Friday, July 10, 2026

Meta bets $13 billion on Alberta with first Canadian data centre



Nate Glubish, Alberta’s minister of technology and innovation (left), and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith speak to press following the announcement on July 8, 2026. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Meta is building its first Canadian data centre in Alberta, a campus worth more than $13 billion that the province calls one of the largest private investments in Canadian history and Meta’s biggest anywhere outside the United States.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced the project at a news conference in Calgary on Wednesday, midway through the Stampede, alongside two ministers, the mayor of Sturgeon County and Meta’s data centre chief.

The 2.9-million-square-foot facility will sit on 1,750 acres in Sturgeon County, inside Alberta’s Industrial Heartland. It will be powered in part by the Greenlight Electricity Centre, the $4.6-billion natural gas plant that Pembina Pipeline, Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners and Kineticor announced last week.

The province says the campus will create more than 3,000 construction jobs and 300 permanent ones, and return about $250 million a year to Albertans through royalties, taxes, levies and fees. Meta is putting roughly $60 million into local roads and water infrastructure.

Alberta Minister of Technology and Innovation Nate Glubish, speaks at The Princeton in Calgary on July 8, 2026. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
Alberta Minister of Technology and Innovation Nate Glubish, speaks at The Princeton in Calgary on July 8, 2026. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Alberta courted Meta for two years and closed the deal without incentives

The first phase draws 970 megawatts of electricity, enough to power a mid-sized city. The campus is designed to grow to 1,800 megawatts, more than the city of Edmonton uses at peak.

The co-located Greenlight plant is what lets the site reach that ceiling without drawing more from the public grid. Under Alberta’s rules, Meta pays for the new power generation and the grid upgrades its own connection requires, rather than passing those costs to other customers.

The province says that arrangement will lower bills for everyone else.

“In this case, in this project, Albertans could see a reduction of up to 6% on the transmission portion of their utility bill,” said RJ Sigurdson, Alberta’s minister of affordability and utilities.

RJ Sigurdson, Alberta minister of affordability and utilities. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
RJ Sigurdson, Alberta minister of affordability and utilities. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Every Albertan who uses electricity pays a share of the cost of building and maintaining the province’s high-voltage grid, the network of transmission lines that moves power across long distances. On a power bill, that cost is the transmission charge and the total is roughly fixed, so it gets divided among everyone connected to the system. 

Sigurdson said that when a customer as large as Meta joins the grid and takes on a big portion of that cost, the amount left for households and businesses to cover shrinks, which is where the 6% reduction comes from.

“Without this grid connected pathway, Alberta may not have landed this massive new tenant,” he said.

Meta's Gary Demasi speaks to press in Calgary. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
Meta’s Gary Demasi speaks to press in Calgary. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Nate Glubish, minister of technology and innovation, said he first met Meta’s data centre team two years ago at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters, where Alberta was not yet on its list of places to build.

The province’s answer was a system it calls the concierge, a single provincial contact that walks a company through the electricity regulator, the grid operator, the utilities commission and the municipality at once instead of leaving it to file with each separately. Glubish said that team is now working with about 60 more projects, several of them at the gigawatt scale of the Meta campus.

Glubish said the province used no grants, tax credits or incentives to attract Meta, and that Alberta instead wrote a levy so data centres pay a share back to the public. He said Meta spent two years and hundreds of millions of dollars on engineering, permitting and consultation before the announcement.

Nate Glubish is Alberta's minister of technology and innovation. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
Nate Glubish is Alberta’s minister of technology and innovation. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

He also drew a line between Meta and projects that have failed in Alberta. Regulators rejected the Synapse proposal near Olds, and Rocky View County council turned down a separate campus after a hearing that ran most of a day.

“Meta is the customer, they are the user, they are the engineer, they are the designer, they are the builder, they are the operator,” Glubish said. “Whereas the proposed project in Olds is a developer who has an idea and believes that if they build it, someone will come and buy it.”

Smith repeated the pitch Alberta has been making for more than a year: affordable electricity, flexible power generation, a cool climate that eases the job of cooling servers, a skilled workforce and homegrown AI expertise.

“Artificial intelligence is transforming the global economy, and Alberta is making sure we lead rather than follow,” said Premier Danielle Smith. “We created the right conditions to attract world-leading investments while protecting the interests of Albertans.”

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith speaks at The Princeton in Calgary on July 8, 2026. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith speaks at The Princeton in Calgary on July 8, 2026. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Meta’s pledges, and its record elsewhere

Water has been a flashpoint in Alberta’s data centre fights. The servers that fill these buildings run hot, and many centres cool them by evaporating large volumes of water, pulling from the same supply households and farms rely on.

Meta led with water for that reason.

The company said its Sturgeon campus, which does not have a completion date yet, will use a closed-loop liquid cooling system with dry cooling, which recirculates a fixed volume of liquid instead of constantly drawing new water, and needs no operational water for cooling. On-site water is limited to washrooms, fire protection and equipment maintenance.

