Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Telus and feds announce AI data cluster in B.C. to boost 'sovereign' computing power

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2026 10:39 AM
  • Telus and feds announce AI data cluster in B.C. to boost 'sovereign' computing power

The federal government and Telus have announced plans for a large-scale AI data centre project in British Columbia they say will boost Canada's sovereign computing and artificial-intelligence infrastructure.

The project announced by AI Minister Evan Solomon and Telus in Vancouver will involve three facilities in B.C. which Telus says will deliver "one of the world’s most powerful and sustainable AI infrastructure clusters."

It's part of a federal initiative announced last year to identify and boost large-scale sovereign data centres.

Telus says it will expand its existing Kamloops data centre and develop two new Vancouver facilities in the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood and in the city's downtown.

The Kamloops expansion and the Mount Pleasant facility will open later this year, while the downtown facility will come online in 2029.

The government says the project will support domestic innovation involving both academia and industry.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta government announces indefinite freeze on industrial carbon price

Alberta government announces indefinite freeze on industrial carbon price
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says her government is freezing its industrial carbon price effective immediately at $95 per tonne of emissions.

Alberta government announces indefinite freeze on industrial carbon price

Gang member wanted Canada-wide arrested in Vancouver, returned to Ontario

Gang member wanted Canada-wide arrested in Vancouver, returned to Ontario
Police in Vancouver have arrested a man who they say is a member of the Zone 43 gang and was wanted nationwide for drugs and firearms offences.

Gang member wanted Canada-wide arrested in Vancouver, returned to Ontario

Vancouver short-term rental data at stake in ongoing freedom of information dispute

Vancouver short-term rental data at stake in ongoing freedom of information dispute
Vancouver affordable housing advocate Rohana Rezel is six years into a freedom of information dispute with the City of Vancouver and Airbnb over data on short-term rental owners, but he says the issue has evolved beyond housing into a fight for "public transparency." 

Vancouver short-term rental data at stake in ongoing freedom of information dispute

What Trump's agreement with the U.K. suggests about trade talks with Canada

What Trump's agreement with the U.K. suggests about trade talks with Canada
U.S. President Donald Trump's preliminary trade agreement with the United Kingdom sent a signal to countries around the world — including Canada — about the goals of his campaign to upend global trade with tariffs.

What Trump's agreement with the U.K. suggests about trade talks with Canada

Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops pleased to hear new pope appointed

Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops pleased to hear new pope appointed
The president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops says the church needs to be in the public square and he is looking forward to working with the new pope.

Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops pleased to hear new pope appointed

NDP talking to the Carney government about getting official party status: Davies

NDP talking to the Carney government about getting official party status: Davies
Interim NDP leader Don Davies said Friday his party is in "very early" discussions with the government of Prime Minister Mark Carney about being granted official party status in the House of Commons.

NDP talking to the Carney government about getting official party status: Davies