Sunday, February 01, 2026

‘There’s a very real human toll to the commute:’ Workers prepare for longer drives amid push for return to office
CTVNewsToronto.ca

Westbound traffic is seen on the Gardiner Expressway in Toronto, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cole Burston

On winter mornings in York Region, Mike Skura scrapes ice from his windshield before sunrise and points his car south toward Highway 404.

On a good day, the drive from Keswick to North York takes about 50 minutes.

However on a bad one with snow, freezing rain, and an accident — he says it can stretch to three hours.

“In the peak of the worst weather, they expect us to be scraping the car off and driving through horrible weather,” he said.

As Ontario sends tens of thousands of public servants back to the office as of this week, Skura worries those bad days are about to become routine.


Westbound traffic is seen on the Gardiner Expressway in Toronto, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cole Burston

In August, the province announced that all 60,000 Ontario Public Service employees will be required to be in the office full time starting in January, while federal public servants have already been ordered back at least three days a week.

Rogers Communications has also said that it will require its employees to be in the office five days a week as of February.

Skura, a 34-year-old emergency management worker with the Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services, is one of the public servants who has been impacted by the push for more employees to work exclusively from the office.

He was previously commuting to work in North York three days a week but will now be going in five days a week, something that he says will mean hours more fighting through GTA traffic.

“Morale is at an all time low that I’ve never seen before,” he says. “There was no kind of warning or reason to do this. There was no performance shortcoming in the ministries, for them to prompt this.”

Westbound traffic is seen on the Gardiner Expressway in Toronto, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cole Burston
‘Barely scraping by’ on top of the new mandate

Statistics Canada says Toronto already has the longest average commute in the country — 34.9 minutes in May 2025, up 1.6 minutes from a year earlier and notes commute times rise as workers spend more days physically in the office.

For his part, Premier Doug Ford has defended the return to office for Ontario’s civil servant as necessary for better productivity.

But Skura says the commute and the cost of it is putting unneeded pressures on many workers.


“Making 100 grand used to be like this golden ticket,” he said. “Now, it’s like you’re barely scraping by… you’re paycheck to paycheck, and you’re making boiled pasta like five nights a week.”

Skura lives in Keswick with his partner and their nine-year-old daughter.

Each morning, he drives from near Woodbine and Highway 404 toward North York, parking near a TTC lot before heading into work.

His current commute is manageable on paper.

However, he says the mandate has already forced his family to buy a second car to manage childcare emergencies and overlapping schedules.

“This mandate has forced me to purchase a second car,” he said. “Now I’ve got the added cost… because my wife now needs to have a car... what if there’s an emergency at school?"

He says every vehicle his family has owned has surpassed 200,000 kilometres — a sign, he argues, of long-term financial strain that commuting only worsens.

Meanwhile, others say the pressure isn’t limited to just car owners.

In past few weeks, CTV News Toronto has heard from dozens of residents who say the shift is leaving them anxious about longer drives, higher costs and less time with their families.
‘Stress and panic attacks’

Liz Morris, who lives in Hamilton and is currently on parental leave, says the idea of returning to downtown Toronto even three days a week fills her with dread.

Morris is also a civil servant but is not an Ontario Public Service member and won’t be subject to the five-day a week requirement, unless her employer follows suit.

“The first word that comes to mind is stress followed by panic attacks,” she said.

Morris is currently expected to attend the office a minimum of three days a week.

When required to be in office, Morris wakes at 4:30 a.m., drives to a GO station and catches a 5 a.m. train to Toronto for a start time of 7 a.m., returning home around 5 p.m. on a good day.

“If I get home at five, by the time I get my dinner ready, her dinner ready, bath, all that stuff… I’ve gotten maybe an hour of fun time with her, and then it’s bedtime,” she said.

“I am spending at minimum 4 hours of my day unpaid in commute for a job that can be completed entirely from home and has been for a few years now successfully.”

She estimates commuting alone costs more than $30 a day, on top of already high daycare fees.

“I choose to live in Hamilton, but I also cannot afford to live in Toronto,” Morris said. “That is not an option for me.”
Losing out on the ‘ideal life’

In Scarborough, Shreya Mistry says her commute from Woodbridge to North York used to take about 20 minutes.

Now, it routinely takes more than an hour.

“The ideal life is you go to the gym maybe three to five days a week,” she said. “I can’t do that… it’s a luxury right now.”

Mistry is a healthcare worker who has always been required to be onsite fulltime but she worries that the return of more white collar workers to the office will also impact her commute.

Using Highway 407 to avoid traffic would cost her roughly $60 a day — an expense she says is unrealistic.

“If I were to use it on a daily basis, that’s unimaginable,” she added.
What experts have to say

Some transportation experts warn the system may not be able to absorb what’s coming.

“I think people should be very concerned, both policy-makers and commuters themselves, about the impact that a back-to-work mandate is going to have on the commute,” said Jennifer Keesmaat, a former chief planner for the City of Toronto.‘Toronto traffic, transit congestion likely to worsen with in-office mandates: experts

She said even small increases in vehicle traffic can push roads past a tipping point, especially when transit ridership remains slow to recover.

University of Toronto professor Matti Siemiatycki, however, says working from home doesn’t eliminate travel — it changes when and how people move.

“When people are working from home, it doesn’t mean they’re not on the roads,” he said. “It just means they’re using those roads differently.”

Peak-hour office trips, he noted, are the ones transit is best designed to handle — yet transit systems are struggling to regain ridership.

“The big question mark for me is, can transit get its mojo back?” Siemiatycki said. “Because, if not, as more people come back… we will have a traffic nightmare on our hands.”

The debate comes as Toronto braces for additional pressure next summer, when the city is set to host World Cup matches.

For commuters like Skura, the issue feels less theoretical.

“There’s a very real human toll to the commute,” he said. “There’s been no proof showing that the full five days is going to benefit anyone… it’s going to cause pain and suffering and generate no economic gain.”


Jermaine Wilson

CTVNewsToronto.ca
 Journalist
January 06, 2026 
Federal departments begin notifying public servants of possible job cuts
A federal government building in downtown Ottawa is seen in this Sept. 11, 2024 image. (Dave Charbonneau/CTV News)

Federal departments have started notifying public servants that their jobs may be impacted by workforce adjustments, as the federal government begins to implement its plans to cut 28,000 jobs over the next four years.

Statistics Canada confirmed on Monday that it will cut 850 positions over the next two years, including 100 positions eliminated immediately this week, and Shared Services Canada told CTV News Ottawa it has begun notifying employees about potential cuts.

“We are in the process of notifying employees and executives that their position is affected and may no longer be required,” a spokesperson for Shared Services Canada told CTV News Ottawa in an email Tuesday evening.

Statistics Canada to cut 850 jobs over next 2 years, 100 this week: memo (CTV News Ottawa)

“We are unable to share the number of employees who will be receiving letters until we have finished this process.”

The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) said in an email that 737 of its members at Shared Services Canada are affected, many of whom are IT workers.


The union warned trimming IT jobs could put services and cybersecurity at risk.