“The water that’s used by this data centre, it’s less than a typical golf course in Alberta over the course of a year,” said Gary Demasi, vice-president of data centre strategy and development at Meta.

Gary Demasi is the vice-president of data centre strategy and development at Meta. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
Gary Demasi is the vice-president of data centre strategy and development at Meta. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Meta committed to being water positive by 2030, meaning the company will fund restoration and conservation work that returns more water to local watersheds than the site consumes. Its first step in Alberta is a partnership with the conservation group ALUS and local farmers to protect 200 acres of grassland, trees and wetland in the North Saskatchewan River watershed, land that stores and filters water for the basin.

“We look forward to putting down roots in this community and building a strong and positive partnership for many years to come,” he said.

Meta has made versions of that promise where it has built before, and the record is mixed. 

In Richland Parish, Louisiana, the site of Meta’s Hyperion campus, the company secured the land through a shell company and pushed state tax legislation forward under non-disclosure agreements before the public knew it was involved, according to a Bloomberg investigation. After regulators approved the gas plants built to power the campus, consumer and environmental groups asked the state to investigate whether ratepayers would be left exposed if Meta walked away.

In Alberta, the rules came first. 

The province set its data centre requirements before opening the door to investment, making projects bring their own power and pay for their own infrastructure, and the county zoned and reviewed the Sturgeon site before the announcement, so Meta is funding its own power and grid work rather than leaving costs to other ratepayers.

The site also sits inside a zone set aside for heavy industry decades ago, with buffer zones between the plants and homes and no farmland or housing on the land itself. Sturgeon County Mayor, Alanna Hnatiw, said the county held the project to its controls on power, water and land use.

Meta said it will offset the campus’s electricity use by paying for an equal amount of clean power to be added to the grid elsewhere, a common industry practice, though the electricity that actually runs the site comes largely from natural gas.

Alanna Hnatiw, Mayor of Sturgeon County. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal
Alanna Hnatiw, Mayor of Sturgeon County. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

The country’s biggest AI campus

Smith said the facility will power Meta’s own technologies, including Facebook, Messenger, Instagram, WhatsApp and its AI products. 

Last week Meta said it may start selling excess computing capacity to outside customers, a business it is still weighing. But no one at the announcement said whether Canadian companies would be able to buy time on the Sturgeon campus.

Data sovereignty is the deeper question, as putting the hardware on Alberta soil does not put it under Canadian control. 

The U.S. Cloud Act lets American authorities compel a U.S. company like Meta to hand over data it controls no matter where that data physically sits, so a data centre in Sturgeon County does not by itself keep what runs inside it under Canadian law.

The Government of Canada’s own cloud policy states that as long as a provider operating in Canada is subject to the laws of a foreign country, Canada will not have full sovereignty over its data. Storing data in Canada gives residency but sovereignty depends on who controls the data and which laws bind the company that holds it. 

At the press conference today, Glubish said Meta is the first of many projects the province expects, and it now has a reference customer to point to as it courts the rest.

Alberta puts $50 million behind Amii’s AI research


Cam Linke, Amii CEO, speaks at the funding announcement at Platform Calgary.
 — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Today, the province of Alberta announced a $50 million investment over five years for the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute (Amii), home to two decades of reinforcement learning research.

Aimed at accelerating AI adoption across public services and industry, part of the plan includes leveraging the newly-established Alberta Intellectual Property Office to ensure IP is owned, protected, and commercialized in the province. 

Amii is one of Canada’s three national AI institutes, alongside Mila in Quebec and the Vector Institute in Ontario, operating under the Pan-Canadian AI Strategy. Established in 2002, it has a focus on reinforcement learning, a field in which the province is recognized as a world leader.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced $50 million in funding for Amii. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Five ministries, one investment

When a government funds something like this, it’s often one ministry writing the cheque. 

This time it’s five.

The ministries of Technology and Innovation and Advanced Education are co-leads, investing $15 million each, with Assisted Living and Social Services at $10 million. Primary and Preventative Health Services and Education and Childcare are each contributing $5 million.

“Alberta has been a leader in the AI space for decades, and the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute… has played a major role in keeping Alberta on top,” said Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, announcing the funding at Platform Calgary. “They have worked closely with the government over the years to see how AI can be implemented into our everyday lives.”

She explained how the funding is the work of five ministries together, “because we know the significant impact that this could have on making the lives of Albertans better.”

Nate Glubish, Alberta’s minister of technology and innovation, credited Myles McDougall, Minister of Advanced Education as an equal partner on the file. 

Nate Glubish, Alberta’s Minister of Technology and Innovation, speaks at the Amii funding announcement at Platform Calgary. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

“I couldn’t have done it alone. I found some of the money in my budget, but my good friend and colleague [McDougall] here is an equal partner with me in that through his budget,” Glubish said. 

Glubish also pointed to the province’s history with Amii. “Alberta began investing in AI research more than two decades ago. That early bet paid off,” he said, noting how Amii’s chief scientific advisor, Dr. Richard Sutton, was a co-recipient of the 2024 A.M. Turing Award, frequently dubbed ‘the Nobel Prize of computing.’

