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Anthropic backs Canadian AI research with $10M in Claude credits

CryptopolitanJul 15, 2026 12:42 AM
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According to the statement made by Anthropic on Tuesday, the firm is set to give eight research organizations in Canada $10 million CAD in Claude credits.

These credits will provide free access to Claude for two universities, two hospitals, and Canada’s three federal artificial intelligence institutes. This is significant for Canadian researchers since they get access to a state-of-the-art model, fully funded by Anthropic, without any cost. And for Ottawa, this is even a bigger deal, since the government sees the development of AI capability in Canada as a priority.

Reports say that Anthropic will not steer research directions or claim ownership of findings, and said more partners are expected in the coming months.

Canadian labs choose how to use Claude

The recipient list includes the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute, known as Amii, in Edmonton, Mila in Montréal, and Toronto’s Vector Institute, plus CHEO, the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Université Laval, the University of Toronto, and the University of Saskatchewan.

The institutions have already mapped the credits to their own priorities. Mila, which Anthropic describes as home to the largest concentration of academic deep learning researchers anywhere, plans to build AI assistants that help its scientists find and vet research.

CAMH’s Krembil Centre for Neuroinformatics will develop predictive models for mental health treatment and test psychiatric AI systems for fairness.

At Université Laval, researchers will study how large language models handle Quebec French, Indigenous languages, and other low-resource dialects.

Saskatchewan is directing its share toward agriculture, public health, and quantum computing.

The University of Toronto’s Data Sciences Institute will run a competitive, peer-reviewed process to distribute its Claude API credits.

The University of Toronto Data Sciences Institute will go through a competitive procedure to have access to Claude API credits, whereby the scientific committee guarantees that these credits are allocated to high-caliber and impactful research projects.

Professor Gary Bader, Associate director for research and software.

Anthropic ties the pledge to Canada’s AI roots

Anthropic linked the announcement to Canada’s role in the history of modern AI. The company noted that the University of Toronto and the Université de Montréal continued working on neural networks when much of the field had moved away, while the University of Alberta advanced reinforcement learning.

The institutions are linked to Geoffrey Hinton, Yoshua Bengio, and Richard Sutton, the three scientists who were most instrumental in the deep learning and reinforcement learning innovations that formed the backbone of the AI industry today.

Chris Olah, an Anthropic co-founder who grew up in Canada and spent a year at the University of Toronto before leaving, said the issuance of credits to Canadian institutions is a continuation of that research culture.

I was formed by that culture, and I’m proud Anthropic can support the next chapter.

– Chris

Anthropic will also add Amii, Mila, and Vector to its Anthropic for Startups program this summer. Hundreds of startups affiliated with the three institutes will each receive at least $5,000 USD in API credits.

Canada ranks second globally in Claude use per worker

Alongside the funding, Anthropic released its first Canadian country brief from the Anthropic Economic Index, its analysis of Claude usage based on anonymized conversation data.

Usage share and per capita adoption among top ten countries by global Claude.ai use | Source: Anthropic

Canada accounts for 2.6% of global consumer use of Claude.ai, ranking eighth worldwide. Adjusted for working-age population, however, the country ranks second, behind only the United States. Canadians use Claude at more than four times the rate their population would predict, according to Anthropic’s Canada brief.

Usage inside Canada follows the structure of the local economy, according to the brief. British Columbia leads on a per-person basis, while Ontario records the most conversations overall.

Share of Canada’s Claude.ai use by province and territory | Source: Anthropic

Translation requests are concentrated in provinces with large public sectors, which Anthropic linked to federal bilingualism rules requiring services in English and French. New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Québec rank highly in both government employment and translation-related Claude use.

Translation use by province and public administration employment | Source: Anthropic

The pledge lands as Ottawa pushes its AI sovereignty agenda. Canada published the world’s first national AI strategy in 2017 and launched AI for All, its new national AI strategy, in June. The plan reinforces Canada’s three national AI institutes and commits to strengthening the country’s AI safety work.

The Canadian pledge also follows Anthropic’s $200 million partnership with the Gates Foundation, announced in May, to support AI programs in global health, life sciences, education, and economic mobility.

 

 

 

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