Employer Intelligence Profile

Seaspan ULC LMIA employer profile

North Vancouver, BC V7P 2R1

Seaspan ULC appears in the visible LMIA employer record set with 23 approved positions across 16 sponsoring role tracks in British Columbia. The clearest role signals are Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers, and the latest visible activity appears in October to December 2024.

Hiring foreign workers: Yes Active in 2024

Executive summary

Approved positions on record 23
Sponsoring job tracks 16
Provinces in scope 1
Latest visible activity October to December 2024

Visible streams: 1 | Core stream mix: High Wage

Confidence Promising hiring confidence
Pathway fit Potential PR Pathway Fit
Role mix Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers

Sponsoring roles

Sponsoring jobs with LMIA support

Seaspan ULC currently shows 16 sponsoring role tracks and 23 approved positions on record. The clearest role signals on this page are Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers.

Mechanical engineers This sponsoring role is shown with the legacy NOC 2016 code carried in the historical LMIA record. Older employer records can use 4-digit codes even when the newer Canadian classification now uses 5-digit NOCs. Legacy NOC 2132 TEER N/A British Columbia High Wage 5 positions $35 - $60/hr

As a mechanical engineer, you will help design and review mechanical systems or equipment, analyze performance, support installation or maintenance issues, prepare technical estimates or reports, and coordinate with engineering, manufacturing, or maintenance teams.

Role signals
Mechanical Design Engineering Analysis Manufacturing Systems Maintenance Planning Project Coordination Quality Review
  • Support mechanical design, review, and improvement work for equipment, components, or systems
  • Analyze performance, reliability, or maintenance issues and recommend practical next steps
  • Prepare estimates, reports, specifications, or technical documentation for mechanical work
  • Coordinate with engineering, manufacturing, construction, or maintenance teams on safe delivery
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in mechanical engineering or a closely related engineering discipline.
  • Experience: Supervised engineering experience is commonly part of the path toward independent professional practice.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a professional engineer and n.e.c., you will work on engineering design, applied research, systems development, product development, and technical analysis while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Engineering Design Applied Research Systems Development Product Development Technical Analysis Regulatory Compliance
  • Apply role-specific judgment in engineering design
  • Keep applied research organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on systems development tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting product development
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field, and some roles may prefer advanced study.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

No editorial employer-expectation summary was attached to this role record.

This is an independent editorial summary based on visible LMIA role patterns and is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

The direct Government of Canada NOC profile link is not attached to this role record yet.

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a mechanical engineer, you will help design and review mechanical systems or equipment, analyze performance, support installation or maintenance issues, prepare technical estimates or reports, and coordinate with engineering, manufacturing, or maintenance teams.

Role signals
Mechanical Design Engineering Analysis Manufacturing Systems Maintenance Planning Project Coordination Quality Review
  • Support mechanical design, review, and improvement work for equipment, components, or systems
  • Analyze performance, reliability, or maintenance issues and recommend practical next steps
  • Prepare estimates, reports, specifications, or technical documentation for mechanical work
  • Coordinate with engineering, manufacturing, construction, or maintenance teams on safe delivery
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in mechanical engineering or a closely related engineering discipline.
  • Experience: Supervised engineering experience is commonly part of the path toward independent professional practice.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

No editorial employer-expectation summary was attached to this role record.

This is an independent editorial summary based on visible LMIA role patterns and is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

The direct Government of Canada NOC profile link is not attached to this role record yet.

