The federal government has released its artificial intelligence strategy, setting out a plan for how Canada will adopt the technology over the next decade, including the development of “large-scale” data centres and the broader use of AI across various sectors.
Solomon said that as Canadians have “real concerns” about trust, safety, privacy, and control when it comes to AI, the goal of the new strategy is to build trust, create opportunity, and give Canadians a “greater sense of sovereign control.”
“Sovereign AI starts with sovereign infrastructure,” the strategy says. “Canada needs domestic data centre capacity and cloud services.”
Canada is “highly dependent” on foreign suppliers for the infrastructure that powers AI, Carney said, noting that this creates “real risks that foreign entities could access Canadian data, deploy AI products that shape Canadian lives without reflecting our values, and tilt the playing field against Canadian firms.”
He added that most of Canada’s data used in AI goes across the border, or is governed by privacy regimes of other countries. To combat this, Canada will expand its “sovereign compute and cloud infrastructure” to reduce reliance on foreign providers.
The strategy also pledges to create up to 90,000 AI-related jobs for young Canadians by 2031, including through the Student Work Placement Program and Canada Summer Jobs, as well as other initiatives.
It also projects that more than 250,000 new AI-related jobs will be created across the country by 2031, and says the government will support workers through training programs.
The strategy seeks to increase AI adoption among businesses from 12 percent to 60 percent by 2034 by boosting funding supports.
Conservative Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman said the government’s strategy is a “very ambitious” plan, but lacks “a lot of details that I think Canadians have been waiting for a very long time.”
The strategy does not provide details on privacy, safety, and security, she said, noting that these were promised to be included in the plan.
Lantsman said Conservatives will support expanding Canadian sovereignty and community computing, adding that intellectual property should remain in Canada, but said the AI strategy “lacks any kind of detail on how to get there.”
Protections
Carney said the government will introduce legislation, regulations, and standards to protect Canadians’ data, privacy, and children under the new strategy, and will modernize privacy laws and online safety legislation.Carney said the development of child safety standards will be a priority at the G7 summit in France this month.
Other elements in the strategy include a national AI literacy initiative, expanded research to track emerging risks, $500 million in funding to expand AI adoption for small and medium-sized businesses, and building a “world-leading public AI supercomputer.”
Carney gave several examples of how AI is used in various industries, including to screen heart murmurs in infants, to reduce fertilizer use through soil mapping, and to reduce congestion on roads with AI-powered traffic lights.
He noted AI poses risks that are becoming more prevalent, including ‘deepfakes,’ unsafe chat bots, and AI-generated disinformation, but the strategy doesn’t include specific details on how the government will address those issues.







