AI Minister Evan Solomon, left, shakes hands with Aidan Gomez of Cohere after participating in a talk at the All In AI conference in Montreal last September.Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press
Ottawa has spent more than $800-million on artificial intelligence technology since 2023, according to data provided by the federal government.
The sum includes two previously announced deals: a $350-million public service contract with Dayforce to replace the troubled Phoenix pay system and a $240-million investment in the AI company Cohere.
It also includes hundreds of entries that range from a few hundred dollars for a ChatGPT subscription to multimillion-dollar contracts with various companies.
Conservative MP Jagsharan Singh Mahal had asked all government departments, agencies and Crown corporations to provide information about AI-related contracts, subscriptions and licences.
Not all complied with the request, meaning the total spending is higher than the amount provided in the government’s response.
Mahal asked for data for the time period from Jan. 1, 2023 to March 9, 2026. The Canadian Press compiled the responses – some of which were listed in U.S. dollars and some of which were in monthly subscriptions – to arrive at a total of roughly $831-million for those departments and agencies that did provide information.
Because of the Dayforce and Cohere agreements, Public Services and Procurement Canada and Innovation Canada were the top spending departments, followed by National Defence at $83.7-million and the Canada Revenue Agency at $29.9-million. Veterans Affairs Canada spent $25.1-million.
The Canada Revenue Agency signed what it called a $17.5-million contract with Sailpoint Technologies for “machine learning-based analytics” to be used for applications such as automatically flagging “high-risk users.”
The National Defence spending includes a $6.3-million deal with Ecopia Incorporated for “mapping software that identifies land features and objects from satellite imagery.”
Nearly all of Veterans Affairs’ spending went toward an AI tool that processes veterans’ medical records. The department said the tool generates “claim summaries, reducing document page volume for disability adjudicators.”
Intelligence agencies CSE and CSIS said they do not share details about activities beyond what is already publicly available. CSE cited national security while CSIS pointed to its “mandate and specific operational requirements.”
CBC/Radio-Canada said information about the value of its AI contracts was protected under the Access to Information Act unless the contract was subject to a public tender.
Other departments and agencies said it was not possible to provide the information because they don’t track it in a centralized database. Those departments and agencies included the RCMP, Natural Resources Canada and Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada.