
-
Japan city proposes two-hour daily smartphone limit
-
A rise in the mountains as Vuelta a Espana cranks up the climbing
-
Thai ex-PM Thaksin acquitted of royal insult charges
-
Japanese amateur boxer in intensive care after latest incident
-
US wine sellers left in limbo despite EU tariff deal
-
Erik Menendez denied parole, decades after parents' murders
-
Under Trump pressure, US Fed chief to walk tightrope in speech
-
Nvidia chief says H20 chip shipments to China not a security concern
-
North Korea's Kim decorates troops who fought for Russia against Ukraine
-
Two separate guerilla attacks kill 18 in Colombia
-
Rice prices up 91 pct year-on-year in Japan
-
Asian markets tick up as investors eye Jackson Hole meeting
-
De Bruyne leads Napoli's Serie A title defence as Lukaku injury causes concern
-
Pollard, Albornoz hailed as key Rugby Championship clashes loom
-
Marseille plunged into crisis with season just getting started
-
Pakistan woos old rival Bangladesh, as India watches on
-
Documents show New Zealand unease over Chinese warships in South Pacific
-
$346 mn US-Nigeria arms deal sets rights groups on edge
-
Got the scoop: Bear takes over California ice cream shop
-
Rested but rusty Djokovic plots US Open ambush
-
'Tough lessons' helping Sabalenka ahead of US Open defence
-
Meta makes huge cloud computing deal with Google: source
-
Blockbuster 'Sincaraz' rivalry ready to light up US Open
-
Less tax, more luxury: millionaires flock to Dubai
-
Akie Iwai leads, Canadian teen Deng in hunt at LPGA Canadian Open
-
Chile, Argentina football fans trade blame over stadium violence
-
Palestinian camps in Lebanon begin disarming
-
Five dead as 'thunderous' bomb attack hits Colombian city
-
Henley leads PGA Tour Championship with Scheffler in pursuit
-
US Supreme Court allows cuts in NIH diversity research grants
-
Why fan violence still sullies Latin American football
-
Lil Nas X arrested after nearly naked nighttime stroll in LA
-
Texas, California race to redraw electoral maps ahead of US midterms
-
US captain Zackary wants Eagles to soar against England in Women's Rugby World Cup opener
-
Palace's Eze on verge of Arsenal move as he misses European tie
-
Google to provide Gemini AI tools to US government
-
Canada measles cases pass 4,500, highest count in Americas
-
'Underdog' Jefferson-Wooden shrugs off Tokyo worlds pressure
-
England's Jones relishing 'special occasion' at Women's Rugby World Cup after tragic year
-
Alcaraz, Djokovic on US Open collision course
-
US singer signs on for Russia's answer to Eurovision
-
Hundred-plus detained after fans 'lynched' during South America cup tie
-
Trump hails 'total victory' as US court quashes $464 mn civil penalty
-
Slot says Liverpool will only sign right player at right price amid Isak row
-
Walmart expects better sales, earnings as shoppers squeezed by tariffs
-
Malnourished Gaza children facing death without aid, says UN
-
Autopsy rules out 'trauma' in Frenchman livestream death
-
Liverpool's Frimpong out for several weeks with hamstring injury
-
Leverkusen rebuild continues with Bade and Echeverri signings
-
Ghana singer Shatta Wale held in US fraud probe over Lamborghini purchase

In Canada's Quebec, residents miffed over mining boom
Canada's Quebec province is rich with minerals needed for everything from electric cars to cell phones, but residents living atop the potential windfall are worried their backyards will be dug up -- and they won't get a dime.
In recent months, tens of thousands of mining exploration permits have been issued in the province amid a global rush for critical and strategic minerals such as graphite, lithium, zinc, nickel and cobalt.
But under provincial mining exploration rules, subsoil in Quebec does not belong to landowners.
In Saint-Elie-de-Caxton, a town of 2,000 people about halfway between Montreal and Quebec City, residents are fed up. Signs around town proclaim "Saint-Elie, incompatible with mining activity" or "Don't Dig in my Caxton."
"We are at war, says Gilbert Guerin, spokesman for the "Don't Dig in my Caxton" committee, pointing to a map delineating exploration claims that have effectively parceled off the town for future mines.
In Quebec, it only takes a few clicks on a website and about Can$75 (US$55) to stake a mining claim covering up to 100 hectares (250 acres) -- an opportunity open to locals and foreigners alike.
"I bought here. I thought I would be sovereign in my own home, but I came to understand that what's underground did not belong to me," says Yvan Lafontaine, surveying his property in the neighboring village of Saint-Mathieu-du-Parc from atop an observation tower he had built.
When Lafontaine learned that a company had acquired the mining rights to the subsoil beneath his land, what the nature lover calls his little "paradise," he fought back by staking 12 claims surrounding the property.
Currently, more than 350,000 claims have been registered, covering 10 percent of Quebec. The southern areas of the province -- where most of the population lives -- is the most sought after.
According to an AFP analysis of government data, the number of claims issued significantly increased from September 2022 to the end of February 2024, with about 160,000 granted -- a 140 percent increase over the previous 18-month period.
- 'Wild West' -
For Saint-Elie resident Julie Hamelin, the mining exploration regulations in Quebec are "outdated."
"It's something out of the Wild West, this way of staking claims," she said, urging provincial authorities to protect inhabited lands from mining.
Guerin, a former civil servant, says he is worried about the "irreversible consequences" that a mining project would have, particularly on the region's groundwater.
To try to discourage mining companies from moving in, residents of Saint-Elie-de-Caxton spent thousands of dollars to buy up more than 220 exploration claims around the village.
Faced with growing public discontent, the Quebec government has announced it intends to modernize its mining law, and insisted in an email to AFP "that no exploration can be carried out without the consent of the owner of private land."
But mining companies definitely are eyeballing Quebec's potential for resources extraction.
"There is a lot of graphite in Quebec. It could be the most important reserve in the world," says Hugues Jacquemin, chief executive of Northern Graphite.
"We absolutely must develop this sector because it is essential for the manufacture of batteries and electric vehicles," he told AFP during a visit to a mine at Lac-des-Iles, 260 kilometers (160 miles) north of Montreal.
Canada is seeking to develop a battery supply chain independent from China, which has until now dominated the market in these critical minerals.
The development of the electric vehicle sector is a priority for both Quebec and Canada, which boasts of being one of the only countries in the world to have all of the necessary minerals to produce batteries.
But in Saint-Elie-de-Caxton and its surrounding areas, not all citizens are on board with the official plans.
"I don't think we should go in this direction," says Hamelin. "The solution is downscaling by using what we already have."
B.Wyler--VB