In August 2024, Finance Canada published for consultation various legislative proposals to address Budget 2024 measures, including two proposals to amend the legislation related to tax incentives that support the mineral sector.
One proposal aims to offset an increase in Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) and the capital gains inclusion rate by amending parts of the AMT. Specifically, the key proposed change eliminates (For AMT calculation) the requirement to add back deductions obtained by purchasing flow-through shares (FTS).
The second proposal amends the legislation related to the Clean Technology Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit (CTM-ITC) – a new incentive that provides a refundable 30% tax credit for capital investments in various eligible activities to extract and process six qualified materials that are essential for clean technologies (Copper, nickel, lithium, cobalt, graphite and rare earth elements). Under the original legislation, qualified materials should account for at least 90% of production to be eligible for the credit. PDAC and other industry stakeholders recommended that due to the polymetallic nature of deposits in Canada, such a high threshold would preclude the vast majority of projects from receiving the credit, and Finance responded by reducing the threshold to only 50% of production.