Look West: Major Project Update (flickr.com)

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Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth

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Backgrounders

Look West: Overview and progress update

In November 2025, the B.C. government launched Look West, a strategic plan to deliver major projects faster, expand skills training and grow key sectors to strengthen B.C.’s economy, creating good jobs and opportunities for people and businesses, and benefiting all of Canada.

The strategy sets a 10-year vision to strengthen B.C.’s economy, including continuing work to speed up permitting and diversify key sectors, so B.C.’s economy is less reliant on the United States.

Look West is focused on three core priorities:

  • training up and growing B.C.’s skilled workforce to deliver major projects and create new jobs and opportunities for people
  • delivering major nation-building projects that generate good jobs and economic growth quicker
  • delivering sector action plans to diversify and balance B.C.’s economy, from critical minerals, tech and life sciences to defence-related industries, marine and aerospace

The strategy is driving substantial investment and job creation, with a proposed investment of more than $89 billion in major projects generating tens of thousands of jobs in the next three years. This progress supports the province’s economic growth and public-service funding while advancing toward a $200-billion private-sector investment goal.

  • Major projects and job creation: More than $89 billion in projects are proposed or underway, including Cedar LNG, which is in a peak year for construction and expected to create up to 500 construction and 100 operational jobs, contributing significant revenue for public infrastructure.
  • Look West strategy objectives: Launched in November 2025, Look West aims to deliver major projects, strengthen economic security and expand skilled-trades training with $283 million in funding to double apprenticeship seats by 2028-29.
  • Government actions to accelerate growth: Efforts include speeding up project approvals, reducing barriers and expediting environmental assessments, with key mining projects receiving permits and legislative support for clean-energy transmission lines.
  • Investment and economic security: Final investment decisions have been made on major mining projects generating thousands of jobs and substantial provincial revenue, alongside initiatives to boost B.C.’s role in Canada's defence economy with more than $67 million in funding.

In less than six months, B.C. has made significant progress on Look West priorities.

Strengthening our workforce

  • Investing in skilled trades training: B.C. is doubling funding to $214 million per year by 2028-29. This is the first major increase in skilled trades training in nearly 20 years, and it will ensure people in B.C. have the skills needed to build major projects in the province.
  • Creating more opportunities for skills training: B.C. will provide $12 million over three years to enhance the employer training grant, which provides funding for employers to invest in their workers. This will allow workers to access essential skills training, preparing them to be more adaptable and successful in a changing labour market.
  • Supporting highly qualified professionals: Budget 2026 includes $30 million to train highly qualified professionals by adding specialized streams to existing programs, including engineering, geology, computer science, biology and aerospace.
  • Strengthening health care: B.C. is attracting more health-care professionals and connecting more people to doctors. As of February 2026, B.C. has the most doctors per capita in Canada and hired more than 500 heath-care professionals from the United States. It is all part of the Province’s efforts to strengthen B.C.’s public health-care system, so people get health services when needed, closer to home.
  • Protecting our future workforce: The Province introduced legislation in February 2026 to strengthen oversight of B.C.’s international education sector, ensuring better protection for international students and holding bad actors accountable.

Delivering major projects quicker:

  • Speeding up permitting, creating good jobs: The permitting process for the Eskay Creek mine took nine months from application submission to decision, more than 40% faster than previous processes. The combined environmental assessment/permit amendment process for the Mt. Milligan mine expansion took 10 months from submission to decision, more than 60% faster than previous processes.
  • Record exploration spending and streamlined processes: In 2025, B.C. saw a record-breaking $751 million in exploration spending, with a 35% increase in exploration permits issued in 2025 compared to 2024, and a 35% reduction in major mining application timelines due to co-ordinated environmental assessment and permitting processes.
  • New permitting timelines and innovation support: Starting in April 2026, fixed permitting timelines and escalation processes will provide more certainty and stability for mineral exploration. Investment in B.C. critical minerals projects could represent an opportunity worth as much as $44 billion by 2040.
  • Supporting innovation in critical minerals: B.C. businesses now have new opportunities to test, deploy and scale cutting-edge technology that can support the continued growth of B.C.’s mining and critical minerals sector at the provincewide mining and critical minerals testbed.
  • Working together with First Nations and reaching historic milestones: The reopening of Eskay Creek gold-silver mine marks the first regulatory process completed under a Section 7 agreement negotiated under the Declaration Act, where the Province and Tahltan Nation each made decisions enabling the project to proceed. The mine is expected to generate $1.19 billion in provincial revenue.
  • Bringing good, local jobs: Mining provides more than 40,000 family-supporting jobs in B.C. Expansions at Mt. Milligan and Copper Mountain will create or sustain a total of more than 1,370 jobs, and Eskay Creek reopening will add approximately 1,000 construction and 770 operational jobs. The Eskay Creek mine and Mount Milligan expansion are also part of the initial 18 projects prioritized by the Province in 2025.
  • Powering North Coast growth with clean energy: BC Hydro has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Ksi Lisims LNG, a key step toward securing a major customer for the North Coast Transmission Line. Ksi Lisims LNG, one of the projects identified as a federal priority along with Prince Rupert Gas Transmission Pipeline, is expected to attract nearly $30 billion in investment, create thousands of skilled jobs and strengthen Canada’s position in the global LNG market.