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a contractor, supervisor, machining, metal forming, shaping, erecting trade, and related occupation, you will work on team supervision, safety compliance, production planning, quality control, and production management while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Team Supervision Safety Compliance Production Planning Quality Control Production Management Project Management
  • Apply role-specific judgment in team supervision
  • Keep safety compliance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on production planning tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting quality control
  • Education: Some employers may expect some secondary school preparation.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a contractor, supervisor, machining, metal forming, shaping, erecting trade, and related occupation, you will work on safety compliance, production planning, team supervision, project planning and coordination, and quality control while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Safety Compliance Production Planning Team Supervision Project Management Quality Control Supervision
  • Apply role-specific judgment in safety compliance
  • Keep production planning organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on team supervision tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting project planning and coordination
  • Education: Some employers may expect some secondary school preparation.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a contractor, supervisor, other construction trade, installer, repairer, and servicer, you will work on construction supervision, project planning and coordination, safety compliance, cost estimation, and performance evaluation while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Construction Supervision Project Management Safety Compliance Cost Estimation Performance Evaluation Team Coordination
  • Apply role-specific judgment in construction supervision
  • Keep project planning and coordination organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on safety compliance tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting cost estimation
  • Education: Some employers may expect some secondary school preparation.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a contractor, supervisor, and pipefitting trade, you will work on project planning and coordination, safety compliance, team leadership, construction supervision, and mentorship while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Project Management Safety Compliance Team Leadership Construction Supervision Mentorship Supervision
  • Apply role-specific judgment in project planning and coordination
  • Keep safety compliance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on team leadership tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting construction supervision
  • Education: Some employers may expect some secondary school preparation.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an electrical and electronics engineer, you will work on electrical engineering, electronics design, product development, research and development, and manufacturing supervision while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Electrical Engineering Electronics Design Product Development Research and Development Manufacturing Supervision Technical Reporting
  • Apply role-specific judgment in electrical engineering
  • Keep electronics design organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on product development tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting research and development
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field, and some roles may prefer advanced study.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an engineering inspector and regulatory officer, you will work on engineering inspection, regulatory or licensing procedures, quality checks and work standards, safety standards, and project oversight while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Engineering Inspection Regulatory Compliance Quality Assurance Safety Standards Project Oversight Technical Review
  • Apply role-specific judgment in engineering inspection
  • Keep regulatory or licensing procedures organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on quality checks and work standards tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting safety standards
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an industrial engineering, manufacturing technologist, and technician, you will work on manufacturing processes, process improvement, quality control, data analysis, and technical support while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Manufacturing Processes Process Improvement Quality Control Data Analysis Technical Support Engineering Support
  • Apply role-specific judgment in manufacturing processes
  • Keep process improvement organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on quality control tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting data analysis
  • Education: Employers usually expect college, certificate, apprenticeship, or other role-related training.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an industrial engineering, manufacturing technologist, and technician, you will work on manufacturing processes, quality control, technical support, process optimization, and data analysis while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Manufacturing Processes Quality Control Technical Support Process Optimization Data Analysis Production Systems
  • Apply role-specific judgment in manufacturing processes
  • Keep quality control organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on technical support tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting process optimization
  • Education: Employers usually expect college, certificate, apprenticeship, or other role-related training.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a mechanical engineering technologist and technician, you will work on mechanical design, product testing, technical documentation, technical support, and engineering support while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Mechanical Design Product Testing Technical Documentation Technical Support Engineering Support Quality Assurance
  • Apply role-specific judgment in mechanical design
  • Keep product testing organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on technical documentation tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting technical support
  • Education: Employers usually expect college, certificate, apprenticeship, or other role-related training.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an user support technician, you will work on computer hardware, software installation, technical support, troubleshooting, and user training while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Computer Hardware Software Installation Technical Support Troubleshooting User Training
  • Apply role-specific judgment in computer hardware
  • Keep software installation organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on technical support tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting troubleshooting
  • Education: Employers usually expect college, certificate, apprenticeship, or other role-related training.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a human resource and recruitment officer, you will work on employee relations, talent acquisition, training and development, agriculture sector, and onboarding while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Employee Relations Talent Acquisition Training and Development Agriculture Sector Onboarding Workplace Culture
  • Apply role-specific judgment in employee relations
  • Keep talent acquisition organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on training and development tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting agriculture sector
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

LMIA Pathway Insight

Read the employer record like a candidate strategist

These LMIA pathway signals are based on Seaspan ULC's visible role mix, latest activity in October to December 2024, and the occupations that stand out most on this employer record: Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers.

Confidence signal

LMIA validity confidence

Promising confidence
Based on 3 approved positions in the latest visible period and the recent activity in October to December 2024, this employer reflects a Promising level of international talent hiring activity in Canada.

Employer continuity

Employer consistency insight

Active in 2024
This employer has appeared in LMIA records across 4 different years, showing a steady long-term hiring presence.

Occupation mix

Occupation diversity insight

Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers
The employer has hired under 16 distinct occupations over time, suggesting a broad workforce composition.

Demand pattern

Retention and continuity insight

Fairly Positive
LMIA records indicate employer hiring activity, which may reflect project-based, seasonal, or evolving workforce demand across hiring cycles.

Work-to-PR alignment

Pathway alignment for candidates

Potential PR Pathway Fit
LMIA activity, pathway tags, and employer location together suggest a Potential PR Pathway Fit level of relevance for candidates exploring employer-linked PR pathways in Canada.
BC PNP Skilled Worker

Final takeaway

How to read this employer page

Visible demand in British Columbia
Seaspan ULC shows promising LMIA hiring confidence based on the published employer record. The latest visible activity appears in October to December 2024. Visible sponsoring history includes roles such as Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers. The current record set points to demand in British Columbia. Candidates who align their experience, NOC fit, and resume presentation to this employer profile can build a stronger application path.

Employer footprint

Visible hiring footprint and timeline

Seaspan ULC shows visible activity across 1 provinces and 1 streams. Use this footprint to judge where and how the employer's LMIA-supported hiring has been concentrated.

Visible LMIA activity timeline

Latest visible activity appears in October to December 2024. The timeline below groups approved positions by visible year and quarter so you can see how this employer record is distributed over time.

2024 October to December
3 approved positions
2024 April to June
1 approved positions
2023 October to December
3 approved positions
2023 July to September
6 approved positions
2023 April to June
4 approved positions
2023 January to March
1 approved positions
2022 October to December
5 approved positions
2020 April to June
0 approved positions

Provinces with visible records

British Columbia

Streams represented

High Wage

Related employer records

Only one employer record is visible for this profile.

Searcher questions

Questions candidates usually want answered on an employer page

These answers use Seaspan ULC's visible role mix, location footprint, and LMIA history so candidates can decide faster whether this employer is worth targeting.

Has Seaspan ULC hired foreign workers before?

Seaspan ULC shows a visible LMIA-related employer record with 23 approved positions on record. The latest visible activity appears in October to December 2024.

Which roles stand out most on this employer page?

The strongest visible role signals are Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., Engineering managers. These are usually the best starting points when deciding whether your current job title and experience fit this employer.

Where is this employer's visible activity concentrated?

Seaspan ULC shows visible demand in British Columbia. Stream coverage currently points to High Wage.

How should I use this page before creating a profile?

Start by checking whether your experience aligns to Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c., then review the sponsoring roles and recent timeline. If the fit looks strong, create a profile so your job title and resume can be matched to employers with similar visible demand.

Is this page useful for PR or work permit planning?

LMIA activity, pathway tags, and employer location together suggest a Potential PR Pathway Fit level of relevance for candidates exploring employer-linked PR pathways in Canada. Use this page as employer and role research, not as a guarantee of PR or a live job offer.

Market context

Employers like this have hired international talent across related roles

These related-role counts show how Seaspan ULC compares with broader visible LMIA demand in occupations connected to Mechanical engineers, Other professional engineers, n.e.c..

Industrial engineering and manufacturing technologists and technicians

164+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

224 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Mechanical engineers

85+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

126 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Contractors and supervisors, machining, metal forming, shaping and erecting trades and related occupations

49+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

107 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Electrical and electronics engineers

235+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

390 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Industrial engineering and manufacturing technologists and technicians

164+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

224 total approved positions are represented in related records.

User support technicians

433+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

737 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Candidate roadmap

How to move from employer research to a profile employers can actually review

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Recruitment services for Canadian employers handled through VisaTalents Global Recruiting Inc — in accordance with applicable Canadian employment standards.

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Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence - Canada. VisaTalents adds its own data intelligence and may incorporate data collected from multiple information providers where applicable. Data accuracy, current openings, and employer requirements may vary.