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TwitterThis Alberta Official Statistic shows the proportion of population by mother tongue in the eight Alberta economic regions for the 2011 Census year. Alberta is divided into eight economic regions as follows: Lethbridge – Medicine -Hat; Camrose-Drumheller; Calgary; Banff – Jasper – Rocky Mountain House; Red Deer; Edmonton; Athabasca – Grande Prairie – Peace River; and Wood Buffalo – Cold Lake. Mother tongue refers to the first language learned at home in childhood and still understood by the person on May 10, 2011. Non-official languages are languages other than English or French. According to the 2011 census, 77.8% of Albertans reported English as their mother tongue, followed by a non-official language (20.1%), and French (2.1%). The Red Deer economic region reported the highest proportion of Albertans with English as a mother tongue (89.7%) and the lowest proportion of Albertans with a non-official language as a mother tongue (8.9%), while Calgary reported the lowest proportion (73.4%) of Albertans with English as mother tongue and the highest proportion of Albertans with a non-official language as a mother tongue (24.9%).
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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This Alberta Official Statistic provides the distribution of Alberta’s population within the 8 economic regions of Alberta for 2011. Alberta is divided into eight economic regions as follows: Lethbridge – Medicine -Hat; Camrose-Drumheller; Calgary; Banff – Jasper – Rocky Mountain House; Red Deer; Edmonton; Athabasca – Grande Prairie – Peace River; and Wood Buffalo – Cold Lake. The economic regions of Calgary and Edmonton account for the largest proportion (69.0%) of Alberta’s population. The remaining six economic regions each accounted for less than 10% of the population.
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TwitterThis dataset provides 10-year employment forecasts at 3-digit National Occupational Classification level for Alberta's economic regions. Alberta's Occupational Outlook projects labour demand, supply and imbalance for occupations in Alberta and its economic regions for a 10-year period based on various factors related to demographics, economic and labour market conditions at time of conducting the forecast.
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TwitterThis dataset provides 10-year employment forecasts at 3-digit National Occupational Classification level for Alberta's economic regions. Alberta's Occupational Outlook projects labour demand, supply and imbalance for occupations in Alberta and its economic regions for a 10-year period based on various factors related to demographics, economic and labour market conditions at time of conducting the forecast.
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TwitterThis dataset provides 10-year employment forecasts at 3-digit National Occupational Classification level for Alberta's economic regions. Alberta's Occupational Outlook projects labour demand, supply and imbalance for occupations in Alberta and its economic regions for a 10-year period based on various factors related to demographics, economic and labour market conditions at time of conducting the forecast.
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TwitterThis dataset provides 10-year employment forecasts at 3-digit National Occupational Classification level for Alberta's economic regions. Alberta's Occupational Outlook projects labour demand, supply and imbalance for occupations in Alberta and its economic regions for a 10-year period based on various factors related to demographics, economic and labour market conditions at time of conducting the forecast.
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TwitterThis dataset provides 10-year employment forecasts at 3-digit National Occupational Classification level for Alberta's economic regions. Alberta's Occupational Outlook projects labour demand, supply and imbalance for occupations in Alberta and its economic regions for a 10-year period based on various factors related to demographics, economic and labour market conditions at time of conducting the forecast.
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TwitterAnnual expenditure-based, gross domestic product, by province and territory in chained, current and constant 2017 dollars.
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TwitterComponents of population change by economic region, single year of age, five-year age group and sex for the period from July 1 to June 30, annual, based on the Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2016. The components include births, deaths, immigrants, emigrants, returning emigrants, net temporary emigration, net interprovincial migration, net intraprovincial migration, net non-permanent residents and residual deviation.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
This dataset provides 10-year employment forecasts at 3-digit National Occupational Classification level for Alberta's economic regions. Alberta's Occupational Outlook projects labour demand, supply and imbalance for occupations in Alberta and its economic regions for a 10-year period based on various factors related to demographics, economic and labour market conditions at time of conducting the forecast.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Gasoline Prices in Canada increased to 1.02 USD/Liter in November from 1 USD/Liter in October of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - Canada Gasoline Prices - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
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TwitterThis Alberta Official Statistic shows the proportion of population by mother tongue in the eight Alberta economic regions for the 2011 Census year. Alberta is divided into eight economic regions as follows: Lethbridge – Medicine -Hat; Camrose-Drumheller; Calgary; Banff – Jasper – Rocky Mountain House; Red Deer; Edmonton; Athabasca – Grande Prairie – Peace River; and Wood Buffalo – Cold Lake. Mother tongue refers to the first language learned at home in childhood and still understood by the person on May 10, 2011. Non-official languages are languages other than English or French. According to the 2011 census, 77.8% of Albertans reported English as their mother tongue, followed by a non-official language (20.1%), and French (2.1%). The Red Deer economic region reported the highest proportion of Albertans with English as a mother tongue (89.7%) and the lowest proportion of Albertans with a non-official language as a mother tongue (8.9%), while Calgary reported the lowest proportion (73.4%) of Albertans with English as mother tongue and the highest proportion of Albertans with a non-official language as a mother tongue (24.9%).