Diversifying markets and growing targeted sectors

  • Powering AI growth with clean energy: Supporting a balanced development of artificial intelligence and data-centre projects in British Columbia, the Province and BC Hydro have launched a competitive process for clean power in high-demand sectors.
  • Supporting breakthroughs in innovation:
    • B.C. is investing more than $30 million through the B.C. Knowledge Development Fund to strengthen world-class high-performance computing infrastructure at Simon Fraser University and the University of Victoria. This includes the renewal of SFU’s Cedar National Host Site, one of Canada’s most powerful academic supercomputers, and UVic’s Arbutus National Host Site, the country’s largest research cloud, enabling cutting edge AI, quantum, and data intensive research across Canada.
    • Partnering with UBC, B.C. is creating the UBC Catalyst Ventures Fund, a $40-million investment fund to help grow B.C. companies rooted in UBC innovation and create more good jobs in the province. Discoveries by UBC researchers have formed the basis of more than 280 spinoff companies and licensed discoveries have led to products, services and treatments that have generated an estimated $13 billion in sales across multiple sectors.
    • Since fall 2025, Integrated Marketplace has established three new testbeds focused on:
      • forestry innovation and emergency management
      • mining and critical minerals
      • marine and coastal.

That brings the total to seven testbeds provincewide. Supported by $41.5 million in provincial funding and $11.7 million in federal support, the Integrated Marketplace enables B.C. companies to test, deploy and scale innovations while reducing adoption risk for industry partners, advancing the Province’s Look West strategy and building a more self-reliant economy.

  • Growing tourism sector: The 2026 Tourism Sector Action Plan aims to double revenues to $46 billion by 2036 and boost economic growth. The new Adventure Tourism Hub is improving British Columbia’s permitting process, making it easier for businesses to seek land-tenure permits for popular tourism activities like heliskiing, cat skiing, heli-assisted guiding activities, commercial snowmobiling and snowmobile-assisted activities.
  • Diversifying markets and building economic resilience: Building partnerships with India, one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, and bringing good jobs to B.C. in the mining, technology and clean-energy sectors.
  • Strengthening interprovincial trade, improving affordability: The Province introduced a new law to let products and services approved in other provinces be sold or used in B.C., cutting red tape and lowering costs for businesses. The law makes it easier for companies to grow and attracts more investment to the province, all while improving choice and affordability for people.
  • Backing bid for global defence-bank headquarters: Backing a private-sector bid for the international headquarters of the new Defence, Security and Resiliency Bank (DSRB) to be located in Vancouver. The bank focuses on financing projects for NATO members and allies. If successful, it would create 3,500 high-paying jobs and position B.C. as a leader in the global security sector.
  • Boosting clean technology, enhancing port operations: B.C. is supporting three domestic companies to test dual-use technologies that make our ports safer, cleaner and more competitive while strengthening Canada’s sovereignty and defence capabilities. The three dual-use technology projects are worth more than $1.7 million.
  • Bringing good manufacturing jobs to B.C.: Supporting B.C.-based businesses to grow local manufacturing capacity and create good jobs. Investing $2 million in Jewel Welding Fabrication and Coatings to expand its production of piping, strengthen local supply chains, creating about 45 jobs.
  • Strengthening domestic biomanufacturing capacity: In December 2025, B.C. announced $33 million in provincial funding to support research equipment and infrastructure at Canada’s Immuno Engineering and Biomanufacturing Hub (CIEBH), a national initiative led by UBC, to enable 100-day start-to-finish drug development for future pandemics and urgent health challenges. The investment strengthens domestic biomanufacturing capacity, economic resilience and high-skill job creation in the province’s life-sciences sector.
Province adds more priority projects

To continue growing B.C.’s economy through major natural resource projects, B.C. has added the following major projects to its list of priority projects to support their progress:

  • Red Mountain mine
  • Fording River coal operations - extension
  • Greenhills operations - Cougar 8/9
  • Copper Mountain - New Ingerbelle extension
  • Baptiste nickel mine
  • New Polaris mine
  • Trail smelter operations
  • Yellowhead Copper project
  • Blackwater mine, Phase 2 expansion
  • Enbridge T-South expansion (Sunrise)
  • KSM mine
  • Ksi Lisims LNG and Prince Rupert Gas Transmission
  • LNG Canada, Phase 2
  • Woodfibre LNG
  • FortisBC Tilbury LNG, Phase 2
  • Pembina NGL pipeline, Birch to Taylor expansion
  • Pembina NGL pipeline, Taylor to Gordondale expansion