
The Common Economic Community (CEC) is a federal development framework to expand Canada’s northern economy through ten planned metroplex cities linked by two transportation-energy corridors and four maritime gateways. The model concentrates resource extraction, processing, manufacturing, administration, education, and permanent housing in structured northern hubs. It replaces temporary labour with serviced settlement, strengthens Arctic sovereignty, diversifies export routes, and supports Indigenous co-governance. A public economic registry ensures transparent land, contracts, and revenue oversight. Trilateral municipal partnerships enable controlled cooperation with China and other markets under Canadian regulatory authority. The CEC positions Canada for durable economic and geopolitical resilience.


