Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

StatCan estimates population edged lower in the first quarter of 2026

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2026 09:42 AM
  • StatCan estimates population edged lower in the first quarter of 2026

Statistics Canada estimates the population edged down 0.1 per cent in the first quarter of this year as the number of non-permanent residents dropped.

The agency estimated the population at 41,417,056 on April 1, down 55,025 people from Jan. 1.

The decrease came as the preliminary number of non-permanent residents fell by 117,879 people in the first three months of the year compared with a decline of 55,194 a year ago.

Statistics Canada says the country welcomed 83,149 permanent immigrants in the first quarter compared with 104,210 in the first quarter of last year.

Net emigration totalled 20,140 people for the quarter compared with 19,961 a year ago.

The natural increase, measured as births minus deaths, was negative 155 for the quarter as there were more deaths than births. The result compared with an increase of 983 in the first quarter of 2025.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver council votes against sanctioning Mayor Ken Sim after harassment finding

Vancouver council votes against sanctioning Mayor Ken Sim after harassment finding
Vancouver's city council has voted not to sanction Mayor Ken Sim after he was found to have misused the influence of his office and harassed a councillor.

Vancouver council votes against sanctioning Mayor Ken Sim after harassment finding

Canada looking to beef up forced labour laws as U.S. imposes new tariffs

Canada looking to beef up forced labour laws as U.S. imposes new tariffs
Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday his Liberal government will soon introduce legislation on forced labour in supply chains after the Trump administration proposed a 10 per cent additional tariff on Canada and other countries following an investigation into the issue.

Canada looking to beef up forced labour laws as U.S. imposes new tariffs

Indigenous speakers, politicians watching audit of languages office closely

Indigenous speakers, politicians watching audit of languages office closely
Indigenous language speakers and political leaders say they were disappointed to learn a landmark Indigenous languages office is under investigation after the federal government received anonymous complaints.

Indigenous speakers, politicians watching audit of languages office closely

Carney says national unity council will study surge in antisemitism

Carney says national unity council will study surge in antisemitism
The new national unity council will assess what is driving antisemitism in Canada and improve research and data collection on hate incidents, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Monday.

Carney says national unity council will study surge in antisemitism

Man, 18, identified as victim in shooting-related homicide in Surrey, B.C.

Man, 18, identified as victim in shooting-related homicide in Surrey, B.C.
Homicide investigators have identified the victim of a fatal shooting over the weekend in Metro Vancouver as an 18-year-old man.

Man, 18, identified as victim in shooting-related homicide in Surrey, B.C.

Federal government’s new AI strategy will emphasize trust, minister says

Federal government’s new AI strategy will emphasize trust, minister says
The federal government’s new artificial intelligence strategy will look to build trust in AI, Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon said Tuesday just days before he is expected to finally make the plan public.

Federal government’s new AI strategy will emphasize trust, minister says