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Microsoft Deepens Its Commitment to Canada with Landmark $19B AI Investment

Since opening our first Canadian office in Toronto in 1985, Microsoft has played an important role in every chapter of Canada’s digital story, long before cloud and AI were household words. That history matters. Over four decades, our company and our thousands of employees have grown alongside Canada. We’ve developed a deep appreciation for this nation’s culture, values, needs, and important role in the world.

Today we are announcing the most important commitment in Microsoft Canada’s history. We’re adding to our investments—with a total of $19 billion CAD between 2023 and 2027, including more than $7.5 billion CAD in the next two years. We’re building new digital and AI infrastructure needed for the nation’s growth and prosperity, with new capacity beginning to come online in the second half of 2026. Equally important, we’re launching a new five-point plan to promote and protect Canada’s digital sovereignty. And we’re combining this with ongoing and new work to invest in Canada’s people, ensuring they have access to the skills needed to succeed in an AI era.

This builds upon Microsoft’s longstanding and deep relationship with the Canadian people. With more than 5,300 employees across 11 cities nationwide, including Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, and Quebec City, we have employees in every region to bring talent closer to the communities we serve.

Beyond our own team, based on third party estimates, we’re fueling the broader tech ecosystem with more than 17,000 companies that are Microsoft partners in Canada generating between $33B CAD and $41B CAD in annual revenue. Based on this partnership model, Microsoft helps support 426,000 jobs across Canada, including close to 300,000 people who build solutions on Microsoft platforms or provide goods and services for these efforts. As we expand our AI and cloud footprint, these partnerships are helping Canadian organizations to modernize and compete globally.

Our commitment also extends beyond business. In 2024 alone, we donated $219M CAD in grants, employee giving, and technology services to Canadian non-profits and charities.

At its core, our commitment to Canada centres on three things: technology, trust, and talent.

Canada’s AI economy is a major sector of growth, driving innovation, job creation and investment. Canada is scaling homegrown companies while also working with international partners to build the advanced infrastructure our innovators require. Microsoft employs 5,300 Canadians, and their new major commitment shows continued belief in Canada’s talent, economy and AI ecosystem. It boosts AI solutions and helps many firms move faster, compete more effectively, and bring new ideas to market. These types of investments complement the work we are doing to develop and scale the AI economy and grow the next generation of Canadian AI champions.” Honourable Evan Solomon, Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation

AI Diffusion by the top 20 global economies

Technology: Building the Backbone of Canada’s Digital Future

Canada’s AI transformation is accelerating. According to Microsoft’s AI Diffusion Leaderboard, Canada ranks 14th globally in AI adoption, with usage now topping a third of the population. Developer contributions are growing too with Canada ranking 14th worldwide in GitHub AI contributors.

This momentum is clear. Canada is a leader not just in AI research, but in putting AI to good use. But sustaining this momentum requires more than enthusiasm. It demands advanced AI infrastructure, sovereign safeguards, world-class cybersecurity, and a skilled workforce to keep pace with innovation. That’s why Microsoft is investing to create a secure, sustainable, and scalable backbone for AI adoption, empowering Canada to lead confidently in the AI era.

Our investment expands our Azure Canada Central and Canada East datacentre regions, delivering sustainable, secure, and scalable cloud and AI capabilities. These datacentres will power everything from modernized public services to advanced AI innovation—responsibly and within Canadian borders.

Every facility and datacentre we build in Canada reflects Microsoft’s global commitment to sustainability. We’re designing our facilities to be energy-efficient, powered increasingly by renewable energy, and optimized for water conservation through advanced cooling technologies. These steps align with our pledge to be carbon negative, water positive, and zero waste by 2030, ensuring that as we expand our AI and cloud footprint, we do so responsibly—minimizing environmental impact while supporting Canada’s clean energy goals.

Since early 2023, these investments have already launched major infrastructure projects, created thousands of jobs, and partnered with Canadian innovators to drive sustainability and economic growth. These datacentres also translate into thousands of construction and permanent engineering and technology jobs, partnerships with Canadian digital innovators, and a surge in local economic opportunity.

Our infrastructure expansion has helped transform and develop new industries—from retail and finance to cleantech and quantum computing. Firms like Canadian Tire, Manulife, BMO, and Gay Lea Foods are embracing AI to transform their businesses, and their stories are a testament to Canada’s leadership in digital adoption.

To help achieve our 2030 sustainability goals, Microsoft is also investing in Canadian cleantech innovation. Canada is recognized as a global leader in cleantech and carbon removal technologies, and we are proud to collaborate with outstanding Canadian companies like Eavor, Cyclic Materials, Arca, Deep Sky, and Carbon Engineering (via 1PointFive).

