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Alberta and Quebec formalize AI coordination, one week after Meta and Claude deals in Alberta

CryptopolitanJul 16, 2026 12:37 AM
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Quebec and Alberta signed a five-year memorandum of understanding on July 14 to collaborate on deploying artificial intelligence in public administration.

France-Élaine Duranceau, Quebec’s minister of cybersecurity and digital technology, and Nate Glubish, Alberta’s minister of technology and innovation, announced the agreement alongside Jean Boulet, Quebec’s minister responsible for Canadian relations.

The agreement entails the exchange of technical resources, joint work on projects, and provincial exchanges about modernizing public services. It does not involve any financial involvement, just knowledge exchange between the parties.

Duranceau said the initiative will build on each province’s expertise to create a more effective state. Glubish framed Alberta’s AI push as a way to increase speed and cut costs.

The two provincial playbooks being combined

The two provinces have taken different paths to public-sector AI over the past six weeks. Quebec signed an exploratory MOU with Toronto-based Cohere in June, framed by Duranceau around “digital sovereignty.” The Cohere agreement is merely exploratory, without any binding contract involved, concentrating more on workshops and discussion than implementation.

Alberta ran a very different play. On July 6, the province’s Ministry of Technology and Innovation deployed a team of autonomous Claude AI agents that reviewed more than 466 million lines of government code across 27 provincial ministries in about 20 hours.

Two days later, Glubish stood beside Premier Danielle Smith to announce Meta’s $13 billion Sturgeon County data center, the largest outside the US. Alberta is moving quickly and building its infrastructure. Quebec is moving cautiously and building its governance structure.

This fits into Canada’s wider AI buildout

On June 4, Carney launched AI for All, the country’s new national AI strategy, which reinforces the three national AI institutes (Amii in Edmonton, Mila in Montreal, and the Vector Institute in Toronto) and commits to strengthening safety work.

As Cryptopolitan reported yesterday, Anthropic pledged $10 million in Claude credits to Canadian research institutions including Amii, Mila, Vector, Université Laval, and the University of Toronto.

The federal government announced $13.85 million on July 15 for 63 Quebec AI small and medium businesses through the Regional Artificial Intelligence Initiative, per Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions.

The Quebec-Alberta MOU sits below all of this. It is horizontal co-operation between two provinces that have constantly disputed federal policies, going ahead with their artificial intelligence development plans without Ottawa deciding the form of the provincial co-operation.

Alberta’s technology minister said during the announcement that his province is now the center of Canada’s emerging data center landscape, citing recent research out of York University. Quebec has not made the same infrastructure play but has staked its ground on sovereignty-conscious governance.

 

 

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