…
Projects are moving.
Money is flowing.
And the narrative isn’t keeping up.
The Gut-Punch…
You don’t weaken a country by doing nothing.
You weaken it by convincing people nothing is happening — while everything important moves forward without them noticing.
Source Credit:
Based on publicly reported project approvals, infrastructure data, and economic impact figures summarized from transcript research notes.
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Pierre and people like him are taking steps from the Trump playbook. If you say it long enough many people will believe it to be true. As for the refinery, hopefully Canadian regulators will take proper measures to ensure it meets high standards to protect the environment and lives of people in the surrounding area unlike what goes on here in the states where corporations dictate what the regulations are, how they are monitored, and how violations are dealt with.
I am nicking the essence of this post. Norway has been a raw material "slave" to EU. With the discovery of a very promising field of minerals we have an opportunity to change that.