Canada has a five‑year window to turn its lithium potential into a globally competitive, ESG‑premium battery materials industry. These two half‑day online workshops bring together leading RTOs, SMEs, and federal partners to co‑design the implementation plan for a Strategic Response Program supporting Canada’s Battery Value Chain
Attendees will work directly with NRC, NRCan, ISED, and industry peers to define how Canada can close the TRL 6–8 gap, build integrated lithium‑to‑CAM hubs, and strengthen the country’s position as a trusted supplier of low‑carbon battery materials.Participants can expect:
Purpose:
Day 1 focuses on hearing directly from Canadian SMEs about the operational, technical, ESG, and commercialization needs that must guide Canada’s lithium‑to‑CAM scale‑up. SMEs will outline what they require from hub design, pilot access, ESG pre‑certification, and market engagement to accelerate domestic growth and global readiness. NRC, RTOs, and federal teams will participate as technical advisors and listeners to capture these priorities.
Outcome:
A consolidated set of SME‑driven requirements forming the foundation for the Strategic Response Program and informing Phase 0 and Phase 1 mobilization.
Purpose:
Day 2 turns insight into action, as NRC, RTO, and federal teams present concrete responses to SME needs captured on Day 1. Participants will validate delivery frameworks for all four BVC interventions: Integrated Hubs, Virtual Pilot Network & SME Fast‑Track, ESG Benchmarking & Battery Passport Readiness, and Commercialization & Market Access.
Outcome:
A unified Strategic Response Program Implementation plan confirming roles, timelines, and partner commitments to accelerate Canada’s lithium‑to‑CAM leadership under NRC’s coordinated national approach.
Accelerate welcomes yesterday’s Spring Economic Update (SEU) and the federal government’s commitment to positioning Canada as a premier global destination for investment.
Building Canadian Power in Advanced Battery Materials
Prime Minister Mark Carney’s trip to Beijing this week resulted in a trade agreement that will permit up to 49,000 Chinese EVs to enter Canada.
As the Canada Strong Budget (2025) deploys $280 billion in capital investments over five years, Canada’s battery sector is experiencing a rare alignment of political will, infrastructure funding, and market demand.
Accelerate supports the Canada Strong Budget and its measures to develop sovereign supply chains for electric vehicles and batteries