Monday, April 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Illicit drugs to be tracked in B.C. with chemical fingerprinting and AI

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Apr, 2026 10:51 AM
  • Illicit drugs to be tracked in B.C. with chemical fingerprinting and AI

Scientists and police in British Columbia are working together on what they hope will be a game-changing "chemical fingerprinting" program to track the source and destination of individual batches of illicit drugs.

A lab at the University of British Columbia will use artificial intelligence to generate "actionable insights" for police, and predict how illicit drugs are moving across the province.

But while information from the two-year pilot program can be used to further investigations, it won't be used in prosecutions, and nor will drugs obtained from prosecuted cases be part of the testing.

A government official says in a background briefing that the technology will give police a more timely and detailed analysis of drugs on the streets.

The province will fund the project with $300,000 per year.

Documents say data from the project will also help generate earlier warnings for "faster and better-informed public health alerts."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

MORE National ARTICLES

Immigration minister's spokesperson defends strict new timelines for refugee claims

Immigration minister's spokesperson defends strict new timelines for refugee claims
A spokeswoman for Immigration Minister Lena Diab is defending new rules that will rule out thousands of refugee claims, saying difficult decisions were required to regain control of Canada's immigration system.

Immigration minister's spokesperson defends strict new timelines for refugee claims

B.C. home sales face major headwinds in March as transactions, prices both slide

B.C. home sales face major headwinds in March as transactions, prices both slide
British Columbia's home sales trended down across the board in March in price, transactions and dollar volume in what realtors are calling a "very challenging economic environment."

B.C. home sales face major headwinds in March as transactions, prices both slide

Finland's president says Canada is on a pragmatic path amid geopolitical tumult

Finland's president says Canada is on a pragmatic path amid geopolitical tumult
Finland's President Alexander Stubb says Canada is doing the right thing by diversifying its trade beyond the U.S. and is in a position to contribute to building a more stable world.

Finland's president says Canada is on a pragmatic path amid geopolitical tumult

Conservative MPs back Poilievre after he says he'll lead party into next election

Conservative MPs back Poilievre after he says he'll lead party into next election
A handful of Conservative MPs stopped on their way into a caucus meeting this morning to tell reporters they're backing their leader as questions swirl about Pierre Poilievre's ability to stay in the job.

Conservative MPs back Poilievre after he says he'll lead party into next election

Liberals set to form historic majority government after sweeping three byelections

Liberals set to form historic majority government after sweeping three byelections
It took nearly a full year and a handful of byelections and defections for Prime Minister Mark Carney to assemble enough members of Parliament to turn his minority government into a slim majority — a feat that has never happened in Canadian politics before.

Liberals set to form historic majority government after sweeping three byelections

Liberals to table spring economic statement on April 28

Liberals to table spring economic statement on April 28
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says the federal Liberals will table their spring economic update on April 28.

Liberals to table spring economic statement on April 28