“This $50-million investment is a vote of confidence in that team,” Glubish added. “It will put AI to work for the people of this province: better healthcare, faster public services, and more Alberta companies solving real problems.”

McDougall said that this technology is helping modernize systems for skilled tradespeople. 

“We apply AI to apprenticeship delivery, streamlining the path to graduation, cutting the paperwork for employers, and getting Alberta’s skilled trade system ready for the workforce demand that’s coming.”

He also gave credit to Alberta’s post-secondary system.

“Our universities, colleges, and polytechnics are training the next generation, the engineers, the entrepreneurs, researchers, and skilled professionals who will lead in an AI-driven economy,” he added. “This investment backs them and strengthens an ecosystem where students can learn, researchers can lead, companies can scale right here in Alberta.” 

Myles McDougall, Alberta’s Minister of Advanced Education, speaks at the Amii funding announcement at Platform Calgary. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Bigger than a funding announcement

Evan Solomon, Canada’s Minister of AI and Digital Innovation, was in attendance at the funding announcement, using the stage to put Alberta’s investment in a national context. 

“We have classically, as a country, been great at research, and we’ve sucked at commercialization,” he said. “Alberta has led the way to show how we have to do that better.”

Solomon cited a commercialization gap, where companies often end up relocating outside of the country, taking their talent and patents with them. 

“We are losing our best IP and brains, so we are stopping that,” he added, later tying that loss to a broader argument about sovereignty. 

“If we don’t build the infrastructure here, we’re going to have to rent it from someone else,” he said. “If we don’t build the innovation here, we’re going to have to buy it from someone else. And if we don’t make the rules here, we have to follow someone else’s.”

This funding comes the day after the news that Meta is building its first Canadian data centre in Alberta.

It also comes on the heels of a Government of Canada and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) announcement made at the Upper Bound AI Conference in Edmonton in May. Solomon announced the appointment and renewal of 42 Canada CIFAR AI Chairs, backed by a $24 million investment, all affiliated with the three national AI institutes.

Evan Solomon, Canada’s Minister of AI and Digital Innovation, speaks at the Amii funding announcement at Platform Calgary. — Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Canada’s recent “AI for All” national strategy goes further, pledging to strengthen the national AI institute network and increase the Chairs program from 130 to nearly 200 researchers. He outlined an investment of $130 million into the national AI institutes, and mentioned $700 million in affordable sovereign compute for Canadian SMEs, an expansion of the Compute Access Fund.

Finally, Solomon revealed a $1.8 billion talent attraction strategy to attract 1000 of the top researchers and their labs to Canada.

“We need the talent to come to Canada,” he said. “It’s the best place to be, it’s the best place to build, and it’s the best place to start a company.”

Building on two decades of research

According to the province, Alberta’s government has invested about $100 million in Amii since 2002. Through its work under the province’s first Technology and Innovation Strategy, Amii has worked with 786 companies to adopt or advance AI, supported 318 startups, and reached 1.2 million people through its literacy programs.

The institute currently has more than 500 active researchers and 71 Amii Fellows/Canada CIFAR AI Chairs.

“We and our strategy have promised to do a free AI literacy course for every Canadian, because we believe everybody should have access to literacy, and we’re going to give an AI tool and agent to every post-secondary student in Canada for five years, free and available, because they need tools to build,” said Solomon, giving kudos to Amii CEO Cam Linke on his work with training and education.

“What’s happened here in Alberta at Amii is the model for the nation.”

The new Amii funding is meant to work against the ‘brain drain” pattern Solomon described. With the Alberta Intellectual Property Office, patents developed with public funds are kept in the province, framing the investment as a way to grow new jobs, attract private investment, and keep ideas developed in Alberta from moving elsewhere.

Photo by Jennifer Friesen, Digital Journal

Linke said the investment builds on that foundation. 

“This investment enables Amii to strengthen the foundations of Alberta’s AI ecosystem by supporting startups, accelerating AI adoption across industry and the public sector, and building the AI literacy needed to prepare the workforce of the future,” he said. 

“Together, we are ensuring Alberta remains a destination for AI talent, innovation and investment while creating lasting economic and societal benefits for Albertans.”

Healthcare is a priority

Justin Wright, minister of primary and preventative health services, said the investment is meant to support faster, better-targeted care. 

“Alberta’s primary and preventative health system depends on getting the right information to the right provider at the right time,” he said. 

“By investing in Amii, we are supporting made-in-Alberta AI solutions that can help improve screening, earlier detection, system navigation and front-line decision-making. Used responsibly, this technology can reduce administrative burden, strengthen prevention-focused care and help Albertans access timely, high-quality services closer to home.”

Linke closed the announcement by tying the funding to Amii’s origins. 

“When you look at the history of Amii, it was an ambitious thing back in 2002 for the province to invest in AI,” he said. “We’re excited for what we can do with the province,  and what we’re going to do with this announcement, not just to be the place that powers AI globally, but also the place that produces the researchers, the talent, and the startups that are going to solve the world’s biggest problems right here.”

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