“Outsourcing core IT functions increases the risk of system outages and service disruptions, delaying access to government websites and services Canadians rely on,” PIPSC said. “Outsourcing cyber protection work can create security gaps and slow responses, increasing the risk of breaches affecting government programs and services.”

Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) says employees will be notified on Wednesday and Thursday about potential job cuts.

“Yesterday, all Public Services and Procurement Canada employees received a message from the Deputies informing them that those with positions that are affected will receive a formal notice on January 14 and January 15, 2026,” a spokesperson for PSPC said.

“Out of respect for our employees, as this process is underway, we will not comment further.”

A spokesperson for Employment and Social Development Canada said a “workforce adjustment process and a reduction in our executive complement” will begin this month “to achieve our targets by the end of 2028-29.”

“We cannot confirm how many positions will be reduced at this time,” the spokesperson said.

“However, ESDC will continue to leverage attrition and workforce planning, aiming to minimize impacts on employees to the maximum possible extent. The goal of the process, wherever possible, will be to ensure continued employment for those who want to remain in the public service.”

Global Affairs Canada (GAC) says information has been provided to staff that it plans to “notify those whose positions may be affected” by the comprehensive expenditure review between Jan. 12 and 31.

“GAC is not in a position to provide an estimate number of notification letters being sent as decisions are being finalized,” a spokesperson said in an email Wednesday afternoon.


“However, like most departments, GAC will be sending affected letters to significantly more employees than the target number of positions to be eliminated. This is to allow more employees to take advantage of voluntary departure programs, and reduce the number of involuntary departures.”

In December, Natural Resources Canada said 700 employees received letters to “inform them that their position will or may be impacted.” Approximately 400 jobs will be cut at the department over the next four years.

Fisheries and Oceans Canada and Environment and Climate Change Canada have previously told CTV News Ottawa that employees will be notified in January if their positions may be affected by the comprehensive expenditure review.

Federal unions have said its members have received notices their jobs may be affected, including 74 at the Department of Finance, 157 at the Public Service Commission of Canada, 94 at Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs and 19 at the Privy Council Office.

The government has also issued early retirement notices to approximately 68,000 public servants outlining information on the planned early retirement program.

The Parliamentary Budget Officer released a report last week saying 1,927 full-time equivalent positions will be eliminated at five departments over the next four years, with the report focusing on Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Correctional Service of Canada, Canada Food Inspection Agency, Canada Economic Development for the Quebec Regions and the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency.

The Canada Strong Budget 2025 outlined a plan to cut another 28,000 positions from the federal public service over the next four years and find $60 billion in savings.

The goal is to reduce the size of the federal public service by 40,000 jobs through job cuts, attrition, and early retirements, from its peak of 367,772 employees in March 2024, to 330,000 by 2028-29. There were 357,965 federal employees as of March 31, 2025.


With files from CTV News Ottawa’s Ted Raymond and Austin Lee
Josh Pringle

CTV News Ottawa Producer and Digital Lead | Ottawa

 January 14, 2026 
Fate of Bay du Nord oilfield in Newfoundland still unclear as Equinor delays deadline

ByThe Canadian Press
 January 20, 2026 

A sign for the company Equinor is displayed on Oct. 28, 2020, in Fornebu, Norway. (HÃ¥kon Mosvold Larsen/NTB Scanpix via AP, File)

ST. JOHN’S — Equinor has delayed a deadline to decide whether it will proceed with its proposed Bay du Nord offshore oilfield in Newfoundland and Labrador, as it hammers out a benefits agreement with the province.

The Norwegian energy company says the status deadline initially set for December has been adjusted to allow time for the province’s Progressive Conservative government to settle in after winning the October election.

News of the delay was first reported by allNewfoundlandLabrador news, and the company says its new deadline is in the near term, but didn’t give details.

Company spokesperson Erika Kelland says that if the project meets the new status deadline, the company is still on track to make a final decision in 2027 about whether to go ahead with the $14-billion project.

Rob Strong, an oil industry consultant in St. John’s, N.L., says he is not concerned about the delay, though he says the project is not a “slam dunk.”


The government wants certain fabrication work for the project to be completed in Newfoundland and Labrador, but Strong says it would be cheaper for the work to be done elsewhere.

The Canadian government approved the Bay du Nord project in 2022, but Equinor said the following year it was putting the development on hold as it looked for ways to cut costs.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 20, 2026.
‘I was absolutely blown away’: Why car dealers say Canadian consumers could win from China EV deal

ByKamil Karamali
 January 18, 2026 

Workers assemble the Zeekr 001 EV models at the Chinese automaker Zeekr assembly plant in Ningbo, east China's Zhejiang Province, April 17, 2025. (Andy Wong)

In almost every deal, there are winners and losers — and the Canada-China deal on electric vehicles appears to be no different.

While Canadian automakers are sounding the alarm — or honking the horn, in this case — that the deal could threaten Canadian auto jobs and the domestic EV supply chain, some Canadian car dealership owners believe it is a win for consumers, who could get good quality electric vehicles for an affordable price.

“I think having more options will bring the price down in the general market,” said Nazar Navolskyy, co-owner of Favorit Motors, a used-vehicle dealership in Toronto.


“I think there’s (going to) be a huge shift, but I think the consumer will win either way -- whether the customer is looking specifically for a Chinese car or willing to explore that option, I think other manufacturers will be forced to react and drop their prices -- and anytime anything is becoming cheaper and better for the consumer, the consumer is winning.”

Navolskyy says he has been exploring car shows around the world and has seen more and more Chinese electric vehicles enter the market, keeping up with technological advancement and challenging their historical reputation for lower quality and safety standards.

“This year, unlike any other year, there was a massive presence of Chinese cars so I already forecasted that they’re coming to North America,” Navolskyy said.

Visitors look at the Chinese made BYD ATTO 3 at the IAA motor show in Munich, Germany, on Sept. 8, 2023. (Matthias Schrader/AP)

“That was my first opportunity to experience that car firsthand, because most people know what we know historically: that Chinese products are cheap, that the quality wasn’t there, that the technology wasn’t there -- now with my real experience, I got to touch and feel, I was absolutely blown away.”

Hamza Patel, manager of Planet Motors, a used-vehicle dealership in Toronto, agrees.

‘Fix this mess’: Ford slams Carney’s deal with China on EVs

“Consumers will now have the option to choose between established brands and newer entrants such as BYD and Xiaomi, which are offering luxury-styled vehicles with advanced technology at a fraction of the cost of vehicles like a new Tesla Model Y,” he said.

“Brands like BYD, in particular, are already offering competitive range, more features, and newer technology compared to what is currently available in the Canadian market at similar or higher price points.”

Patel added that prospective EV buyers may begin to question the value of purchasing older used EVs when brand-new alternatives from China, with newer technology, longer range and more features, are available at similar or lower prices.

“From a broader perspective, increased affordability will also make it easier for governments to meet EV adoption mandates more quickly, as cost, one of the biggest barriers to EV ownership, will no longer be as significant a concern for consumers,” he said.

