Andrew N. Disipio

Andrew N. Disipio

Partner & Head of Mining Industry Team at Bennett Jones LLP
(416) 777-5034
100 King St W, Suite 3400, 1 First Canadian Pl, PO Box 130, Toronto, ON
Year called to bar: 2013 (ON); 2012 (New York)
Andrew Disipio, Head of Mining, practises corporate and securities law, with a focus on mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures, strategic investments, private equity and corporate finance. Andrew has significant expertise in both public and private M&A, having acted on plans of arrangement, takeover bids, share and asset acquisitions, joint ventures and complex corporate reorganizations. He also routinely acts for issuers and underwriters on equity and debt financings, including shelf and short form prospectus offerings and private placements, as well as reverse takeovers and stock exchange listings. While Andrew acts for clients in a wide range of industries, including technology, gaming, consumer products, media & telecom, financial services, real estate and retail, he focuses on the mining and metals sector as Head of the Firm's Mining Group. Andrew assists mining clients through every phase of their business, from inception through to exploration, extraction, development and production. His commitment to providing comprehensive legal solutions, combined with his deep understanding of the mining industry, has made him a trusted and long-standing advisor to mining clients at every stage of their development.
Andrew N. Disipio is a featured Leading Lawyer in:
Canadian Legal Lexpert Directory
Repeatedly Recommended
Canadian Legal Lexpert Directory
Repeatedly Recommended
Andrew N. Disipio is also listed in the following publication(s)
Read more about Andrew N. Disipio in ...
Mining law's new frontier in Canada – dealmakers, disruption, and the pursuit of security
Trade frictions and permitting delays slow deals, but lawyers are driving creative solutions
How Canada's mining M&A is adapting in 2025 during geopolitical and tariff uncertainty
Trade frictions, permitting delays, are slowing deals – but lawyers are finding ways to make them work