Trust: A Five-Point Plan to Protect Canada’s Digital Sovereignty

As important as our investment in AI infrastructure is the new company-wide initiative we are launching to protect Canada’s digital sovereignty. This builds on technology and expertise across Microsoft and is based on a five-part plan to defend Canada’s cybersecurity, keep Canadian data on Canadian soil, strengthen privacy protection, support leading local AI developers, and ensure the continuity of cloud and AI services.

Defending Canada’s cybersecurity

As we enter the second quarter of the 21st century, the protection of digital sovereignty starts with the protection of cybersecurity. Reflecting Microsoft’s long-term presence in Canada, we appreciate how much has changed since the century began. During the first quarter of the century, Canada’s population grew by more than 28 percent and its GDP in real terms grew by more than 55 percent. Changing geopolitics and navigation in the Arctic Ocean have put Canada in a more important global position than ever.

Canada’s growth and importance have made the country a bigger cybersecurity target.

Microsoft has long prioritized the protection of Canadian cybersecurity. With unmatched threat intelligence capabilities based on 100 trillion signals from around the world every day, we’ve seen increasing international targeting of Canadian digital assets, especially from China, Russia, North Korea, and countries across south Asia and the Middle East. This has included influence operations in advance of elections and digital espionage focused on government agencies.

Even more significant, Canada’s diverse and robust economy has become a target of sophisticated international ransomware attacks. Organized criminal groups—some with nation state sponsorship—are targeting every sector of the economy and the public, and they are starting to rely on even more sophisticated technology and techniques, including AI. Our assessment is that in 2025 more than half of cyberattacks against Canada with known motives have been based on financial objectives, and 80 percent of them have involved efforts to exfiltrate data. Almost 20 percent have targeted the healthcare and education sectors, which creates more widespread threats to the public.

To strengthen our protection of Canada’s cybersecurity, we are launching today in Ottawa a dedicated Threat Intelligence Hub. This Hub will house Microsoft subject matter experts in threat intelligence, threat protection research, and applied AI security research. They will have access to Microsoft threat intelligence data and assets from around the world, so they can work closely with the Government of Canada and law enforcement partners to track and interdict nation state actors and organized crime.

In recent months, our team in Canada has been working to thwart China-based threat actors and has been sharing intelligence related to North Korean IT workers using stolen or fake identities to secure jobs with technology companies in Canada. We are dedicated to making this cybersecurity protection even stronger going forward.

Keeping Canadian Data on Canadian Soil

We also recognize the importance of ensuring that our Canadian customers can keep their local data on Canadian soil. This is why we embarked a decade ago, in close consultation with national leaders, to build and open our first two Canadian datacentres to provide local data residency in Toronto and Quebec City. We have steadily expanded our local services each year since. In 2026, we will take three new steps to keep Canadian data on Canadian soil.

First, we will strengthen sovereign controls and expand our data residency commitments by offering in-country data processing for Copilot interactions.

 

Second, we will expand our Azure Local offering in Canada to enable the extension of Azure capabilities to customer-owned environments such as private cloud and on-premises infrastructure.

And third, we will launch Sovereign AI Landing Zone (SAIL) in Canada. This is an open-source AI Landing Zone whose code will be hosted publicly on GitHub, and which will provide a secure foundation for deploying AI solutions within Canada’s borders, so organizations can build, scale, and innovate while maintaining the highest standards of privacy and compliance.

Protecting Canadian privacy

We recognize that privacy is a cornerstone of digital trust. We have long protected the digital privacy of people across Canada. As we look to 2026, we will build on this strong foundation with new technical capabilities and legal measures.

Next year, Microsoft will bring the latest confidential computing capabilities to our Canadian datacentre regions. Confidential computing in Azure enables organizations to keep data encrypted and isolated, even while in use, helping meet stringent digital sovereignty requirements. Azure Key Vault will also be available to Canadian customers, supporting external key management and allowing encryption keys to remain under customer control, whether stored on-premises or with a trusted third-party Hardware Security Module (HSM).

We will couple these technical measures with expanded contractual protection. We are codifying our promise to protect our Canadian customers’ data with a contractual commitment, in which we agree to challenge any government demand for Canadian government or commercial customer data where we have a legal basis for doing so.

Supporting Canada’s AI developers

Canada’s growing AI and digital ecosystem also requires protection and support for the nation’s leading AI developers. We have expanded this work in 2025 and will continue to prioritize these efforts in the year ahead.

