Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2025 10:37 AM
  • Alberta minister reportedly putting together first AI-generated legislation in Canada

The Alberta government is about to take the next logical step in artificial intelligence — using it to draft a proposed law.

Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally says the plan is to use AI to develop and introduce the Alberta Whisky Act when the house sits next spring.

"AI is a tool that is being leveraged across many sectors in Canada," Nally said in a statement Tuesday.

"In sectors such as health care, it can be a useful tool to assist health professionals in diagnostics, helping them find abnormalities during screening procedures for patients."

Nally said the AI-generated legislation will then be vetted to ensure all checks and balances are met.

"This would make Alberta the first jurisdiction in Canada to utilize AI for this purpose."

Alberta's government says on its website the legislation would establish the production standards for a liquor product called "Alberta Whisky."

"The legislation would also support the long-term growth and competitiveness of Alberta's whisky sector by providing clear standards for product labelling, aging, geographic indicators and marketing, while enabling innovation and access to international markets," it said.

The Canadian Press reached out to all Canadian provinces and territories to confirm whether they have used AI to draft legislation.

Spokespeople responded in all regions except Ontario, saying their jurisdictions have never used AI to draft legislation.

"Before legislation gets to a stage of being ready to draft, the policy work that supports it is a product of often years of research and analysis and typically informed by engagement with stakeholders and/or consultation with Yukon First Nations," Yukon's government added.

"We are not aware of any instances of governments in Canada having introduced any bills written by AI."

Randy Goebel, a University of Alberta computing science professor and AI researcher, says there are several pros and cons to legislators using AI.

"Humans drafting legislation have got it wrong for centuries and the drafting of legislation is tedious, hard work," said Goebel in an interview.

"So, of course, you should use tools that help accelerate the drafting of legislation. To accelerate the creation of accurate legislation is a great goal. … Legislators who don't use AI will be replaced by those who use AI."

But Goebel said his research, which includes using AI to develop mock legislation, has so far shown the technology is faulty.

"It turns out to require changes," he said.

He said the faults are related to the technology's Natural Language Processing system.

Goebel says the system is a subfield of AI and focuses on how computers translate machine language to human or natural language.

"Forty per cent of the errors are just because saying something in natural language, (such as English), is open to interpretation, and it's much broader, richer, than programming language," he said.

"That's why in place has to be processes to test whether the legislation makes sense or not before it becomes passed as law."

Alberta's government is not the only AI trailblazer. Albania introduced an AI minister in September to tackle corruption and promote transparency and innovation.

The minister, named Diella, was created earlier this year in co-operation with Microsoft as a virtual assistant on the e-Albania public service platform. It has helped users navigate the site and get access to about one million digital inquiries and documents.

In May, the United Arab Emirates introduced a government department, called the Regulatory Intelligence Office, that will use AI to draft, review and update its laws.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graeme Roy

MORE National ARTICLES

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says
On Thursday, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the government's new major projects office will work to speed up engineering and regulatory work on the Alto high-speed rail line. 

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop
While many audience members pushed back on the province's six proposals with the aim of taking greater control over immigration, policing, taxation and other issues, the crowd joined past town halls by overwhelmingly supporting the ideas in straw polls.

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection
The provincial government said it took the preventive measure after a Lion electric school bus caught fire in Montreal earlier this week.

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection

Canada Post union to lift overtime ban, stop delivering flyers

Canada Post union to lift overtime ban, stop delivering flyers
CUPW president Jan Simpson is calling on Canada Post to get back to the bargaining table in hopes of wrapping up the ongoing dispute before the holiday season.

Canada Post union to lift overtime ban, stop delivering flyers

Surrey celebrates National Tree Day with hands-on tree planting to grow its urban forest

Surrey celebrates National Tree Day with hands-on tree planting to grow its urban forest
For more than 30 years, Releaf volunteers have planted thousands of trees and shrubs each year in Surrey’s parks, restoring natural areas, improving air quality, creating wildlife habitat and strengthening local biodiversity.

Surrey celebrates National Tree Day with hands-on tree planting to grow its urban forest

Thousands Attend the 23rd Annual Fleetwood Festival 2025

Thousands Attend the 23rd Annual Fleetwood Festival 2025
The festival, hosted by the Fleetwood Community Centre in partnership with the Fleetwood Business Improvement Association, featured a wide range of free activities and entertainment, including live music, cultural performances, food trucks, community booths, and family-friendly attractions such as face painting, henna, bouncy castles, and mini golf.

Thousands Attend the 23rd Annual Fleetwood Festival 2025