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

Think big: Canada should be open to risks as it invests in space, professor says

Think big: Canada should be open to risks as it invests in space, professor says

Canadians passionate about their country's role in space say investments in homegrown astronauts and...

Think big: Canada should be open to risks as it invests in space, professor says

NDP pushing for ban on AI surveillance pricing as Lewis makes Parliament Hill debut

NDP pushing for ban on AI surveillance pricing as Lewis makes Parliament Hill debut
The NDP is expected to introduce a motion on Wednesday calling on the government to ban a practice known as surveillance pricing that New Democrats say is unfair to consumers. 

NDP pushing for ban on AI surveillance pricing as Lewis makes Parliament Hill debut

B.C. legal challenge to Catholic-run hospital's denial of MAID enters closing phase

B.C. legal challenge to Catholic-run hospital's denial of MAID enters closing phase
The mother of a woman who was denied medical assistance in dying at a Catholic-run hospital in Vancouver says her daughter's final hour was "unbearably painful," and a legal challenge of St. Paul's policies is "built on her legacy."

B.C. legal challenge to Catholic-run hospital's denial of MAID enters closing phase

Clean energy groups call for East-West grid connections, investments in renewables

Clean energy groups call for East-West grid connections, investments in renewables
A coalition of clean energy groups is calling on Ottawa to connect the country through a grid powered by renewable energy.

Clean energy groups call for East-West grid connections, investments in renewables

Jobs minister urges youth to pursue skilled trades despite generational stigma

Jobs minister urges youth to pursue skilled trades despite generational stigma
Federal Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu says Canada must break the stigma around careers in the skilled trades if the Liberals want to achieve their infrastructure and homebuilding agenda.

Jobs minister urges youth to pursue skilled trades despite generational stigma

As session returns, Eby's government faces 'peril' over DRIPA: political scientist

As session returns, Eby's government faces 'peril' over DRIPA: political scientist
A political analyst says British Columbia Premier David Eby faces a "moment of real peril" as legislators return to Victoria this week.

As session returns, Eby's government faces 'peril' over DRIPA: political scientist