Toronto's Buried History: The Dark Story of How Mining Built a City
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- Published on Wednesday, 29 March 2017 00:45
- Written by editor
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A Socialist Project e-bulletin .... No. 1390 .... March 29, 2017
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Toronto's Buried History:
The Dark Story of How Mining Built a City
Niko Block
On Sunday March 5th, the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) hosted its 85th annual conference in downtown Toronto. With more than 20,000 attendees and 900 exhibitors, the conference is the largest of its kind in the world. During those four days, delegates take over 20 of Toronto's downtown hotels and spend millions of dollars in its restaurants and bars.
By day, they meet in the caverns of the Metro Toronto Convention Centre -- an underground pavilion larger than 10 football fields -- to make deals. When I attended the conference in 2013, by the end of day one of my satchel contained several business cards, glossy brochures and... a branded water bottle. I had an overview of mining prospects in Nunavut; surveys of global exploration and investment trends; a guide to investment in China's mineral industry; maps of every gold-mining project in Alaska and the Yukon; and a series of brochures from the Mongolian ministry of mining promoting the emergence of large-scale coal extraction there.
The most striking find came from the booth of the U.S. Geological Survey, whose material was entirely about extractive prospects in Afghanistan. A message on the back of the reports expressed appreciation for the generous support of both USAid and the Department of Defence.


