May 29, 2024
Much of the jump in foreign investments was due to Swedish battery manufacturer Northvolt’s decision to build a $7-billion plant in Quebec. Announced in late September, Premier François Legault said it was the largest private manufacturing investment in the province’s history. Quebec committed $2.9 billion for the project, while Ottawa chipped in $4.4 billion. Officials at the agency said the Northvolt deal contributed as much as $6 billion toward the increase in foreign investments in the province last year.
On the foreign market, 59 per cent of fixed sales were conducted in the United States; 31 per cent in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America; and 10 per cent elsewhere in Canada, similar to last year’s figures. A total of $2.1 billion in sales were conducted outside of the U.S. market.
Foreign direct investment in the Montreal area slumped 24 per cent last year as technology companies scaled back expansion plans and some industrial projects were scrapped due to a lack of available power, Montreal International, the city’s non-profit investment promotion agency, reported in February.
Daniel Silverman, vice-president of foreign direct investment, said much of the new investment last year happened in the regions of Quebec where there is more space to accommodate the vast factories and production zones required for electric battery production and subsidiaries linked to that production.
Also making a difference is Quebec’s focus on creating “innovation zones,” like the one announced on Tuesday in which Boeing Co. pledged $240 million toward a Montreal-area aerospace cluster, anchoring a provincial plan that aims to make Quebec a global launchpad for development of drones and greener aircraft. Other innovation zones in places like Bromont, Sherbrooke and Bécancour are becoming beacons for investment, Silverman said.
Montreal is the only place in the world where the aviation giants Airbus, Boeing and Bombardier are directly present, Fitzgibbon said. It is also strong in life sciences, as evidenced by the creation of the $180-million Moderna vaccine plant, which bodes well for future investments.
While Quebec does not expect to be able to equal its $13 billion in foreign investments for the coming year — given that the Northvolt project, which was years in the making, accounted for nearly half of this year’s record haul — Fitzgibbon said the pipeline of projects that have been created is generating offshoot industries needed to support them, and there are more in the works that will keep investments flowing.
Source: Montreal Gazette
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