Beyond — Page 39
Fertilizer prices spike, pushing up grocery bills this year
A Persian Gulf shipping closure has sent costs soaring for farmers. Consumers will feel it in bakery aisles, cooking oils, and meat counters.
Signal, DuckDuckGo warn they may exit Canada over encryption bill
Tech companies are pushing back against Bill C-22, which would require them to build or maintain surveillance capabilities, potentially...
Carbon pricing deal unlikely to cut Canadian emissions, study warns
New analysis says Alberta's energy agreement with Ottawa will do little to reduce Canada's emissions due to inefficiencies in carbon...
PEI oyster farms devastated by parasitic diseases
MSX and Dermo are forcing farms across Prince Edward Island to discard nearly their entire supply, threatening one of the province's...
Tragically Hip, Nelly Furtado lead Canada's World Cup album
Drake producer Boi-1da curated 'What If It All Goes Right?' featuring Canadian artists competing for global audience during tournament.
China targets Canadian officials through job listings
Five Eyes intelligence agencies warn Beijing is using LinkedIn and job platforms to recruit government and military staff for espionage.
UFC moves pay-per-view to streaming in Canada
Starting January 2027, UFC numbered-event main cards will be exclusive to Paramount+ subscribers in Canada at a fraction of current PPV costs.
Sun Life agrees to $213.5M settlement for overcharged policyholders
Class action resolving decades-old claims that MetLife charged excess fees on universal life policies sold in late 1980s and 1990s.
Trump administration escalates forced labour tariff threat
U.S. accuses Canada of weak enforcement on imports, raising stakes as USMCA trade deal heads for renewal.
Carbon deal unlikely to cut emissions, climate institute warns
Independent analysis suggests the Alberta-Ottawa pipeline agreement may leave Canada's greenhouse gas pollution unchanged or even growing.
Canada's public service is shrinking as costs bite
Ottawa joins democracies worldwide cutting bureaucracy to rein in pandemic-era spending and rising deficits.
Pandemic immigration boom masked Canada's economic weakness
High immigration intake propped up GDP while per-capita earnings fell, economists say — now the correction is underway.