Tech Roundup
July 14, 2026

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Edmonton Unlimited

Province's $50M for Amii to spur commercialization, adoption

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The Alberta government will invest $50 million over five years into the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute. The sum is roughly equal to the total funding the province has given Amii over the preceding 24 years. Premier Danielle Smith made the announcement at Platform Calgary during the Calgary Stampede, alongside Evan Solomon, the federal minister of AI and Digital Innovation. Amii CEO Cam Linke said the investment will strengthen Alberta's AI ecosystem by supporting startups, accelerating AI adoption, and building AI literacy.

The funding will come from five different provincial ministries, which shows how big a role the organization plays in innovation, posted Nate Glubish, the provincial minister of technology and innovation. His ministry, as well as the Ministry of Advanced Education, are both contributing $15 million; the Ministry of Assisted Living and Social Services is contributing $10 million; the Ministry of Primary and Preventative Health Services and the Ministry of Education and Childcare are each contributing $5 million. "By aligning investments across multiple ministries, Alberta is helping ensure AI expertise, talent and innovation can be applied where they deliver the greatest value for Albertans," the province said in a news release.

The plan includes leveraging the new Alberta Intellectual Property Office, which aims to keep IP owned, protected, and commercialized in the province. Solomon said Alberta has been leading the way in commercialization, allowing companies to stay in the country, and he hinted at the need for sovereign compute power. "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."

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Data centres and AI

Headlines

  • The Alberta government is investing $37 million through Emissions Reduction Alberta's Drilling Technology Challenge to support 10 projects — worth nearly $179 million combined — aimed at improving drilling efficiency and safety in oil and gas, geothermal, and critical mineral development. Two Nisku-based projects received funding: $3.1 million for Calgary's Precision Drilling for a project to demonstrate robotic automation and pipe-handling to improve drilling, and $2.6 million for Ontario-based CleanDesign's project to demonstrate software that optimizes drilling power use. Edmonton's Phase Advanced Sensor Systems received $420,000 to develop and test high-temperature downhole pressure sensors for geothermal wells.
  • Annie Poirier created a dating app called Oops Social after becoming fed up with typical dating apps like Hinge and Tinder. "From my own experience with the dating apps, you go on there, and you get ghosted, and I think it's normal for people to ghost people — they don't care about you because they never felt anything," Poirier told Taproot. "They just swiped on a face, and there was no chemistry to start with." The app, which has no swiping and voice notes instead of texts, opened to about 160 beta testers in June after Poirier received coaching from Edmonton Unlimited to help her bring the idea to life.
  • Swift Charge is now pursuing growth beyond hospitality after securing a contract with InnVest Hotels to install more than 300 EV chargers at over 70 hotels across Canada. "We're already starting to see the ceiling as a hotel-focused operation," co-founder and CEO Sheldon Zhang told Taproot from China, where he was visiting manufacturers. "We're significantly winning in the hospitality segment in Canada already, so we have to expand beyond hotels."
  • Excelsior founder Mark Benning was a guest on the Executive Wins podcast to discuss what it takes to build a successful venture capital firm in Western Canada.
  • Future Fields CEO Matt Anderson-Baron talked to SynBioBeta about the company's EntoEngine platform and what it means for pharmaceutical teams having trouble with difficult-to-express proteins.
  • Edmonton Unlimited hosted a workshop on intellectual property strategy for life sciences companies, at which Dentons lawyers emphasized that IP extends well beyond patents. From the outset, founders should ensure that their company owns the IP being created, the workshop heard.
  • The Federation of African Canadian Economics is bringing its Melamoon pitch competition to Edmonton on July 18. It's the fourth stop on a five-city national tour designed to connect Black founders with capital and visibility. Top performers at the Jamaica Association of Northern Alberta's downtown JANA Centre will advance toward the Toronto grand finale, where $200,000 in non-dilutive funding will be awarded.

Jobs and opportunities

Happenings

Here are some events coming up over the next seven days:

And here are some upcoming events to keep in mind:

Visit the Taproot Edmonton Calendar for many more events in the Edmonton region.

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