Canada's economic geography is not uniform. Ontario runs the manufacturing and financial engine. Alberta leads on energy and is growing fast into technology. British Columbia is the Pacific gateway with the most diversified trade profile in the country. Quebec anchors aerospace, AI, and Hydro-Quebec's industrial strategy. The Prairie provinces produce the food and energy that the world needs. Atlantic Canada has ocean resources, defence investment, and an Indigenous fisheries story that is one of the most significant governance questions in the country. The territories hold the mineral wealth and the sovereignty stakes that define Canada's Arctic position. Each of these stories deserves its own analysis.
Provinces: live research briefs
Central Canada
Canada's economic engine, home to 38% of national GDP and the auto sector. The EV transition, GTA housing collapse, and productivity gap with American peers define the decade ahead.
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Western Canada
Canada's Pacific gateway. LNG Canada's first cargo shipped in June 2025. 37% of Indo-Pacific FDI. 27 critical minerals projects at late permitting. The most trade-diversified province in the country.
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Western Canada
Fastest-growing major province. Coal-free since June 2024. Tech sector growing three times faster than the overall economy. Heritage Fund deficit and 97% US crude concentration are the structural vulnerabilities.
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Provinces: research briefs live
Central Canada
Aerospace, AI research, Hydro-Quebec industrial strategy, battery manufacturing, and the civil law jurisdiction story. Canada's second-largest economy with a distinct economic governance model.
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Prairie provinces
Potash, uranium, canola, and an emerging critical minerals story. Canada's most export-intensive province by GDP share and one of the most US-trade-concentrated.
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Prairie provinces
Agricultural processing, clean hydroelectric power, aerospace manufacturing, and a significant Indigenous population and governance story in the north.
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Atlantic Canada
Lobster and seafood exports, tidal energy innovation, ocean technology at Dalhousie, and a defence and shipbuilding sector tied to Halifax's naval base.
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Atlantic Canada
Bilingual province at the centre of the Marshall rights fisheries story. Forestry, energy, and a growing life sciences cluster in Moncton.
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Atlantic Canada
Offshore oil, the Labrador Trough iron ore deposits, Churchill Falls hydro, and a fisheries sector still navigating the legacy of the cod moratorium.
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Atlantic Canada
Agriculture, seafood, and a tourism economy. Canada's smallest province by size and one of the most per-capita-intensive agri-food exporters.
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Territories: research briefs live
Northern Territories
Critical minerals, tourism, and the Alaska Highway corridor. Predominantly First Nations population with growing self-government and economic development capacity.
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Northern Territories
Diamonds, gold, rare earths, and the Deh Cho corridor. Indigenous governance is the central political economy story. NORAD infrastructure investment is creating new procurement opportunities.
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Northern Territories
Inuit self-determination, Arctic sovereignty, fisheries governance, and the mineral wealth of the world's newest major jurisdiction. The most significant governance story in Canadian economic life.
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