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Telus and L-Spark give Canadian AI startups a runway

Five Canadian startups get access to the country’s fastest supercomputer, and six months of hands-on help to actually build something with it.

Photo by Getty Images on Unsplash
Photo by Getty Images on Unsplash
Photo by Getty Images on Unsplash

Telus and L-Spark want Canadian AI startups to stop losing ground to better-resourced competitors. Their answer is a six-month accelerator backed by Canada’s fastest supercomputer.

The telecom company and startup accelerator announced the Telus Sovereign AI Accelerator on April 28, a six-month program pairing five Canadian startups with compute credits from the Telus AI Factory, powered by 99% renewable energy and NVIDIA infrastructure. 

The program includes one-on-one advisory support from L-Spark executive advisors, with the startups keeping full control over their data and intellectual property throughout.

The inaugural cohort spans retail, healthcare, robotics, enterprise software, and industrial automation. 

  • Airy3D is building depth-sensing technology for robotics and automotive applications.
  • Codalio accelerates product development for startups. 
  • Edge Signal is applying physical AI to retail operations. 
  • PataBid targets the construction bidding process for complex specialty trades. 
  • TopoLift builds custom intelligence layers that learn the structure of a client’s business.

“Canada has no shortage of talented AI visionaries and founders, but too often they lack the coordinated support needed to scale from promising ideas to globally-competitive businesses,” says Telus CIO Hesham Fahmy.

The keyword here is access. 

Building and training serious AI models requires infrastructure that most Canadian startups can’t afford to access independently, and the gap between having a compelling model and having one trained on production-grade compute is significant. 

“Great AI companies aren’t built on technology alone — they’re built on execution, focus and access to the right expertise at the right time,” says Leo Lax, L-Spark’s Executive Managing Director.

The sovereignty angle matters for CIOs watching this. As more Canadian technology leaders reconsider US-based vendors, programs that build domestic AI capability on Canadian infrastructure are filling a real gap in the enterprise supply chain.

Final Shots

  • The Telus Sovereign AI Accelerator pairs compute access with commercial advisory support across a six-month engagement, addressing two distinct gaps Canadian AI startups typically face separately.
  • Participating companies retain full control over their data and intellectual property, a selling point that speaks directly to enterprise clients navigating sovereignty requirements.
  • The inaugural cohort covers five sectors (retail, healthcare, robotics, enterprise software, and industrial automation) signalling a deliberate effort to build Canadian AI capacity across industries, not just verticals with obvious consumer appeal.

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