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    BC’s new 40–140 day exploration permit timelines: key points for project teams

    February 2, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    BC’s new 40–140 day exploration permit timelines: key points for project teams

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    British Columbia will from 1 April process mineral exploration permits within 40–140 days, with any files breaching the service standard escalated to the chief permitting officer for a decision within 14 days, after exploration spending reached a record C$751 million in 2025. The province is allocating C$3 million, including C$1 million to increase permitting capacity and C$2 million to improve the Mineral Claims Consultation Framework, which has been a key bottleneck. Minister Jagrup Brar cited recent approvals at Skeena’s C$713-million Eskay Creek restart and Centerra’s Mt. Milligan expansion to 2035 as proof the system can move faster while maintaining First Nations consultation.

    Technical Brief

    • Consent-based Section 7 process with Tahltan Central Government underpinned Eskay Creek’s recent major permit approval.
    • Eskay Creek restart is scoped at about C$713 million capital for gold-silver production.
    • Mt. Milligan permit amendments enable mine-life extension planning out to approximately 2035.
    • Centerra’s Mt. Milligan expansion contemplates up to C$400 million additional capital deployment on-site.
    • Consultation bottlenecks are being addressed specifically through upgrades to the Mineral Claims Consultation Framework.
    • Record C$751 million exploration spend in 2025 signals strong pipeline pressure on permitting capacity.

    Our Take

    Fixed 40–140 day permitting windows in British Columbia will be closely watched by operators at capital-intensive sites like Eskay Creek and Mt. Milligan, as they effectively cap schedule risk on early-stage work that feeds into multi-hundred-million-dollar expansion and restart decisions.

    The related AME Roundup 2026 piece on C$3 million for mineral claims permitting shows this is not a one-off announcement but part of a coordinated policy push by the Ministry of Mining and Critical Minerals to make BC more competitive for critical minerals and gold exploration within Canada.

    With the US Department of Energy’s US$12 billion Project Vault stockpiling initiative in play, BC’s faster permitting for critical minerals positions the province to capture US-linked offtake or funding opportunities ahead of slower-permitting jurisdictions in our Policy coverage set.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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