Close Menu
Daily Guardian
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
What's On

Civil disobedience an option if Alberta referendum proceeds: First Nations chiefs

June 4, 2026

Toronto police officer charged with sexual assault, child luring offences: SIU

June 4, 2026

Liberals to delay proposed changes for major project environmental reviews

June 4, 2026

SurgeXRP Announces Presale Milestone as XRP-Based Real Estate Platform Surpasses 20% of Allocation

June 4, 2026

K92 Mining Announces Major Expansion of Arakompa AR1 High-Grade Zone and Delineation of Substantial Near-Surface High-Grade Bulk Tonnage Zone

June 4, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
Daily Guardian
Home » What are AI data centres? A closer look as Canada eyes ‘large-scale’ push
News

What are AI data centres? A closer look as Canada eyes ‘large-scale’ push

By News RoomJune 4, 20266 Mins Read
What are AI data centres? A closer look as Canada eyes ‘large-scale’ push
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Canada’s newly-announced AI strategy includes plans for “large scale” AI data centres, a move that comes amid growing pushback from many communities across the country and in the U.S. concerned about the impacts these facilities could have.

Data centres require large amounts of energy and resources to operate, on top of their initial construction impacts and knock-on effects to local communities, like potentially higher electricity rates.

“Data centres require huge, huge amounts of energy, and Canada has both carbon-based energy and now more and more renewable energy. So we do seem like a natural home,” says computer science professor Arvind Gupta at the University of Toronto.

“If we want public acceptance of data centres, we’re going to have to think about sustainability.”

A recent Angus Reid study released on June 1 polled about 1,800 Canadians, with 68 per cent saying they would oppose a large AI data centre near their home. The majority cited energy and environmental sustainability and the impacts to their local neighbourhoods and surrounding communities.

One such example was in Saskatchewan, where an AI data centre was approved after being protested by the local community.

At the same time, nearly half (46 per cent) of survey respondents said they support the idea that Canada needs domestic AI infrastructure, like data centres, to maintain sovereignty over these technologies.

The AI strategy, written by Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon, describes how the government’s plans will require doubling Canada’s electricity grid capacity by 2050, which echoes Prime Minister Mark Carney’s announcement on May 14.

Gupta said it’s key that community consultations are done to get these projects up and running.

“If you don’t consult the community, it becomes really tricky, and the local politicians will then make it really hard for that company to operate,” he says.

“So it’s actually in the company’s interest to make sure they’re doing proper consultation and really becoming part of that community.”

Artificial intelligence, generally, requires a massive amount of energy to function because of the advanced physical technology that powers the programs.

Get breaking Canada news delivered to your inbox as it happens so you won't miss a trending story.

Get breaking National news

Get breaking Canada news delivered to your inbox as it happens so you won’t miss a trending story.

Similar to a standard computer, this includes microchips, processors, racks and connective components, as well as cooling systems — but on a massive scale.

These data centres not only require their own dedicated spaces to function, but often entire compounds comparable to a small town. This means they can have a big impact on their surrounding communities not only because of their size, but what they require to function.

“Data centres are energy hungry,” says Mike Welland, an engineering physics professor at McMaster University, whose background also includes nuclear engineering.

“So because the Ontario power grid is largely decarbonized, due in large part because of nuclear power, it’s a good fit to put data centres as a sovereign resource inside Ontario.”

In a separate interview with Global News from May 14, Welland explained that the energy required by some AI software like ChatGPT can be compared with the time used on a consumer microwave oven.

“A simple factual question is about one to 1.5 microwave seconds — on par with a Google search. If you’re having a conversational query, where the AI has to reread the script every time, you’re looking at two to five microwave seconds. If you give it a short document and you’re asking it to summarize, it’s about 10 seconds,” Welland said at the time.

“And then short video generation becomes massive. That becomes five to nine minutes, even for video that is a few seconds long.”

