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Canada-Germany AI declaration signals shift away from U.S.
Summary
Canada and Germany signed a joint declaration on artificial intelligence at the Munich Security Conference to expand cooperation on AI infrastructure, research and talent, and they also announced a new Sovereign Technology Alliance.
Content
Canada and Germany signed a joint declaration of intent on artificial intelligence at the Munich Security Conference. The agreement was signed by Evan Solomon, Canada’s minister of artificial intelligence and digital innovation, and Karsten Wildberger, Germany’s minister for digital transformation and government modernization. It builds on the Canada-Germany Digital Alliance announced in December and establishes a framework for expanded cooperation on AI development, infrastructure and talent. The two governments also announced a Sovereign Technology Alliance aimed at strengthening collaboration among trusted partners and reducing strategic technology dependencies.
Key facts:
- The declaration was signed on the margins of the Munich Security Conference by Evan Solomon and Karsten Wildberger.
- It formalizes cooperation on expanding secure compute infrastructure, accelerating AI research and commercialization, and strengthening talent development.
- The announcement builds on the Canada-Germany Digital Alliance that was announced in December.
- The Sovereign Technology Alliance was launched to deepen collaboration among trusted partners on advanced technologies and reduce strategic dependencies.
- The move is presented in the context of Canada pursuing deeper ties outside the United States and expanding partnerships in Europe and elsewhere.
Summary:
The declaration formalizes closer Canada-Germany cooperation on AI and related digital technologies and introduces a new multilateral avenue through the Sovereign Technology Alliance. Undetermined at this time.
