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The CEO of a Vancouver-based company has figured out how to collaborate with Trump

The CEO of a Vancouver-based company has figured out how to collaborate with Trump

National Post25-05-2025

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America and China have tapped the brakes on a spiralling tariff war. But there are other points of fierce competition between these two nations that haven't abated — including the race for rare earth metals. In late March, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order to fast-track the mining of critical minerals in a new frontier, the deep sea, a move intended to give America a competitive edge over China.
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And in an odd twist, it's a Vancouver-based corporation, The Metals Company, that's been lobbying power brokers in Washington to bypass multilateral United Nations conventions and set a unilateral pathway for commercial mining of deep sea minerals. The company has announced its U.S. subsidiary will apply for a U.S. mining permit to harvest mineral nodules lying 5,000 metres deep in the Clarion-Clipperton zone of the Pacific Ocean.
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Officials at the International Seabed Authority — the UN-backed regulator responsible for setting the rules for deep sea mining in international waters — aren't happy. Trump's decision to revive a 1980-era U.S. mining law that predates the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), a convention the U.S. has not signed or ratified, flies in the face of how the UN prefers to see things done.
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With the stage set for a showdown between Trump's executive order and UN conventions, I'm curious to find out what Gerard Barron, the CEO of The Metals Company, has to say.
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Gerard's in Sydney, Australia, when we connect. The public company's first quarter results for 2025 have just been released; The Metals Company shares jumped nearly 83 per cent in April, and the stock is up 180 per cent in 2025. To say Gerard is bullish would be an understatement. With a trillion dollars worth of metals sitting on the seabed floor in their licence areas, Gerard declares, the company should be worth far more than a couple of billion, Canadian.
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The son of Aussie dairy farmers, Gerard is now a jet-setting entrepreneur splitting his time between London and Dubai, and more recently spending a lot of time lobbying in Washington, D.C., and some time at corporate offices in Toronto. Sporting a black T-shirt and frequently running a hand through his thick hair as he speaks, candidly and confidently, it's not difficult to imagine why this deep sea mining pioneer has been dubbed 'the Elon Musk of Australia.' Gerard bristles at the comparison: 'There is no equivalent to Elon Musk.' But he does confirm the company's vice-chair, Steve Jurvetson, is well connected to Musk.

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