Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. fast-tracking 18 mining and energy projects in face of U.S. tariff threat

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2025 05:56 PM
  • B.C. fast-tracking 18 mining and energy projects in face of U.S. tariff threat

The British Columbia government has released a list of 18 critical mineral and energy projects worth roughly $20 billion that it said it's working to accelerate in the face of ongoing tariff threats from the United States.

The list contains mining projects that have received pushback from some B.C. and Alaskan First Nations groups, including Eskay Creek, Highland Valley and Red Chris mines.

The Stk’emlupsemc te Secwepemc Nation said in November that it would not give its consent to expand the Highland Valley Copper Mine, southwest of Kamloops, because the impact would be "neither reasonable nor sustainable" and the mine has already harmed its ancestral lands and water.

That is in contrast to the Haisla Nation and Pembina Pipeline Corporation in June last year when they announced a positive final investment in the Cedar LNG Project, a floating liquefied natural gas facility on the west coast that is also on the government's list for expedited projects.

Cedar LNG has been opposed by environmental groups, including Environmental Defence Canada and the David Suzuki Foundation, which say new LNG infrastructure "contradicts Canada’s climate commitments."

What the government called the "initial list" is made up of projects that already have developed business cases but still need some type of permit or approval from government.

In addition to four mines, there are three energy security projects, and eleven BC Hydro clean energy ventures that mostly involve wind power.

The projects will employ approximately 8,000 people in B.C. and the provincial government is working to identify other projects, the Office of the Premier said in a statement.

The release of the list comes after Premier David Eby said on Monday that the government was expediting some projects to diversify the economy, assuming there would be "four years of continual on and off tariff threats" from the United States under the presidency of Donald Trump.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ripe avalanche conditions for parts of B.C. expected to persist this week: forecaster

Ripe avalanche conditions for parts of B.C. expected to persist this week: forecaster
A forecaster says ripe avalanche conditions are expected to persist across much of British Columbia for the rest of the week. Large swaths of the province, stretching from the coast to the Alberta boundary, are under "considerable" or "moderate" avalanche danger warnings.

Ripe avalanche conditions for parts of B.C. expected to persist this week: forecaster

Wild Christmas: BC Ferries cancels many sailings over 'severe' forecast

Wild Christmas: BC Ferries cancels many sailings over 'severe' forecast
The ferry firm said the "severe" forecast meant all sailings between Tsawwassen and Duke Point in Nanaimo on Wednesday had to be axed, while trips between Tsawwassen and Swartz Bay between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. were also scrapped.

Wild Christmas: BC Ferries cancels many sailings over 'severe' forecast

Fake banker scam in Burnaby

Fake banker scam in Burnaby
Mounties in Burnaby are asking for the public's help identifying a suspect believed to have defrauded a senior of thousands of dollars by posing as a bank employee. Police say they received a report in September saying a man called the victim and was able to obtain their date of birth and passwords.

Fake banker scam in Burnaby

Premiers urge Trudeau to extend deadline for charitable donations after postal strike

Premiers urge Trudeau to extend deadline for charitable donations after postal strike
Canada's premiers are calling on the federal government to extend the deadline for claiming charitable donations on tax returns through to the end of February. Ontario Premier Doug Ford made the request in a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday, sent in his capacity as chair of the Council of the Federation.

Premiers urge Trudeau to extend deadline for charitable donations after postal strike

Man dead after Mounties attempt arrest

Man dead after Mounties attempt arrest
RCMP say a man died after officers tried to arrest him on outstanding warrants near Edmonton. Police were called Monday to a rural home southeast of the city in Beaver County.

Man dead after Mounties attempt arrest

Arrest after man drives wrong way

Arrest after man drives wrong way
Mounties are looking for witnesses and dashcam footage of a pickup truck that crossed onto the wrong side of Highway 1 when police tried to pull it over near Hope, B.C., last week. They say that just before 9:30 a.m. on Dec. 17, BC Highway Patrol attempted to stop a white pickup truck that was speeding in the eastbound lane of the highway.

Arrest after man drives wrong way