Our work with Cohere exemplifies this commitment: we are welcoming Cohere into the Microsoft Foundry’s first-party model lineup, making their advanced language models—Command A, Embed 4, and Rerank—accessible on Azure. This will amplify Canadian innovation on a global stage. This partnership is built on more than technology; it is grounded in trust and shared values, with initiatives to help Cohere scale across Canada and worldwide.

We will explore new ways to integrate Cohere’s sovereign, made-in-Canada AI models into Microsoft services, helping to ensure Canadian enterprises and the public sector benefit from secure, locally developed solutions that embody responsibility and integrity. Together with Canada’s leading innovators, we are building relationships that deliver opportunity and impact while reinforcing the trusted foundation of Canadian digital sovereignty.

Defending the continuity of Canadian cloud services

Finally, in the face of geopolitical uncertainty, continuity is essential. Microsoft pledges to rigorously defend the uninterrupted operation of cloud services for Canadian government customers. If ever confronted with an order to suspend or halt operations in Canada, we will pursue every available legal and diplomatic avenue—including litigation—to protect access to critical infrastructure. Our track record demonstrates our resolve to stand up for customer rights. We remain ready to reinforce this commitment through robust contractual agreements, confident in our ability to ensure the ongoing operation of Canadian datacentres. Ultimately, these efforts aim to deepen trust between people, institutions, and nations, grounded in mutual respect and a shared commitment to advancing Canada’s digital future.

Microsoft’s digital infrastructure in Canada is not built on wheels. It is permanent infrastructure, and fully subject to Canadian laws and regulations. We recognize and respect that our operations in Canada are governed by Canadian law, just as we adhere to local laws in every country where we operate.

A visual showing percentage of working age adults using AI across Canada.

Talent: Investing in the Future for Every Canadian

At its core, every datacentre we build and every AI capability we deploy is an investment in Canadians and their future. Because technology alone doesn’t drive transformation, people do. That’s why it’s imperative to ensure that every Canadian can develop the skills needed to succeed in an AI era.

The need is clear. By 2030, nearly 60 percent of workers worldwide will require new digital skills, yet today only 24 percent of Canadians have received AI training, compared to a global average of 39 percent. Closing this gap is critical for Canada’s competitiveness.

Our new Microsoft Elevate business unit is designed to put people first, making AI opportunities accessible across the country. Since July 2024, Microsoft Canada has engaged 5.7 million learners through free skilling programs, with more than 546,000 individuals completing an AI training course. And we’re not stopping there. By 2026, Microsoft Elevate will help 250,000 Canadians earn in-demand AI credentials, ensuring the workforce is ready for the next decade of innovation.

Our partnerships amplify this impact. The Nonprofit AI Impact Hub, developed with the Canadian Centre for Nonprofit Digital Resilience (CCNDR) and Imagine Canada, strengthens the digital resilience of Canada’s 170,000 charities and nonprofits, which collectively employ 2.7 million people. Through role-based AI training and micro-credentials, we’re equipping this sector with tools to serve communities better.

We’re also investing in the next generation. Today, we are proud to announce a new partnership with Actua, a national leader that brings STEM education to youth throughout Canada, including those in remote, rural, and Indigenous communities. Microsoft Canada and Actua are committed to working with Indigenous communities across Canada to support AI skills development, so that the benefits of AI are felt widely. This partnership will support Actua’s AI Ready and InSTEM (Indigenous Youth in STEM) programs, to equip 20,000 young Canadians with essential AI skills. The InSTEM program will add AI learning for Indigenous youth, blending technology with cultural heritage and knowledge. For instance, students learn how AI tools can help preserve Indigenous languages and support cultural identity.

Canada Can Count on Us

Few American companies have benefitted more than Microsoft from such longstanding ties to Canada. Living so close to the border, we have long appreciated the many attributes that make Canada so special. We share more than geography. We share priorities like security, sustainability, and inclusive growth.

Today, we’re taking this partnership to the next level. We believe Canada has what it takes to help lead the world in responsible AI innovation and adoption, and we’re committed to being a partner every step of the way.

The post Microsoft Deepens Its Commitment to Canada with Landmark $19B AI Investment appeared first on Microsoft On the Issues.

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Microsoft’s $15.2 billion USD investment in the UAE

As Abu Dhabi and Dubai kick off a significant week hosting annual energy and technology conferences, we want to share details of our ongoing and planned investments in the United Arab Emirates. Roughly two and a half years ago, we embarked on a new AI initiative with the encouragement and support of both the United States and UAE governments. Much of this progress has involved a new partnership with G42, the UAE’s sovereign AI company, with whom we’re making critical progress.   