In the AI strategy, it says these data centres will scale to at least 100 megawatts, and Welland says a typical nuclear reactor in Canada may put out between 700 and 800 megawatts.

If these data centres are going to be plugging into the same electricity grid as local residents, Gupta says that has the potential to drive up electricity rates.

“Are we subsidizing electricity for a data centre and driving up the cost for the local residents?” he says.

“These are very energy-intensive operations, and so it’s just demand and supply. If you get a new operator coming in that has huge demand for energy, there won’t be as much energy, and of course, energy providers, the hydro companies will jack up rates.”


Data centres don’t just require a large and reliable source of energy to power their machines. They also need a way to keep those devices at a stable temperature while they produce heat.

This, Welland says, is why Canada is a good spot to build out data centres, especially because of the vast amount of fresh water.

“A computer is a remarkably effective space heater … that heat needs to go somewhere. So it needs to be either put into the air or into the atmosphere,” Welland says.

“One of the benefits of potentially putting one of these data centres near a large body of water — for example, Lake Ontario — is because it’s a freshwater system.”

Welland explains that, like nuclear power plants, these data centres can pull water straight from the bottom of a lake to flush out the heat from the data centre and return the water back to the lake.

He adds: “Unfortunately, there is an aspect of heat pollution involved in that, which is a very valid concern, but it doesn’t consume drinking water.”

Heat, or thermal pollution, is defined by the United Nations as “the discharge of heated effluents from industrial processes such as electric power generation, atomic power stations and other factories at temperatures that can affect the life process of aquatic organisms.”

The AI strategy does not address mitigating thermal pollution impacts, but says Canada’s approach will include “robust environmental standards, and tangible benefits for local communities.”

The strategy also highlights Canada’s “physical advantages,” including the cooler northern climate as being a way to reduce the cost and energy intensity from these data centres.

On the same day as the federal announcement, Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew announced the province will reject a hyperscale AI data centre, citing the size of the project, the energy it will consume and its impact on the community outweigh the limited gains.

“There’s a big threat to the environment and not much benefit to the economy,” he told reporters at the Manitoba legislature.

Prairie communities are among those who have been pushing back, with similar opposition to a project in New Brunswick from locals.

“There’s no reason that these companies can’t have a proper dialogue with the community to make a plan, and make it a net positive for everybody,” Gupta says.

“So I see this as a partnership between these companies and the communities they go in, and if they approach it this way, do proper consultation, really think about the needs of the community, then I don’t see why communities would be against it.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Civil disobedience an option if Alberta referendum proceeds: First Nations chiefs

Toronto police officer charged with sexual assault, child luring offences: SIU

‘I just about fell over,’ says $46M winner of Manitoba’s largest Lotto 6-49 prize

Stony Plain daycare evacuated after van hits building, gas leak detected

Montreal-area home sales down nearly 7% in May amid economic pressures: board

‘It’s time for change’: N.B. Green Party Leader David Coon to step down

Muslim group seeks action on Islamophobia 5 years after Ontario family murdered

Man convicted of sexual assaults a ‘significant risk’ under day parole in Ottawa: police

Toronto’s kiki ballroom scene creating a ‘really beautiful culture,’ members say

Editors Picks

Toronto police officer charged with sexual assault, child luring offences: SIU

June 4, 2026

Liberals to delay proposed changes for major project environmental reviews

June 4, 2026

SurgeXRP Announces Presale Milestone as XRP-Based Real Estate Platform Surpasses 20% of Allocation

June 4, 2026

K92 Mining Announces Major Expansion of Arakompa AR1 High-Grade Zone and Delineation of Substantial Near-Surface High-Grade Bulk Tonnage Zone

June 4, 2026

Latest News

Croesus appoints Patrick Chamberland as Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer

June 4, 2026

What are AI data centres? A closer look as Canada eyes ‘large-scale’ push

June 4, 2026

5 things missing from Canada’s AI strategy, from timelines to job impacts

June 4, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Canada. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version