Skip to main content

Site Banner Ads

Site Search

Search

Home Up Here Publishing

Mobile Toggle

Social Links

Facebook Instagram

Search Toggle

Search

Main navigation

  • Magazines
    • Latest Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Up Here Business
    • Visitor Guides
    • Move Up Here
  • Sections
    • People & Places
    • Arts & Lifestyle
    • History & Culture
    • Travel & Tourism
    • Nature & Science
    • Northern Jobs
  • Newsletter
  • Community Map
  • Merch
  • Visitor Guides
  • Our Team
  • Subscribe/Renew

Fortune Tellers

February 2016

It's 2026 and the situation is dire. No more so than in the North.

By Herb Mathisen

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Fortune Tellers

“It’s been another down year for the mining sector—the 13th in a row. But analysts agree that this is the year that commodity prices finally recover,” reads a business pundit with rote seriousness on a television inside Iqaluit’s vacuous airport, before the TV’s ripped out of the wall by a looter. A newly imposed ban on southbound air travel has sparked violent riots in the three territorial capitals—and across each territory—as highways to the south have also been ordered barricaded.

When the last of the operating mines began scaling down, some saw the writing on the wall and sold their homes, packed up and moved away. With a litre of milk and a loaf of bread equivalent to nearly half a day’s wages to anyone not employed with the public service, and with no solid industries left to replace the lost jobs of the shuttered mines, the territorial governments banded together and resorted to this drastic measure—essentially holding their citizenry hostage—to retain the last vestiges of revenues, in the form of that sweet per capita federal formula transfer. In response, a black market has sprung up to sneak Northerners south by secret overland trail routes and clandestine waterways. 

Okay… so that’s probably not going to happen. But this hyperbolic outcome does highlight the North’s dependency on—some might call it an addiction to—the resource extraction sector and its ties to the vagaries of world markets. Governments know a diversified economy is the surest way to ride out the lows.

But how can Northern economies get the most out of resource projects while they’re producing? How will they develop new industries that reduce the dependency on southern imports? How will they make communities more sustainable and liveable? What can be done right now to avoid this dystopian 2026 future? Those are some, uh, real good questions.


Our State of the Economies feature usually looks back at the year that was for the North’s economies and tries to predict what’s in store for the year to follow. This time, we tried something a little different.

With 2015 essentially a repeat of 2014—a slumping resource sector causing mines to slow or shut down along with a drop in mineral exploration spending—we decided to imagine what the North might look like 10 years from now. Will the three territories still be so closely tied to the fate of the mining sector, its most important industry? And to government transfers? We spoke with political and business leaders in Nunavut, the NWT and Yukon to see what can be done now to avoid disaster in 2026.

Click the links below to check out the predictions in each territory:

Fortune Tellers - NWT

Fortune Tellers - Yukon

Fortune Tellers - Nunavut

 

 

 

 

February 2016

THAT'S A LONG WAY BETWEEN TOWNS, PILGRIM. PHOTO COURTESY OF MARCO MARDER

What it’s like to hike (part of) the Dempster Highway

And some advice for anyone crazy enough to try it.

By Daniel Campbell

THAT'S A LONG WAY BETWEEN TOWNS, PILGRIM. PHOTO COURTESY OF MARCO MARDER

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

February 2016

Would you go all the way to the yukon just to see this? Photo by flickr.com/photos/clsresoff/ (creative commons)

Top Five Jack London-Related Things To Do in the Yukon

Free

What are the best ways to channel London in today’s Yukon? Here are our picks.

By Eva Holland

Would you go all the way to the yukon just to see this? Photo by flickr.com/photos/clsresoff/ (creative commons)

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

Related Articles

Up Here Business No.3/23

In the cold.

In from the Cold

How does diesel-dependent Nunavut meet its carbon targets? The Kivalliq Hydro-Fibre Line would do it in one shot. And that’s just for starters.

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

Up Here Business No. 4

Sean Stofer, Chris Cornboro and Michael Austin—COO, CEO and chief marketing officer

Trail Blazers

ArcticPharm is the first cannabis grower and manufacturer to set up shop in the North. With its dry flower and pre-rolls now debuting on retail markets in the Yukon and Ontario, founders Chris Cornborough and Sean Stofer have more to celebrate than 4/20.

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

Up Here Business No. 4

Man looking at multiple colourful doors.

A Nuclear Option?

Businesses and developments. Corporations should consider it. Nuclear power is a challenging idea. But small modular reactors may be the surest path to zero-carbon mining in the North. They may also be a big economic opportunity.

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

Up Here Business No. 4

Ben Perreira at his desk

Let Em' Go

Are you struggling to meet your employees’ demands for more flexibility when it comes to working from home? Neighbourly North’s Ben Perreira is an expert on the subject. He says, relax.

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

Up Here Business No. 4

Mine worker checking our core samples.

Home Coming

Brandon Macdonald has returned to his roots with Fireweed Metal's Macmillan Pass Project. He's also giving orphaned discoveries a new place to call home.

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025

Up Here Magazine - September/October 2022

Joella Hogan

It Makes 
a Village

Joella Hogan is a savvy business operator who has brought Mayo’s Yukon Soaps Co. to national prominence. She also has a keen eye for turning her entrepreneurial investment into a vital piece of community infrastructure. How so? Hint: Think housing.

October 28th, 2025 October 28th, 2025
Newsletter sign-up promo image.

Stay in Touch.

Our weekly newsletter brings all the best circumpolar stories right to your inbox.

Up Here magazine cover

Subscribe Now

Our magazine showcases award-winning writing and spectacular northern photos.

Subscribe

Footer Navigation

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimers & Legal

Contact Information

Up Here Publishing
P.O Box 1343
Yellowknife, NT
X1A 2N9  Canada
Email: info@uphere.ca

Social Links

Facebook Instagram
Funded by the Government of Canada