Canada previously set a legally binding zero-emission vehicle sales target for manufacturers, but the 20 per cent target for 2026 was delayed in response to slowing sales and industry pressure.

 Visitors look at a Geely Galaxy E8 EV car model during the Auto China 2024 in Beijing on April 28, 2024. (Andy Wong/AP)

“Overall, I think it’s a positive,” said Devin Arthur, with EV Society, a Canadian non-profit organization of EV owners and enthusiasts, in a Zoom interview with CTV News.

“So having more choice in the market is obviously more beneficial,” he said. “It leads to better competition. Those prices will come down — and that makes vehicles more affordable for everyone in Canada.”

New details on Chinese EV imports


A senior government source told CTV News on Saturday that a new auto strategy, set to be released next month, will prioritize made-in-Canada vehicles and give companies that build vehicles domestically preferential market access.

The source said that in the first year — when 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles will be allowed to enter Canada at a reduced tariff rate of 6.1 per cent starting March 1 — the imports will likely not include EVs from Chinese manufacturers, as they are not certified by Transport Canada. Instead, the vehicles are expected to be manufactured by North American or Asian automakers with factories in China.

But the source said that will eventually grow, with the expectation that Chinese companies could eventually partner with Canadian automakers to build electric vehicles in Canada, using Canadian workers and for Canadian sales and export.

But some auto manufacturers question whether the deal will benefit Canadians.

The production line at the Zeekr factory in Ningbo. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg (Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)

“I think it’s highly unlikely to happen,” said Brian Kingston with the Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association in a Zoom interview with CTV News.

“(Chinese auto manufacturers) ... achieve a price advantage because they’re building those vehicles in China with low or non-existent labour standards and extremely weak environmental standards. That business model doesn’t work in Canada,” he said.

“If you look at General Motors and Stellantis, they have unionized workforces. They pay about $44 an hour plus pension in benefits. A Chinese manufacturer pays on average about $4 an hour.”

Kingston added that Chinese manufacturers would provide less economic spinoff, as Canadian auto plants employ local workers who support businesses in surrounding communities.

Arthur, however, said Canada cannot depend on the United States to meet its EV manufacturing goals, citing uncertainty around the current U.S. administration.

“We’re already losing those manufacturing jobs,” Arthur said. “So I think it’s probably in our best interest as Canadians as a whole, to diversify, to find other options, to find other potential candidates that would come here and build out that manufacturing sector.”



Kamil Karamali

Weekend Correspondent, CTV National News



Canada EV deal with China boosts investment potential but U.S. access question looms

January 20, 2026 

A BYD electric car is on display at the Essen Motor Show in Essen, Germany, Thursday Dec. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner, File) (Martin Meissner)

TORONTO — The trade deal between Canada and China has experts saying it could lead to Chinese electric vehicle firms producing vehicles in Canada, but much depends on the trade talks ahead with the United States.

Critics including Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Unifor leader Lana Payne panned the deal as an attack on workers and Canadian manufacturing, while Prime Minister Mark Carney said the government has already spoken with Chinese companies interested in investing in Canada.

The deal has the federal government lowering tariffs to 6.1 per cent from 100 per cent on 49,000 Chinese EVs a year, with a ramp-up to 70,000 within five years, while China has agreed to reduce tariffs on a range of Canadian goods.

It comes as Chinese manufacturers are already adapting globally to trade restrictions and are moving toward local production where they sell, said automotive consultant Sam Fiorani in an interview.

“Once they get a foothold in Canada, the idea that they could build plants locally, the odds of that jump dramatically.”


Fiorani, vice-president of global vehicle forecasting at AutoForecast Solutions, said Chinese firms need to test the waters first, but once they establish a brand, they look to invest where they sell.

“Build locally is the long-term plan for any Chinese automaker.”

China has been ramping up exports, estimated at around 6.5 million units lasts year, as its domestic industry has capacity to produce millions of more vehicles than it can sell locally, but firms have still been investing heavily abroad, said a report out last November from S&P Global Mobility.

“Along with avoiding tariffs and shipping costs, building close to where you sell improves market potential inherently,” said S&P analyst Abby Chun Tu in the report.

“In most cases, consumers are more open to automakers who invest locally, regardless of where a brand’s home market is.”

However the chances Chinses firms will set up shop in Canada with out guaranteed access to the U.S. market is unrealistic, said Andrew King, managing partner of DesRosiers Automotive Consultants Inc.

“The Canadian market itself is just too small to justify an assembly plant -- which is why the auto industry established an efficient North American assembly system -- a system that the current U.S. administration seems determined to destroy,” he said by email.

It’s not necessarily a question of full Chinese production in Canada or not.

Chinese firms could do a less costly modular production, putting together pre-assembled pieces in Canada, if access to the U.S. becomes unlikely, said Ryan Robinson, automotive research lead at Deloitte Canada, but some form of investment is possible.

“I think there’s a potential for it, for sure,” said Robinson.

There’s certainly demand potential on the consumer side as buyers confront the reality of current vehicle prices, he said, while noting the policy could also help Canada get closer to emission reduction goals.


The investment potential in Canada comes as Chinese firms have increasingly been building capacity outside of their home market. Chinese EV producers have built at least 15 facilities across Southeast and Central Asia since 2022, the S&P report noted, including in countries like Malaysia that has a vehicle market less than half the size of Canada’s.

The wave of investments come as Chinese firms look to expand from an already saturated domestic market, leading to them collectively spend more abroad than at home in 2024 for the first time, according to a report out last year from the Rhodium Group.

Europe has also seen a jump in manufacturing capacity with Chinese giant BYD building plants in Hungary and Turkey, while Chery has entered a joint venture with Spanish automaker Ebro-EV Motors.

Stellantis, meanwhile, has partnered with Leapmotor for the Chinese to firm build its vehicles at Stellantis’ Poland plant, and was set to start producing in Malaysia at Stellantis’s Gurun facility at the end of 2025, the report noted.

Meanwhile, the future of the Stellantis plant in Brampton, Ont., remains an open question after the automaker moved production slated for it to the U.S. last year.

The Canadian government said in announcing the deal with China that it expects within three years it will “drive considerable new Chinese joint-venture investment in Canada,” creating new auto manufacturing career for Canadian workers.

TD chief economist Beata Caranci said in a report last September that Chinese EV production in Canada is unlikely given concerns about market access to the U.S., but that there are still areas for partnership.

“Given the EV technology gaps that remain between China and other nations and China’s desire to expand globally, some form of partnership could aid Canada in improving its EV ecosystem,” she said in the report.

Speaking in Doha, Qatar, on the weekend, Carney said there is interest in Chinese companies producing “affordable” electric vehicles in Canada.

“We’ve had direct conversations directly from the Chinese companies ... with explicit interest and intention to partner with Canadian companies.”

Ford said it was terrible deal for the auto sector and a miscalculated decision by the Prime Minister, while Unifor national president Lana Payne said it was a self-inflicted wound to an already injured Canadian auto industry.

Fiorani said that while investment in Canada is possible, it’s unlikely Chinese firms would partner with the Detroit Three, as they’re all unionized and Chinese producers will be looking to be union-free.