All told, Microsoft will invest $15.2 billion USD in the UAE between the start of this initiative in 2023 and the end of this decade, in 2029. This is not money raised in the UAE. It’s money we’re spending in the UAE. And as we do everywhere in the world, we’re focused not just on growing our business but also on contributing to the local economy. This involves bringing together three critical factors – technology, talent, and trust.   

On some days, it feels like the tech sector is gripped in a rhetorical race to announce ever larger, sky-high numbers. We believe in moving fast while staying grounded and being transparent about our investment details. And we want to share our strong conviction that our investments benefit the shareholders of our company, the people of the UAE, and the relationship between our two nations.   

Our investment numbers  

Our $15.2 billion USD investment includes the following:  

  • Beginning in 2023 and through the end of this calendar year, Microsoft will have invested and spent just over $7.3 billion in the UAE. This includes our $1.5 billion equity investment in G42, more than $4.6 billion in capital expenses in advanced AI and cloud datacenters in the country, and more than $1.2 billion in local operating expenses and the cost of goods sold.   
  • From the start of 2026 to the end of 2029, we will spend more than $7.9 billion in the UAE. This includes more than $5.5 billion in capital expenses for ongoing and planned expansion of our AI and cloud infrastructure, including new steps we will share publicly in Abu Dhabi this week. It also includes almost $2.4 billion in planned local operating expenses and the cost of goods sold.  

An investment in world-leading technology  

Some of our most important work involves exporting world-leading technology from the United States to the UAE. This includes the GPUs essential to power AI in our datacenters across the country that support the UAE’s people and institutions.  

Microsoft was one of the few companies during the previous administration to secure export licenses from the Commerce Department to ship GPUs to the UAE. In no small measure, this is because of the substantial work we did to meet the strong cybersecurity, national security, and other technology conditions required by these licenses. These licenses enabled us to accumulate in the country the equivalent of 21,500 Nvidia A100 GPUs, based on a combination of A100, H100, and H200 chips.  

Microsoft was also the first company this year under the Trump administration to secure export licenses from the Commerce Department to ship GPUs to the UAE. Approved in September, these were based on updated and stringent technology safeguards. These licenses enable us to ship the equivalent of 60,400 additional A100 chips, in this instance involving Nvidia’s even more advanced GB300 GPUs.  

While the chips are powerful and the numbers are large, more important is their positive impact across the UAE. We’re using these GPUs to provide access to advanced AI models from OpenAI, Anthropic, open-source providers, and Microsoft itself. We’re supporting AI-enabled applications, including our Copilot applications, from a wide variety of local and international providers. And we’re partnering with G42 to support public and private sector organizations across the UAE economy, as well as consumers across the country.  

The UAE’s ranking in the Microsoft AI Diffusion Report published last week shows the country leading the world in per capita AI usage. With 59.4 percent of the population using generative AI, the UAE is ahead of Singapore, which is in second place at 58.6 percent. Beyond these two, no other country tops the 50 percent mark. Microsoft’s infrastructure challenge in the UAE is not a risk of getting ahead of demand but keeping pace with it.  

Investing in talent  

Microsoft’s investment in the UAE is not just about technology, it’s also about people. By cultivating AI talent and skilling individuals to develop, deploy, and use AI in a way that reflects the region’s unique needs, Microsoft is helping to ensure that the UAE remains on the leading edge of AI diffusion.  

Today, Microsoft’s presence in the UAE reflects this commitment. Our growing team includes almost 1,000 full-time employees and related staff representing 40 nationalities. Nearly 100 of our employees are engineers, supported by an Emirati partner ecosystem that has grown almost threefold in just two years, now with 1,400 firms employing nearly 45,000 professionals across the country.  

This year, we established the Global Engineering Development Center in Abu Dhabi to attract world-class tech talent to the UAE. Our engineers not only develop new products and services for Microsoft, but support institutions and businesses across the region so they can use AI and cloud technologies to transform their own operations. As we look to the future, we aspire to grow our engineering teams further and add a new focus on domain-specific AI models and applications that will propel advances in key scientific and technological fields.  

We also opened a new center for the Microsoft AI for Good Lab in Abu Dhabi, staffed by PhD level research talent specializing in large-scale AI models, vision-language models, and post training techniques. Backed by Azure compute grants allocated to partner organizations, this team collaborates with nonprofits, start-ups, researchers, academic institutions, and local businesses to address humanitarian challenges across the Middle East and Africa using AI. Already, the Lab has partnered with researchers to train large language models for low-resource languages, including those spoken in Malawi, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – helping ensure that AI serves communities that risk being left behind in the AI age.    

As the Microsoft AI Diffusion Report underscores, people need digital proficiency to fully participate in an AI-driven economy. Without the right skills, AI risks deepening inequality rather than broadening opportunity. That’s why skilling is a core pillar of our investment in the UAE.   

