Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTProactiveSat, June 20, 2026 at 4:37 PM GMT+2 3 min readFirst Phosphate Corp. (CSE:PHOS, OTCQX:FRSPF, FRA:KD0, OTC:FPHOY) earlier this week highlighted its inclusion in the G7 Critical Minerals Resilience and Production Alliance, with chief executive officer John Passalacqua telling Proactive that the recognition represents an important step in advancing the company's integrated LFP battery materials strategy.Passalacqua said First Phosphate was selected as one of only 13 projects identified under the alliance, which was established to support critical minerals resilience and production across G7 nations. He indicated that the project selection demonstrates growing international support for the development of strategic battery materials supply chains.According to Passalacqua, the most significant benefit is not simply the visibility generated by the announcement but the progress made in de-risking the company's projects and improving access to capital.He explained that the company's mining operations have been advanced toward a final investment decision, while attention is increasingly turning toward the phosphoric acid plant planned for Port Saguenay. Passalacqua said the project is being advanced with the support of institutions associated with the Italian government and engineering group MAIRE.The CEO noted that while some of the underlying agreements and developments had been disclosed previously, the latest announcement brings those initiatives together under a single strategic framework linked to the G7 alliance.Passalacqua stated that a key objective remains the creation of an onshored LFP battery supply chain stretching from phosphate production through to battery manufacturing. He described the initiative as an important endorsement of the company's broader vision and the role phosphate can play in supporting energy transition technologies.Potential catalysts for investors include continued progress toward final investment decisions, further project de-risking activities, advancements at the Port Saguenay facility, financing milestones and additional partnerships related to the North American battery materials supply chain.Passalacqua also pointed to the broader geopolitical significance of the project, saying support from Canada, Denmark, Italy and institutions within the European Union reflects increasing focus on securing critical mineral supply chains.One of the interview's notable comments came when Passalacqua said the company is pursuing "the on shoring of the LFP battery supply chain, end to end, mine to market phosphate all the way down to the batteries itself being put together by First Phosphate."Terms and Privacy PolicyEU DSA contactPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info