He said the small volume of low-tariff vehicles will mean producers will, however, want to find some way to invest in Canada if they want to grow in the market.

“It should not take very long for some of those brands to become accepted in the Canadian market, and that will lead to local production of those vehicles as the manufacturers want to expand beyond the current limits.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 20, 2026.


CARS FOR CANOLA

Canada told U.S. it planned to drop Chinese EV tariffs: source
Updated: January 17, 2026 

President Donald Trump greets Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney on Monday, Oct. 13, 2025, in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, Pool)

The Canadian government provided the U.S. administration with notice that it was planning to make a deal with China to reduce tariffs on some Chinese electric vehicles.

Speaking on background, a senior Canadian government official said Canada’s Ambassador to Washington Kristen Hillman was aware of the deal with China and said there were conversations with the Americans.

“We did not take anybody by surprise,” said the official, who CTV News is not naming because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The timing of the notification remains unclear, but the source said U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer was informed about Canada’s decision to introduce a quota.Carney headed to Qatar to discuss investment, despite human rights record

The same official said they believed U.S. President Donald Trump will eventually open the door to Chinese EVs and put in place guardrails that require the vehicles to be made in the United States.

On Friday, Trump called the Canada-China agreement a “good thing.”

“If you can get a deal with China, you should do that,” Trump said. But that optimism wasn’t shared by everyone in the administration.

“I think they’ll look back at this decision and surely regret it – to bring Chinese cars into their market,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy at an event with other U.S. government officials at a Ford factory in Ohio.


Canada’s EV tariffs

In 2024, then-prime minister Justin Trudeau slapped a 100 per cent tariff on Chinese electric vehicles following a similar move by the U.S. Administration. Both counties cited concerns that cheaper Chinese-made electric vehicles would hurt the North American auto market.

In Beijing on Friday, Prime Minister Mark Carney signed what he called a landmark trade arrangement with China as part of a new five pillar strategic partnership.Canada China news: Auto industry seeks clarity on EV deal

As part of that deal, many punishing Chinese agricultural tariffs were removed in exchange for Canada re-opening the door to Chinese electric vehicles.

The source said the government’s new auto strategy will be released in February. The policy, the source said, will prioritize made-in-Canada gas and electric vehicles, giving companies that build in Canada favourable market access. The strategy will also open the door to more investment from foreign automakers who want to build cars in Canada.

Prime Minister Mark Carney meets with President of China Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on Friday, Jan. 16, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
No Chinese cars yet

Starting March 1, 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles will be allowed to enter Canada at tariff rate of just 6.1 per cent. Officials say these vehicles are unlikely to be EVs from Chinese companies like BYD, given those cars are not yet certified by Transport Canada. That process, however, will get underway shortly.

Instead, officials say the vehicles imported into Canada in 2026 will likely be EVs made in China by North American or Asian companies. In 2023, before the 100 per cent tariff was put in place, the official said the EVs imported into Canada were largely Teslas made in China or Volvo Polestar cars made in China.

The move was met with mixed feelings as many in the auto industry called for more clarity on the deal that some experts said could damage the auto sector.

Lana Payne, Unifor national president, told CTV News Channel on Friday that she’s extremely disappointed with the deal. “We have been, for a year now, in the fight of our lives as a union to try and protect good auto union jobs in this country, and the auto sector, too,” she said. “And this deal has just made that fight a little harder for us.”

Canada expects Chinese investment

Canada expects the quota for Chinese EVs to grow as Chinese investment and partnership with auto manufacturers and dealers expand in Canada. The source said the expectation is that Chinese companies will partner with automakers in Canada to build electric vehicles, using Canadian workers, for Canadian sale and for export.

While in Beijing, Industry Minister Melanie Joly met with leaders at BYD, Chery and Magna, a Canadian company building auto parts in China.


Annie Bergeron-Oliver

Senior Correspondent, CTV National News


Canada resumes beef exports to China, cattle supply remains low

ByKathy LeOpens 
Published: February 01, 2026

 Cattle crowd around a feeder on the Perepelkin family farm near Leslieville, Alta. 
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

Canada is resuming beef exports to China after a years-long ban that shut down a major overseas market, a move some Alberta producers say comes at a critical time as national cattle supplies remain low and beef prices stay high.

The ban was imposed in late 2021 after an atypical case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as mad cow disease, was detected on an Alberta farm.

“It’s always good news when a new market is made available to us,” said John Smith, who operates Plateau Cattle Co., near Nanton, Alta.

“As we can see with the world’s geopolitical landscape, tariffs on, tariffs off, I think it’s great to have increased market access across the world.”

On a sunny afternoon at his ranch, Smith watched his cattle graze calmly, largely unaffected by the global trade decisions shaping their future.


Some of those animals, Smith said, will eventually be sold to large processors, with the beef destined for markets both near and far, including China.

Smith said China fills a specific niche for Canadian producers by purchasing cuts that are less in demand domestically.

Half of Saskatchewan cattle exports now head abroad, key markets include Japan, Mexico, and South Korea. Damian Smith reports.

“Having a place for those cuts to go does nothing but improve the economics for cow calf producers, feedlot operators and packers,” he said.

Before the ban, Canadian beef exports to China hit nearly $200 million per year.

Industry experts say exports could eventually return to pre ban levels, but rebuilding the market will take time.

The Canadian Cattle Association says large processors could begin shipping beef to China within weeks, though moving significant volumes will be slower because of limited supply.

“We do have very tight cattle numbers in both Canada and the United States,” said Dennis Laycraft, executive vice president of the association.

“That’s going to limit the overall exports that we do sell, but we do continue to export large quantities of beef. And we are exporting live cattle. So, we do know that we are able to start to build that market again.”

Herd sizes across Canada have been reduced by prolonged drought, forcing many producers to scale back.

Smith said if rainfall improves and herd numbers begin to recover, demand from China could help keep beef prices steady.


“It’s probably going to hold the price where it is,” he said.

“It might decrease slightly, but trade partners come in and trade partners go.”

For producers, Smith said long term stability is important.

“As producers and feedlot operators, we can actually invest with confidence and increase supply.”

Still, he said, given China’s history of abruptly suspending imports, questions remain about how reliable the market will be over the long term.


Kathy Le

Journalist, CTV National News


First exports of canola seed and beef soon going to China: agriculture minister

ByThe Canadian Press
Updated: January 20, 2026 

Agriculture Minister Heath MacDonald discusses the tariffs that were lifted following the China-Canada deal, and if Ottawa will drop tariffs on Chinese steel.

China is moving quickly to import Canadian canola and beef after Ottawa struck a deal with Beijing to reduce tariffs, Federal Agriculture Minister Heath MacDonald said Tuesday.

MacDonald told reporters in Ottawa a Chinese importer has ordered 60,000 metric tonnes of canola seed, and he’s aware of a company shipping its first load of Canadian beef to China next week.

It’s expected be the first time China has purchased Canadian canola seed and beef since it imposed measures to block the products.

