Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Members of the committee, thank you so much for the opportunity to appear before you today.
As you said, Mr. Chair, I am joined by officials from my department. I appreciate the committee's deep interest in this kind of work.
As some of you know, I've already appeared before the science and research committee in the fall session and again just this week to discuss my mandate and share with committee members the work we're doing to build trust with Canadians concerning artificial intelligence.
I am honoured to be here today and to participate in this essential study on artificial intelligence.
To put it simply, AI is a transformative technology, and if used properly, it will improve people's lives and serve Canadians for the better. That is our mission, and that is our goal. I'm glad this committee is here to dig into the foundational issue we need in order to have responsible, reliable AI, and that is trust.
If Canadians want to reap the full benefits of artificial intelligence, they must be confident that this technology is being used safely, fairly and responsibly.
The countries that succeed will be those that use this technology responsibly in ways people can trust and that actually make life better. AI is meant to serve people, not the other way around.
As the first Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation for Canada, I've been working towards a renewed national AI strategy for Canadians almost two years ahead of schedule. Trust, safety and responsibility are the foundations of that work.
Our AI strategy is anchored in one core principle and three pillars.
The core principle is very simple; it is “AI for all”, and the three pillars are build, empower and protect.
“AI for all” means this: No matter where you live in Canada and no matter your background, your age or your income, this technology will work for you responsibly, reliably and safely. It will strengthen our democracy and deliver better public services if we manage it correctly. It will create good jobs for Canadians and protect people, especially children and vulnerable communities, from harm. That's what the principle is.
“AI for all” is already being put into action. It is guiding the final stages of our refreshed national AI strategy, which we'll be launching very soon. Our strategy is shaped by real input, ideas shared by Canadians through our public portal, expert advice from our AI task force—their reports are now available to the public online—and insights from researchers, workers and industry leaders across the country.
The goal is simple: to set a clear direction where Canada is going in AI and how we will get there on our own sovereign terms for our benefit.
If I may, I'll walk you very briefly through what this means in practice and our three pillars: build, empower and protect.
With respect to the first pillar, we are building a strong, sovereign and safe AI foundation to drive economic growth and create prosperity. That requires the infrastructure and, in plain terms, the compute power that allows Canadian companies to build and use Canadian technologies right here at home.
That means security for Canadian data and peace of mind for the citizens of Canada. That means more opportunity for Canadian innovators, more resilience for our economy and more jobs staying and being built right here at home. This also means digital sovereignty. Sovereignty does not mean isolation—we're a trading nation—but it does mean having the capacity to choose where we build and where we scale to keep Canada under Canadian law.
It is a matter of digital sovereignty and choice for Canada.
The second pillar is empower. Canada already has extraordinary strengths in talent and research. I just look at our three great AI national institutes: Mila in Montreal; Vector in Toronto; and AMII in Edmonton. They're global anchors of excellence, built by pioneers who helped shape modern AI.
Our focus now is to shorten the distance between impact and insight, turning Canada's world-leading AI science into real-life adoption, higher productivity and companies that scale here at home.
I'll give you an example. We have a new initiative in just the last month: the $100-million venture scientist fund launched by Mila and the VC company Inovia to invest in scientists to turn their ideas into action.
That progress only matters if Canadians are part of it. Investing in skills and training is an essential part to make sure people in every region succeed in our AI-driven economy.
The third pillar is protect. Trust must underpin everything we do. It is the foundation. That's why in 2024 we launched the Canadian AI safety institute, bringing together leading researchers from inside and outside government to focus on the real risks and the real safeguards associated with advanced AI. This work is connected with international partners, because safety in AI is a global challenge that requires global co-operation. We're committed to modernizing Canada's privacy framework to protect Canadians' data, safeguard children online and ensure as AI evolves that people's rights remain at the centre of our approach.
Protection means that Canadians will have the tools to protect them from harm.
AI is moving quickly. So are we. We're building in Canada. We're buying in Canada. We're building a safe AI for all Canadians to thrive in the future.
Thank you.