In the crisp pages of Budget 2025, Canada charts a deliberate course through its mineral veins: full CCUS tax credits stretched to 2035, a widened net for incentives on minerals like germanium and scandium—antimony's subtle gleam among them. These aren't mere fiscal levers but threads in the larger weave of a clean energy transition, drawing capital to the processing plants and capture sites that dot our boreal expanse. It's a reminder, perhaps, of how our collective story—rooted in the quiet labor of extractors and innovators—might yet harmonize the raw pulse of resource development with the steady breath of environmental care. What quiet revolutions begin when policy meets possibility?