“That’s how quickly this whole process has taken place,” MacDonald said. “When the door opened, it opened.”

MacDonald made the comments while announcing Ottawa is beginning a round of consultations on a new agreement that will provide funding and programming to the agriculture sector in 2028 and beyond.


News of the planned shipments also come as Canada recalibrates its trading relationship with China.

On Monday, China lifted its ban on Canadian beef imports after an atypical case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy — known as BSE or mad cow disease — was found on an Alberta farm in 2021. BSE is a fatal brain disease in cattle and atypical strains pose no health risks to humans.

And last week, Beijing reduced tariffs on Canadian canola seed and at least temporarily removed levies on canola meal, lobsters, crabs and peas. In exchange, Ottawa made concessions on Chinese electric vehicle duties.

MacDonald said China’s lifting of the beef ban, along with reducing or removing agriculture tariffs, helps Canada access more markets to grow its economy.

Canada’s farmers and food processors contribute $150 billion, or 7 per cent, to the country’s GDP each year, he added.

The Canadian Cattle Association welcomed the news of access to China being restored.

“We are pleased to see renewed access into China, one of the largest export markets for beef. Every market matters to Canadian beef farmers and ranchers; it supports our industry’s resilience and growth,” Tyler Fulton, the association’s president, said in a statement.

MacDonald said there’s more work to do on Canadian pork, which continues to face Chinese tariffs.

“We need to further identify the situation with China ... to ensure that we’re meeting their demands and they’re meeting our demands,” he said.

On the canola seed shipment, MacDonald didn’t say when it will be exported, though tariffs on the crop are to be reduced on March 1.

Farmers have been patient, he added. “The consultation and the professionalism that they showed us as government officials has been second to none,” MacDonald said.


Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, whose province grows more than half of the country’s canola, repeated his thanks to Prime Minister Mark Carney for getting the deal done.

Moe told reporters Tuesday in Saskatoon the agreement is “huge” for the Saskatchewan and Canadian economies. “This agreement with China is one of the strongest agreements that I have seen in my elected time,” he said.

“It’s significant for a rancher as it is for a canola farmer.”

Ontario Premier Doug Ford has been critical of the deal, arguing it further threatens his province’s auto sector, which is already squeezed by tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump. The agreement allows up to 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles into Canada at a vastly reduced tariff rate of 6.1 per cent.

Moe said the figure represents three per cent of Canada’s electric vehicle market.

“To say that this is favouring one province over another, that is just simply not a true statement,” Moe said. “This is a decision that is in the best interest of Canada.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 20, 2026

With files from Catherine Morrison in Ottawa

Jeremy Simes, The Canadian Press

‘Value recovery can start now’: Canola industry reacts to China tariff cuts

ByAnam Khan
Published: January 16, 2026

Rick White, CEO and president of the Canadian Canola Growers Association, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss trade deal with China and it's impact on Canadian canola growers.

Canola farmers can finally begin recovering from the significant losses suffered under tariffs imposed by China last year, said the head of the Canadian Canola Growers Association.

That comes after Prime Minister Mark Carney reached a deal with China during his visit this week, joined by Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe.Carney reaches ‘landmark’ tariff-quota deal with China on EVs, canola

Carney said tariffs on Canadian canola are expected to drop in some cases to about 16 per cent, in return for Canada allowing about 49,000 electric vehicles from China into the country each year at a tariff just over six per cent.

“We are very hopeful and optimistic to some degree, that the success of this will be determined by the movement of canola, the sales of canola going back into China,” Rick White, CEO and president of the Canadian Canola Growers Association, told BNN Bloomberg.

“The value recovery can start now.”

How much tariffs dropped on different canola products

There are three main canola products in the industry: seed, meal, and oil. Each is affected by tariffs differently.

Ottawa expects Beijing to drop canola seed duties to 15 per cent from 84 per cent by Mar. 1, 2026.

Canola seed is by far the biggest component of the trade with China, and tariffs are expected to drop from 76 per cent to 15 per cent, White said.

“That’s a significant drop,” he said, adding the industry sends about six million tonnes of canola seed into that market, worth roughly $4 billion.

Canola meal tariffs have dropped from 100 per cent to zero starting March 1. The product is a byproduct of crushed canola seeds used to extract oil.

They’re used for livestock and poultry feed around the world, and “China has heavy demand for proteins like canola meal and other meals of oilseed products like soybeans,” White said.

Canola oil is the smallest part of the industry, and tariffs remain at 100 per cent.
How hard did tariffs hit the industry?

White said canola farmers saw a significant decline in crop value after China imposed tariffs in retaliation for Canadian levies on electric vehicles last year.


He said the tariffs weighed heavily on futures prices, which are agreed-upon prices for delivery later.

Farmer Bill Prybylski stands in a canola field on his farm near Yorkton, Sask., in this 2023 handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan (Mandatory Credit) (HO/The Canadian Press)

He explained farmers were suffering because the difference between the futures price and the cash price they actually receive, called the basis, widened even more as futures prices fell.

“At the end of the day, what happened was there was significant value deterioration of the canola that was grown by farmers,” White said. “Farmers had all this production. It’s in their bins right now, and the values were tumbling.”
The U.S. and China are Canada’s largest Canola buyers

In a regular year without tariffs, Canada produces about 21 million tonnes of canola seed, and about six million tonnes typically go to China, said White.

“It’s very, very important to us,” he said.

Canola production is heavily concentrated in Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitoba and the Peace River region of British Columbia, accounting for 99 per cent of all seeded area, according to Statistics Canada.

The U.S. market is the top export destination for Canadian canola products, with a total export value of $7.7 billion in 2024, and more than 7.4 million tonnes shipped to the U.S according to the association.

“We can’t have problems with our two major export markets without having a substantial negative impact on the livelihoods of western Canadian farmers,” White said.

He said canola products are moving smoothly under the CUSMA deal, with no tariffs in place.
‘What got us here were political decisions’

White said the canola industry was the subject of the political decision that triggered this in the first place, and that getting trade back with China, Canada’s second-largest export market for canola, ultimately came down to political decisions too.

“But we are very, very supportive and very thankful to the group of the delegation that went over there, that politically went over there, because that’s what it took to get this done,” said White.

“Canola is a major contributing factor to the western Canadian economy, and farmers in particular.”

Anam Khan

Journalist, BNNBloomberg.ca
Starmer says U.K. ‘can’t stick its head in the sand’ over China after Trump issues warning

The Associated Press
January 30, 2026 

From left, Zheng Zeguang, Chinese ambassador to to Britain, Ren Hongbin, Chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Ge Haijiao, Chairman and Executive Director of the Bank of China Limited (BOC) pose for photos in Beijing, China, Friday, Jan. 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, Pool) (Kin Cheung)

BEIJING — U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer arrived in the Chinese financial centre of Shanghai on Friday in his bid to boost business opportunities for British firms in the world’s second-largest economy, just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump signaled a possible opposition to any deal between Beijing and London.

Starmer, the centre-left Labour leader, has brought more than 50 business leaders on his trip to China, the first by a U.K. prime minister in eight years.

