TORONTO 鈥 Industry Minister Fran莽ois-Philippe Champagne says sa国际传媒 has signed a letter of intent with artificial intelligence chip giant Nvidia to boost computing power.
In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, the minister announced the document was signed with the California-based powerhouse, which recently saw the race to innovate with AI push its valuation past the $1.5 trillion mark.聽
Neither party revealed the contents of the letter during Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang's trip to Toronto on Thursday.
鈥淢inister Champagne wants my support to ensure that sa国际传媒 can have access to leading edge technology so that it could, with necessary funding, build its own infrastructure and I'm very enthusiastic about that,鈥 Huang told The Canadian Pressin an interview late Thursday.
鈥淲e've been a partner of sa国际传媒 since the beginning of deep learning 鈥 and so this is a very important region for us to invest in, a very important country for us to invest in.鈥
sa国际传媒 is not alone in prioritizing AI infrastructure. Huang said Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Britain, France and Italy are all attuned to the topic.
The opportunity facing sa国际传媒, however, is unique.
Huang considers sa国际传媒 the birthplace of modern AI because two 鈥済odfathers鈥 of the technology, Yoshua Bengio and Geoffrey Hinton, long completed AI research in the country. The two eventually won the prestigious A.M. Turing Award 鈥 often called 鈥渢he Nobel Prize of computing鈥 鈥 with Yann LeCun.聽
Bengio and Hinton have since set up AI research hubs, the Vector Institute in Toronto and Mila in Montreal.
鈥渟a国际传媒 has such deep and quite significant in scale AI research, between Montreal and Toronto,鈥 Huang said.
鈥淒on't squander that and make sure that these researchers have the instruments they need, the funding they need to continue to advance the science they, in a lot of ways, invented.鈥
Wearing his signature black leather jacket, Huang spoke to a Canadian Press reporter at the Four Seasons Hotel in Toronto while he dined on sushi and sliders.
Earlier, he shared a stage before an invite-only crowd with Raquel Urtasun of autonomous driving company Waabi, Aidan Gomez from AI darling Cohere, Al谩n Aspuru-Guzik of the Vector Institute and Brendan Frey from drug discovery firm Deep Genomics.
鈥淭here are a lot of different things that we have to do in order to accelerate the ecosystem here in sa国际传媒,鈥 Huang told the audience.聽
鈥淧art of it requires the encouragement and support of government, part of it is about inspiring a young researcher to continue to do research here in sa国际传媒, and part of it is about creating the opportunities for them 鈥 after they graduate.鈥
He emphasized sa国际传媒 doesn't lack research or talent 鈥 an observation shared by Stephen Toope, president of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.
However, Toope pointed out sa国际传媒's global ranking on AI talent had slipped over the past few years, according to a report from U.K. firm Tortoise. It's ranking on AI capacity, which measures a nation's AI adoption and development capabilities, also dipped.
Its AI infrastructure ranking fell from 15 to 23 between 2021 and 2023, which concerns Toope.
"My fear is that we could reach a point where the people who we brought here and retained here actually can't do the work they want to do because they don't have access to the computing power," Toope said.
Computing power includes power sources, data centres and chips.聽
Most chips come from the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, which counts Apple and Nvidia as customers. (Nvidia, which Huang co-founded in 1993, designs graphics processing units 鈥 cards that enhance the performance and quality of gaming and creative applications 鈥 but often uses third parties to manufacture them.)
Many feel it's unlikely sa国际传媒, which lacks major foundries, could ever seriously rival Taiwan Semiconductor.
"Quite frankly, sa国际传媒 is not in the short term, or even the medium term, likely to build out massive capacity to produce the kind of chips that are required for AI," Toope said.
"It's just too complicated, too expensive.鈥
A 2021 report from sa国际传媒鈥檚 Semiconductor Council found fabrication facilities for semiconductors, also known as chips, can cost about US$5 billion in land, equipment and materials, and advanced logic and memory factories can reach US$20 billion.
鈥渟a国际传媒 doesn't have to advance chips. There are so many companies that build chips,鈥 Huang said.
Rather than make chips, Toope is pushing for the country to adopt a purchasing consortium backstopped by the Canadian government 鈥 but including public and private actors 鈥 that could all work together to help the country more efficiently procure computing capacity.
"It's not making its own chips, but it's a kind of sovereignty because we've got a guaranteed supply," he said.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 2, 2024.
Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press