Last November, we committed to skill one million people in the UAE by the end of 2027–and we’re well on our way to meet – and exceed–our goal. Last month at GITEX, Microsoft partnered with UAE government entities to launch an initiative to upskill 120,000 government employees across the federal government, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Sharjah. We will also skill 175,000 students and 39,000 teachers through collaborations with GEMS, Abu Dhabi Department of Education (ADEK), and the Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA). We will announce new steps in this area on Thursday in Dubai.  

Talent is the engine of AI leadership. Attracting, nurturing, and building AI talent and know-how is essential to the UAE turning its vision of becoming a global leader into a reality.   

Strengthening trust   

Ultimately, the use of AI depends on trust. People and institutions need to trust that AI will be developed and deployed with responsible safeguards. They need to have confidence that the cybersecurity of AI chips, models, and services will be protected. And they rightly expect AI to serve the public broadly, with cause for optimism that AI will reach and support the Global South.  

Given the role of export controls and other trade issues, the flow of advanced GPUs and AI models also requires trust between nations. This in turn requires clear rules and agreements, coupled with effective compliance systems. And as always, trust between nations depends on strong relationships between its people, grounded in mutual respect and appreciation for each other’s cultures.  

We’re focused on supporting all these needs.   

One important part of this is the Responsible AI Future Foundation, or RAIFF. G42, Microsoft, and Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence (MBZUAI) founded this new foundation in Abu Dhabi in February to promote responsible AI standards and best practices in the Middle East and across the Global South. This foundation is advancing research on the technical and ethical elements of responsible AI and is developing frameworks to ensure ethical development and deployment of AI systems, accounting for cultural diversity.   

A second element comes to life through the first annual Abu Dhabi Global AI Summit, which began Sunday. Hosted by G42, Microsoft, the Responsible AI Future Foundation, and Eurasia Group’s GZERO Media, this Summit brings government ministers, private sector executives, and AI leaders together to discuss what’s needed to drive AI diffusion across the Global South. We meet at a time when there is a growing risk that uneven AI diffusion may widen the economic and societal gaps that divide the world. It’s imperative that governments, businesses, and non-governmental organizations collaborate and take new steps to promote broader access to AI.  

Both these elements build on a third and deeper initiative that Microsoft and G42 have advanced during the past two years. In conjunction with our $1.5 billion investment, Microsoft and G42 created last April a firstofitskind binding framework between two private companies. Developed in close consultation with the U.S. and UAE governments, this Intergovernmental Assurance Agreement (IGAA) ensures that both our companies meet or exceed U.S. standards in critical areas such as cybersecurity and physical security, export controls and technology transfer, data protection and responsible AI, and Know Your Customer (KYC) best practices.   

As we drafted the IGAA, we consulted not only leaders from government ministries in our two countries, but with members and staff of both political parties in both houses of Congress in Washington, D.C. We listened to feedback and adapted the IGAA to address their suggestions. And we’ve built a strong compliance infrastructure to implement these requirements based on industry best practices and auditing standards.   

All these steps help bolster mutual confidence and trust between our two governments. But trust between nations also grows through relationships among people. That’s why we’re advancing a fourth and new element this week, traveling to Abu Dhabi with a Seattle delegation of public and private leaders. The group includes a former Governor and local leaders in economic development, higher education, medical research, the non-profit community, and sports. The goal is to deepen understanding, exchange ideas, and explore solutions that can advance both regions.   

Looking to the future  

Microsoft is committed to the future of the UAE and a strong relationship between our two nations. We believe in the UAE’s long-term economic vision and the role the UAE and the U.S. continue to play together to support peace, stability, and growth across the Middle East.  

As we do everywhere we do business, Microsoft is committed to a broad perspective and long-term approach. Our work in the UAE has underscored the importance of connecting technology investments to initiatives to attract and develop the talent needed for a vibrant and self-sustaining tech ecosystem. And work to advance trust, which may seem peripheral to some, is in fact of central importance. From stronger business practices to broader international ties, trust is a critical catalyst for technology success at a local and global level.  

Technology is our business and we’re as excited as anyone by its potential. But we know that ultimately there is only one test that matters. It’s how our technology empowers others to achieve more. Like every public company, our shareholders rightly expect us to deliver value to customers in ways that enable us to continue to grow. But we also judge ourselves by whether we are generating local opportunities and growth that go well beyond ourselves. Across the UAE, we’re committed to passing this test.  

The post Microsoft’s $15.2 billion USD investment in the UAE appeared first on Microsoft On the Issues.

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