← NewsAll
Canada and South Korea sign MOU to expand trade in autos and minerals
Summary
Canada and South Korea signed a memorandum of understanding that establishes a Canada‑Korea Industrial Cooperation Committee to focus on future mobility, automotive production, battery supply chains and critical minerals.
Content
Canada and South Korea signed a memorandum of understanding in Ottawa to deepen trade ties. Industry Minister Melanie Joly met with Korean counterparts and the agreement establishes a Canada‑Korea Industrial Cooperation Committee focused on "future mobility." The move comes as Canada seeks alternative trading partners amid global trade tensions and U.S. tariffs.
Key details:
- The MOU was signed in Ottawa and creates the Canada‑Korea Industrial Cooperation Committee to coordinate on future mobility and related sectors.
- The committee will focus on establishing a footprint for Korean automotive production in Canada, including electric vehicle manufacturing opportunities, though no investment amounts were provided.
- The agreement highlights cooperation on battery supply chains, materials processing, critical minerals processing and recycling, and lists artificial intelligence among strategic sectors.
- Officials said the MOU is intended to diversify exports and strengthen supply chain and energy resilience; the release gave no specifics on companies, investment figures or job numbers.
Summary:
Officials described the MOU as a step to deepen cooperation on automotive production, batteries and critical minerals and to diversify Canada’s exports. Undetermined at this time.
