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Ontario economic development minister focusing on defence investments in 2026 | Globalnews.ca

Ontario economic development minister focusing on defence investments in 2026 | Globalnews.ca

By Globalnewsdigitalglobalnews-feed

In a year that began with the United States upending global trading relationships, Ontario’s economic development minister travelled the world in search of new ties and has zeroed in on the defence sector as a way to steady the ship into next year and beyond. The American-generated turmoil is far from over but Ontario, like the country, and like most of the rest of the world, is looking to distance itself from the seemingly daily onslaught, Vic Fedeli said in a recent interview. “The theme around the world is, how can we work together around the U.S.?” he said. “They know you wake up every morning sort of with one eye half-cocked, looking at Twitter and wondering, ‘What new hell have we been delivered this morning?'” Fedeli - formally known as the minister of economic development, job creation and trade, but informally dubbed Ontario’s chief salesperson - flew to 20 countries this year seeking to strengthen ties and forge new ones. Next year will bring more of the same, though perhaps “dialed back a hair,” he said. “Twenty countries was a lot,” Fedeli said. “We’ve got to let some of that mature now and close these deals that we believe are all now pending, so we want to make sure that we close them. But you’ll really see us more focused on the places that we go to, focused on defence.” Get daily National news Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy . Fedeli is looking to secure new production in the province from foreign companies and help open new markets for existing Ontario defence manufacturers, but he also aims to boost domestic production. Catholic priest in GTA charged with sex offences, removed from ministry: archdiocese Most Ontarians wait more than three months for specialist or diagnostic test: poll Toronto transit ridership sputters, failing to hit projections or 2024 totals Toronto’s mayor vows to prioritize budget over potential re-election bid The province and federal government see an opportunity, for example, at Algoma Steel, he said. A flurry of defence spending is expected in the near future, including the European Union’s $1.3-trillion ReArm Europe plan, and a lot of steel will be needed to meet those demands, Fedeli said. They have a plan for a second steel plate line and to make I-beams for infrastructure, Fedeli said. “We’re working with the feds and Algoma in a three-way partnership to fund these two things that are going to be really permanent additions to Algoma and hire back lots and lots of people,” he said. Algoma recently announced that roughly 1,000 jobs are being cut because U.S. tariffs are forcing it to transition from coal to electric arc furnaces. The decision was heavily criticized in large part because the federal and Ontario governments had given it $500 million, something critics say should have come with strong job guarantees. The province is not hesitant to again invest in the company, Fedeli said. “That (money) kept them alive,” he said. “They honestly just would not be...

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Ontario economic development minister focusing on defence investments in 2026 | Globalnews.ca | Read on Kindle | LibSpace