Starmer suggested Trump’s criticism was aimed more at Canada than Britain. He added that Washington was aware in advance of his trip and its objectives and pointed out that Trump has said he plans to visit China this spring.

“I don’t think it’s wise for the United Kingdom to stick its head in the sand,” Starmer told Sky News. “China is the second biggest economy in the world. Along with Hong Kong, it’s our third-biggest trading partner. And through this visit, we’ve opened up lots of opportunities for jobs and wealth creation.”

Starmer started his trip in Beijing on Thursday, where he met with Chinese leaders including Xi Jinping. The two pledged to pursue a long-term and stable strategic partnership in what was seen as a sign of improving ties after several years of friction between the two countries.


In Washington, Trump suggested that he may oppose any deal between Beijing and London, and then pivoted to Canada, with which he has had a series of sharp exchanges since Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney visited China earlier this month.

“Well, it’s very dangerous for them to do that,” he said, when asked about Starmer’s visit and any U.K. trade talks with Beijing. “And it’s even more dangerous, I think, for Canada to get into business with China. Canada is not doing well. They’re doing very poorly.”

“You can’t look at China as the answer,” he said.

Starmer and Carney are among a series of foreign leaders to visit Beijing as their nations seek to improve ties with China. Many have seen their countries’ economies buffeted by Trump’s tariffs and are looking to expand other export markets.

The British prime minister said Xi agreed to remove a travel ban that had been imposed on several British lawmakers after the U.K.’s former centre-right Conservative government joined the European Union, Canada and the U.S. in imposing sanctions on four Chinese officials over evidence of rights abuses against the Uyghur Muslim people in the far western Xinjiang region.

“This has been a cause of concern in Parliament and for parliamentarians for some time and that is why I raised it on this visit,” Starmer told ITV News. “The response from the Chinese is that the restrictions no longer apply and President Xi has told me that that means that all parliamentarians are welcome to visit.”

It wasn’t clear if the U.K. offered anything in return for lifting the sanctions on British lawmakers, but the Chinese Foreign Ministry said that the two sides agreed to normal exchanges between their legislatures.

Lawmakers who had been sanctioned, including former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith, issued a statement rejecting any deal to lift the sanctions in exchange for diplomatic and economic concessions.

“We wish to make our position unequivocally clear: we would rather remain under sanction indefinitely than have our status used as a bargaining chip to justify lifting British sanctions on those officials responsible for the genocide in Xinjiang,” the group of seven, including one former member of Parliament, said in a joint statement.

___

Ken Moritsugu, The Associated Press
Darlene Superville in Washington, and Brian Melley in London, contributed to this report.


Starmer and Xi call for deeper U.K.-China ties as Trump shakes up global relations

ByThe Associated Press
January 29, 2026 


Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, left, shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping ahead of a bilateral meeting in Beijing, China, Thursday, Jan.29, 2026. (Carl Court/Pool Photo via AP)

BEIJING — The leaders of Britain and China called Thursday for a “strategic partnership” to deepen ties between their nations at a time of growing global turbulence as they sought to thaw relations after years of chill.

Neither Prime Minister Keir Starmer nor President Xi Jinping publicly mentioned Donald Trump, but the U.S. president’s challenge to the post-Cold War order was clearly on their minds.

“In the current turbulent and ever-changing international situation ... China and the U.K. need to strengthen dialogue and cooperation to maintain world peace and stability,” Xi told Starmer at the start of their meeting.Latest updates on international news here

Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said Xi had stressed, without mentioning the U.S. directly, that “major powers” must adhere to international law or the world would regress into a “jungle.”

Starmer said that “working together on issues like climate change, global stability during challenging times for the world is precisely what we should be doing.”


The two leaders met for 80 minutes — double the scheduled time — in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing as their nations try to improve ties after several years of acrimony. Relations have deteriorated over allegations of Chinese spying in Britain, China’s support for Russia in Moscow’s war on Ukraine and the crackdown on freedoms in Hong Kong, the former British colony that was returned to China in 1997.

Starmer is the first British prime minister to visit in eight years.

Xi said that “China-U.K. relations experienced twists and turns in previous years, which was not in the interests of either country.”
Relationship is in ‘a good place’

Starmer’s Downing Street office said Britain wanted “a consistent, long-term, and strategic partnership that will benefit both countries.”

After meeting Xi, Starmer said the leaders had made “really good progress” on a range of issues.

“The relationship is in a good place, a strong place,” the British leader said.

His four-day trip, which is set to include a stop in China’s financial capital, Shanghai, has yielded a raft of business announcements and government agreements, including lower Chinese tariffs on Scotch whisky and 30-day visa-free travel to China for U.K. tourists and business visitors.

Xi appeared to acknowledge the criticism that Starmer has faced for reaching out to China despite national security and human rights concerns. The United Kingdom recently approved controversial plans for a huge Chinese Embassy in London, removing a sticking point in relations but also overriding fears that the “mega-embassy” would make it easier for China to conduct espionage and intimidate dissidents.

“Good things often come with difficulties,” Xi said. “As long as it is the right thing to do in accordance with the fundamental interests of the country and its people, leaders will not shy away from difficulties and will forge ahead bravely.”


Starmer’s visit comes less than two months after a Hong Kong court convicted Jimmy Lai, a former newspaper publisher and British citizen, under a national security law that Beijing imposed on the territory after massive pro-democracy protests in 2019.

Starmer said he raised human rights issues with Xi and the two men had a “respectful discussion.”

Starmer has said he will protect national security while keeping up diplomatic dialogue and economic cooperation with China.

“I made a promise 18 months ago when we were elected into government, that I would make Britain face outward again,” the leader of the center-left Labour Party said. “Because as we all know, events abroad affect everything that happens back in our home countries, from prices on the supermarket shelves to how secure we feel.”

Starmer’s government has struggled to deliver the economic growth it promised and ease a cost-of-living crisis for millions of households and he sees China as a potential source of growth.

More than 50 U.K. business executives have joined him on the trip, along with the leaders of major cultural organizations, as he seeks to expand opportunities for British companies in China and secure Chinese investment in the U.K.

Among the business deals announced on the trip was a US$15 billion investment in China through 2030 by drugmaker AstraZeneca.

Britain is also keen to get more access to the vast Chinese market for U.K. professional and financial services. The two countries agreed to conduct a “feasibility study” as a first step before negotiating a services agreement..

Trump tariffs spur new trade talks

The disruption to global trade under Trump has made expanding trade and investment more imperative for many governments. Vietnam and the European Union upgraded ties to a comprehensive strategic partnership on Thursday, two days after the EU and India announced a free trade agreement.

“At a moment when the international rules-based order is under threat from multiple sides, we need to stand side by side as reliable and predictable partners,” European Council President Antonio Costa said in Hanoi, Vietnam.Trade War coverage on BNNBloomberg.ca

Starmer is the fourth leader of a U.S. ally to visit Beijing this month, following those of South Korea, Canada and Finland. The German chancellor is expected to visit next month.

