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Air Canada Express — BC North Coast

Mar 2016

Northern BC Coast, British Columbia, Canada

Modern Era
  • DateMar 2016
  • LocationNorthern BC Coast, British Columbia, Canada
  • Witnesses0
  • ShapeUnknown
  • Credibility★★★★☆
Same eraModern Era
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  3. 2016Air Canada Express — BC North Coast
  4. 2016IAF Sukhoi Su-30MKI Intercepts Unidentified Object — Barmer
  5. 2016Mosul Orb — USAF Targeting Pod Recording

Credibility Audit

3 factors
  1. Pilot Witness+3
  2. Multiple Witnesses+2
  3. Radar Corroborated+3
Raw total8
Final tier★★★☆☆Moderate
Thresholds
  • ★0–3
  • ★★4–7
  • ★★★8–11
  • ★★★★12–16
  • ★★★★★17+

DoD Observables

2 of 5
  • Instantaneous Acceleration
  • Hypersonic Velocity
  • Low Observability
  • Trans-Medium Travel
  • Anti-Gravity Lift

Event Description

In 2016, the crew of an Air Canada Express flight operating along the northern coast of British Columbia filed a formal incident report with Transport Canada after observing an unidentified object that paced their aircraft for an extended period. The report was submitted through standard aviation safety reporting channels, giving it an institutional credibility distinct from informal witness accounts.

The crew — consisting of a captain and first officer, both with professional aviation licenses and the observational training that comes with commercial flight operations — noticed the object during a scheduled flight over the coastal mountain and fjord terrain of northwestern British Columbia. The object maintained a position relative to the aircraft that was inconsistent with another conventional aircraft or with natural phenomena such as Venus or other celestial bodies that are sometimes misidentified by aircrew unfamiliar with their appearance near the horizon.

The object's behavior — tracking the aircraft's speed and heading for a sustained period — eliminated most prosaic explanations that apply to brief, momentary sightings. A hovering weather balloon would fall behind as the aircraft advanced; a celestial body would not maintain its bearing and distance in the way described. The crew reported their observation in accordance with Transport Canada's reporting protocols for unusual airspace encounters, which are designed to capture information relevant to aviation safety.

Transport Canada's incident reporting system, CADORS (Civil Aviation Daily Occurrence Reporting System), provides a searchable record of flight crew observations that include UAP reports alongside conventional aviation incidents. The 2016 BC north coast report was accessible to researchers who review these databases, and it is representative of a broader pattern of Canadian commercial aviation UAP reports that have been filed through official channels.

Canada has produced a disproportionate number of well-documented aviation UAP reports relative to its air traffic volume, with British Columbia in particular generating a cluster of aviation and ground-based sightings. The professionalism of the Air Canada Express crew, the formal filing through Transport Canada channels, and the consistent description of structured, pacing behavior make this case a representative example of the ongoing phenomenon of professional aviation crew UAP encounters — encounters that continue to occur and be officially documented decades after the first wave of post-war reports.

Sources

  1. [1]governmentTransport Canada — Aviation Incident Report
  2. [2]mediaUFO*BC — Air Canada Express case file