Canada’s national Artificial Intelligence strategy: AI for All
Jun 4, 2026
As Canada accelerates its position in the global AI race, robust, scalable, and sovereign digital infrastructure is more critical than ever. At eStruxture, we have long been dedicated to providing the foundational capacity that powers Canadian innovation, ensuring that businesses across the country can scale securely. The launch of the federal government’s "AI for All" strategy marks a pivotal moment to align our technological ambitions with the essential infrastructure required to support them. We are energized by this national commitment and stand ready to ensure Canada's AI growth is backed by resilient, sustainable digital solutions that keep data secure and close to home.
‘‘The federal government’s AI strategy is a positive step that recognizes Canada’s AI ambitions and the data economy depends on secure, resilient, Canadian-based digital infrastructure that gives businesses, governments and communities confidence in where data lives and how it gets used. If Canada really wants to move faster not just on AI but on the data economy, the most important thing to do is to build public trust — trust with communities, trust with customers, trust in energy and water use and proof that this new economy will create real benefits here at home. Building value for Canada needs to be done with Canadian values. That is the work ahead, and it is work eStruxture is ready to help move forward’’. - Todd Coleman
Executive summary: Canada’s National AI Strategy — “AI for All”
Canada’s newly released National Artificial Intelligence Strategy: AI for All is a major shift from research-led AI policy toward a broader industrial, economic, sovereignty and public-trust agenda. The strategy’s core thesis is that Canada already has world-class AI research, talent and companies, but has not yet translated that advantage into broad adoption, commercialization, productivity growth or sovereign control over the AI infrastructure stack. The government frames the plan around trust, opportunity, sovereignty and adoption, with the stated objective that AI should “serve all Canadians, not the other way around.”