The U.K. leader also met Thursday with Zhao Leji, the chairman of China’s legislature, the National People’s Congress, and Premier Li Qiang, who told Starmer his efforts to improve relations had been “widely welcomed” in both countries.

Starmer told the U.K.-China Business Council he was seeking “a more sophisticated relationship fit for these times.”

“I would like to echo a Chinese phrase, which I think captures the essence of what I’m talking about: pursue common goals whilst reserving differences,” he said. ”That’s what we are working together to achieve.”

___

Ken Moritsugu And Jill Lawless, The Associated Press

Lawless reported from London.
ANOTHER CRYPTO-GRIFT

Inside the botched launch of ex-NYC Mayor Eric Adams’ new crypto token


ByThe Associated Press
January 16, 2026 

FILE - NYC mayor Eric Adams attends the ceremony to mark the 24th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

NEW YORK — For a moment, Eric Adams was riding high.

Fresh off trips to Dubai and the Democratic Republic of Congo, the now jobless ex-mayor of New York City was back in Times Square on Monday to announce his first initiative as a private citizen: a new cryptocurrency coin that would also serve to beat back antisemitism and “anti-Americanism.”

“We’re about to change the game,” he promised, without describing how, exactly, the digital asset would support those lofty ambitions. “This thing is going to take off like crazy.”

But after surging to a nearly US$600 million valuation within minutes of its launch, the new coin, dubbed NYC Token, went into free fall, losing nearly 75 per cent of its value by that evening. The drop came after an account linked to the token’s creation withdrew $2.5 million worth of coins, according to the crypto-analytics firm Bubblemaps.

Around $1.5 million was later returned, the firm said, though by then investor confidence had collapsed. To some cryptocurrency experts, the rollout had all the hallmarks of a “rug pull.” The scheme — prevalent among celebrity-linked meme coins — involves insiders hyping an asset then quickly dumping their stakes, saddling amateur investors with deep losses.

Others have suggested that Adams and his inexperienced team were themselves duped by savvier investors, who took advantage of a sloppy launch.

The debate has found Adams back in a mode of damage control that defined so much of his one-term mayoralty: denying misconduct, attacking the press and facing scrutiny about the competence of his inner circle of loyalists.

Through a former campaign spokesperson, Adams has released multiple statements in recent days clarifying that he had not profited off the token and had not moved investor funds, calling reports otherwise “false and unsupported by evidence.”

“Like many newly launched digital assets, the NYC Token experienced market volatility,” the spokesperson, Todd Shapiro, said Wednesday. “Mr. Adams has consistently emphasized transparency, accountability, and responsible innovation.”

A machine lawyer and an Israeli hotelier

Despite claims of transparency, Adams has so far declined to reveal his partners in the token.

But two people close to the project confirmed that Frank Carone, Adams’ former chief adviser and one-time lawyer for the Brooklyn Democratic Party, was closely involved in the launch. The two people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they had been asked not to disclose the identities of people involved in the token’s creation

.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams chats with his Chief of Staff Frank Carone (right) outside City Hall, Nov. 1, 2022. (Luiz C. Ribeiro/New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

One of Carone’s former clients, Yosef Sefi Zvieli, a real estate investor linked to several Israeli hotels, was also part of its creation, Shapiro confirmed to The Associated Press.

Zvieli, whose involvement was first reported by Business Insider, previously owned a college dorm in Brooklyn, which drew complaints from students of filthy conditions and neglect. After defaulting on his mortgage, Zvieli hired Carone as his attorney and was able to turn the troubled property into a city-financed homeless shelter.

Their exact role in the token launch was not immediately clear, though at least part of Zvieli’s job involved reaching out to influencers ahead of the debut. Neither he nor Carone appeared to have direct experience in cryptocurrency. Messages left with the two men were not returned.

As questions around the launch swirled this week, Adams sought guidance from Brock Pierce, the billionaire crypto investor, and former “Mighty Ducks” child actor, whose private jet he sometimes used as mayor.

After looking into the project, Pierce said he was confident that “no one has run off with anyone’s money.”

Though he described himself as Adams’ “crypto adviser,” Pierce said he was only made aware of the project after its launch. “Had I been consulted, I would’ve put together a team of more qualified people who knew what they’re doing,” he added.

Political-coin instability

Even within the largely unregulated world of meme coins, experts say projects promoted by politicians are especially prone to unsavory trading practices.

The president of Argentina, Javier Milei, has faced fraud allegations for his own crypto promotion, which drew thousands of investors before swiftly collapsing. Coins launched by President Donald Trump and his wife, Melania Trump, also saw significant price fluctuations upon release.

The number of accounts that invested in NYC Token were far less than those ventures, totaling just over 4,000 as of Thursday, according to Nicolas Vaiman, the founder of Bubblemaps, which conducted an analysis of publicly available trade records.

Roughly 80 per cent of those accounts had bought in during a 20-minute period before Adams had announced the coin but after it was made available for purchase, the analysis found. The window, Vaiman said, provided an advantage to insiders involved in the launch and other traders who pay close attention to new tokens.

A novelty Bitcoin token during the NFT.NYC 2024 conference in New York, US, on Wednesday, April 3, 2024. NFTs, which went from being touted as the cutting edge of the digital frontier to the punchline for the most recent crypto bust, are suddenly staging an unlikely comeback following global sales volume for NFTs plummeted 63% to $8.7 billion last year, according to data from CryptoSlam. 
Photographer: Timothy Fadek/Bloomberg via Getty Images

“Political coins are driven purely by attention, and the crypto community is aware that attention peaks right after the launch,” Vaiman said. “People know you don’t want to stick around, especially for such a vague prospect, like fighting anti-Americanism or antisemitism. What does it even mean? How are you going to achieve that in a token?”

The website for the coin says a “portion of the proceeds” will be divided evenly among three causes: antisemitism and anti-Americanism “awareness campaigns,” crypto education for the city’s youth and a scholarship initiative.

It does not detail which organizations will be supported, or what percentage of the proceeds will go toward charitable causes.

Uncertain fate

Adams has disputed that any money had been pulled by the token’s creators.

He has said the appearance of withdrawals were the result of adjustments made by the designated market maker, an entity that buys and sells orders of a new token to ensure traders can make purchases without major price shifts.

The market makers include FalconX, a well known digital asset broker. The company declined to respond to inquiries on the record.

As of Wednesday, a majority of accounts that invested in the coin had lost money, according to the Bubblemaps analysis. Fifteen traders were down at least $100,000, while 10 had netted $100,000.

Pierce said he was still hoping the project could be salvaged, adding that “the fate and outcome of this project will be determined in the coming days.”

But some in the crypto world had their doubts.

“It could be a legitimate project with just a really bad rollout,” said Benjamin Cowen, the founder of another crypto research analytics firm, Into the Cryptoverse. ”But the way it was launched didn’t instill a lot of confidence. It’s hard to regain trust in the crypto community.”

Jake Offenhartz, The Associated Press
Google adds AI image generation to Chrome browser, side panel option for virtual assistant

ByThe Associated Press
Published: January 28, 2026 

A woman walks by a giant screen with a logo at an event at the Paris Google Lab on the sidelines of the AI Action Summit in Paris, on Feb. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus,File) (Thibault Camus)

Google is empowering its Chrome browser with the ability to alter imagery and a virtual assistant to help with online tasks as part of its push to turbocharge its digital services with more artificial intelligence technology.

The features rolling out include making Google’s AI image generator and editing tool, Nano Banana, available to Chrome’s logged-in users on desktop computers in the United States. The expanded access to Nano Banana through the leading web browser may further blur the lines between real-life pictures and fabricated images.

The browser’s expansion will also offer an option for Chrome’s U.S. users to open a side panel so an AI-powered assistant can help with an assortment of chores while a user remains engaged with other online tasks.Latest updates on company news here

Subscribers to Google’s AI Pro and Ultra services will also be able to activate an “auto browse” function that will log into websites, shop for merchandise on command and prepare posts on social media. Users will still have to manually complete purchases from the shopping carts prepared by AI and approve drafted social media posts.

The AI in Chrome relies on the Gemini 3 model that Google released late last year and is now being baked into many of the services that helped its corporate parent, Alphabet, recently surpass a market value of US$4 trillion.


Earlier this month, Google tapped into Gemini to bring more AI features to Gmail as part of an effort to make that service behave more like a personal assistant and then funneled more of the technology into its search engine. in hopes of providing more relevant answers tailored to users’ individual tastes and habits

The upgrades to Google’s search engine plug into the company’s “Personal Intelligence” technology that leverages AI to learn more about people’s lives. Google is promising to roll out a Personal Intelligence option in Chrome at some point later this year.

Chrome’s AI makeover is rolling out just a few months after a federal judge rejected the U.S. Department of Justice’s push to force Google to sell the browser as part of the penalty for running an illegal monopoly in search. The judge rebuffed the proposed breakup partly because he believes AI already is reshaping the competitive landscape as smaller rivals such as OpenAI and Perplexity deploy the technology in chatbots and their own web browsers.

Before releasing its AI browser Atlas last October, OpenAI had expressed interest in buying Chrome if the breakup had been ordered. Perplexity, which offers an AI browser called Comet, even submitted a US$34.5 billion bid for Chrome before the judge opted against a sale mandate.

---

Michael Liedtke, The Associated Press
Is Amazon cutting jobs to replace humans with AI? Here’s what experts say

By Andrew Johnson
 January 29, 2026 

People walk out of an Amazon Go store in Seattle, March 4, 2020. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

Amazon says its latest round of job cuts affecting 16,000 corporate positions worldwide is about streamlining its business, not replacing human workers with artificial intelligence. Experts say they’re not surprised.

The layoffs, announced Wednesday, mark the second major workforce reduction at the company in three months. While Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has openly discussed his expectation generative AI will reduce the company’s corporate workforce in the future, Amazon says the current cuts are aimed at reducing layers of management and bureaucracy following years of rapid expansion.

In a statement to CTV News, Amazon Canada would not provide details on how many Canadian workers may be affected. The announcement is being closely watched in Vancouver, where nearly 5,000 people work at Amazon’s downtown headquarters. “These are very important jobs. They’re high-paying jobs, and we’re very glad to have them in downtown Vancouver,” said city councilor Peter Meiszner.

Amazon is North America’s second-largest private employer. Its workforce doubled during the COVID-19 pandemic as millions of people, stuck at home, shifted to online shopping. Since then, it has been cutting costs aggressively.

“When things reopened, some of that activity shifted back to brick-and-mortar stores, and the online space needed to resize,” said Adam King, a Labour Studies professor at the University of Manitoba.

While he does acknowledge there are signs hiring has slowed in entry-level tech positions involving simple tasks that can be taken over by AI, King says. “I wouldn’t chalk this up to technological innovation displacing workers.”

Tech experts don’t believe the latest cuts at Amazon signal increasing adoption of AI at the expense of human jobs and caution that AI is not yet capable of broadly replacing complex corporate roles.

“When it first appeared, it was growing exponentially, it was getting smarter. But it hasn’t continued on that trajectory,” said Dan Riskin, CTV’s Science and Technology Expert. “A lot of the models have levelled off in terms of their abilities. If you interact with ChatGPT on a regular basis, you’ll know that it’s still just a bit stupid and it still makes some really dumb mistakes.”

For that reason, Riskin says employers would be wise to continue to invest in humans at the highest levels. “Humans, the best humans, are still better than AI. If you’re trying to build an organization with great people in it and you’ve got some key roles, AI hasn’t shown itself to be that good yet.”

Andrew Johnson

Journalist, CTV National News




‘Massive market of US$1 trillion’: Toronto company emerges as AI leader after signing deal with Uber

By Joshua Santos
January 30, 2026
BNNBLOOMBERG


A Canadian company, with significant operations in the U.S., is working to clear regulatory hurdles to bring autonomous vehicle technology to Canada after it signed a massive deal with Uber, the CEO says.

Toronto-based Waabi Innovation Inc has secured a US$1 billion deal to “triple down” and commercialize its self-driving trucking system and enter the robotaxi market.

“We are the leader really globally on self-driving trucking, which is really exciting to be doing this from Canada,” Raquel Urtasun, CEO, told BNN Bloomberg in an interview Thursday.

She says she started the company four and a half years ago.

The deal with Uber will see Waabi roll out 25,000 robotaxis.


“What you see with this massive robotaxi deal is their excitement and they are tripling down... in terms of really, Waabi being the provider for the Uber network.”

Urtasun, who previously worked for Uber, says Uber was an early investor in her company.

“They have really seen what our technology can do,” said Urtasun.

She says she would like to bring the same technology to Canada but faces government hurdles here.

She says the company launched in the U.S. because the regulatory framework is ahead of Canada’s but it is working with the government to bring the technology to Canada as soon as possible

“We are working with regulators to make it possible for us to safely deploy the technology here as well,” said Urtasun.

She says the company has been testing its vehicles on roads with safety drivers since 2022.

“We can actually prove our system is safe,” said Urtasun.

Urtasun says the same AI system works for self-driving trucks and robotaxis, which will enable the company to have a fast and seamless entry into the robotaxi market.

“Our autonomous system is really performance-ready for driverless,” said Urtasun.



She says trucks can drive on surface streets in urban environments and that Wabbi has worked with “some of the biggest shippers and carriers in North America.”

Waabi will utilize the full power of AI and its system through reasoning to prove it is safe and it can learn efficiently together with a simulator, Urtasun added.

She says it can teach the system to perform “better than humans” to avoid accidents on the road and the technology‘s advantage has propelled Waabi to make it ready for the next stage.

With competitors such as Waymo and Tesla offering self-driving services, Uratsan says her company has “more than enough space” to have market share for years to come.

“We have the next generation of tech that can really enable us to swiftly and efficiently come into the robotaxi market. It’s a massive market of $1 trillion in the U.S. alone,” said Urtasun.

Urtasun said the company has been operating in Texas since 2023.

With files from the Canadian Press
Joshua Santos

Journalist, BNNBloomberg.ca