SUBMISSION TO INNOVATION, SCIENCE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CANADA
Consultation on the Next Chapter of Canada's AI Strategy
The distributed civic layer: completing sovereign compute after the 2026 cascade
Submitted by: theFlux.caOctober 2026
ABOUT THE SUBMITTER
theFlux.ca is a Canadian initiative building distributed, jurisdictionally contained AI infrastructure for public sense-making: a mesh of tower-embedded, community-governed AI nodes (fluxNode) supporting a public deliberation commons (theCommon). Our work is grounded in the tipping-point and polycrisis research tradition, much of it Canadian, and is documented in a published whitepaper, a peer-reviewable quantitative model with an interactive companion, and a briefing note previously provided to the Ministry. All are attached. This submission is offered in that spirit: every claim below corresponds to a published parameter that officials and critics can vary.
SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS
Recognize a distributed civic AI stream. The next chapter of the strategy should formally recognize distributed, community-scale AI infrastructure as a stream complementary to centralized sovereign compute, with resilience-through-distribution stated as a strategic objective.
Make concentration risk a design criterion. Every public compute investment should be assessed for chokepoint exposure — physical, corporate, and jurisdictional — alongside cost and capability, and portfolio-level distribution targets should be published.
Open the AI Compute Access Fund to distributed deployments. Eligibility should extend to community-scale sovereign nodes operated by nonprofits, municipalities, Indigenous governments, and SMEs, not only to access purchased from large centralized providers.
Embed Indigenous data sovereignty structurally. The strategy should adopt OCAP®-aligned provisions so that First Nations-governed data can be processed on infrastructure under First Nations custody, developed in partnership with the First Nations Information Governance Centre.
Fund one instrumented public sense-making pilot. The strategy should fund at least one pilot pairing distributed sovereign compute with public deliberation infrastructure, with published resilience metrics — recovery time from shocks as the headline indicator — so that the civic value of sovereign AI is measured, not asserted.
WHY THE STRATEGY'S NEXT CHAPTER MUST ADDRESS DISTRIBUTION
The lesson Canada just paid for
Between February and June 2026, the closure of a single maritime chokepoint converted a regional war into the largest oil-supply disruption on record, a global fuel and fertilizer shock, and measurable stress in every downstream system from aviation to food. Domestically, 2025–26 taught the same lesson in economic form: concentrated dependencies are revocable at another sovereign's pleasure, and — as the February 2026 Supreme Court ruling on tariffs demonstrated — reversing the policy does not restore the trust it destroyed. Systems science calls this hysteresis, and it is the decisive argument for building resilience before crises rather than restoring it after: the pre-crisis state does not come back at the pre-crisis price.
Canada's AI infrastructure carries the same architecture of exposure. Compute concentrated in a small number of large facilities, dependent on foreign cloud providers, foreign chips, and single-corridor power and network connections, is Hormuz in digital form: efficient in normal times, and a small set of high-value targets — for sanction, acquisition, terms-of-service change, or attack — in abnormal ones. The years 2025 and 2026 were abnormal ones, and the strategic environment that produced them has not reverted.
What centralized sovereign compute cannot do alone
The Canadian Sovereign AI Compute Strategy rightly answers the first question — where do the models run, and under whose law. The consultation now asks what the next chapter should be, and we submit that it is the second question: what does a democracy do with sovereign compute, and how does that capacity survive stress? Centralized facilities serve research and industry; they do not, by themselves, give communities, municipalities, and Indigenous governments AI capacity under their own custody, and they concentrate rather than distribute national exposure. The complement is a mesh of smaller nodes embedded in existing tower and community-network infrastructure: no single point of failure, physical custody as the trust boundary, and data gravity that stays in the jurisdiction — down to the community — where the data originates.
The quantitative case: a threshold, not a gradient
We have published a formal model of the 2026 cascade using the standard interacting-tipping-elements formalism from the climate cascade literature, with an interactive companion that officials can operate directly. Its central, robust finding is that societal sense-making capacity — the ability to perceive accurately and coordinate a response in time — acts on four dynamics at once: it slows escalation, loosens dangerous coupling, shortens institutional response delay, and strengthens damping. Because tipping systems have thresholds, the return on this capacity is not linear: below a threshold, investment merely decorates the cascade; above it, the cascade truncates — the triggering crisis still occurs, but it stays contained. Public investment in this layer therefore purchases a category change in national resilience at pilot-scale cost. The model, its parameters, and its limitations are published precisely so this claim can be attacked; we ask only that it be tested rather than assumed away.
The comparative advantage no other country holds
Three Canadian assets make the distributed civic stream a national comparative advantage rather than a generic good idea. First, the research base: the polycrisis analytics of the Cascade Institute, the cognitive-science foundations at the University of Toronto, and the national AI institutes. Second, democratic lineage: Canada invented the modern citizens' assembly (British Columbia 2004, Ontario 2007), giving deliberation infrastructure a made-in-Canada legitimacy that imported platforms lack. Third, and most distinctive: the First Nations OCAP® principles constitute the most developed data-sovereignty framework in the world, and distributed jurisdictionally contained AI is the first infrastructure architecture that can honour them by construction rather than by exception. A strategy that builds this partnership from inception offers something no competing national AI program — American, European, or Chinese — is positioned to offer, and the post-2025 diversification of Canadian trade toward Europe meets an explicit European demand for digital public infrastructure that is neither American nor Chinese. The distributed civic layer is, in short, both a resilience investment and an export.
IMPLEMENTATION: MODEST, GATED, MEASURABLE
We are not proposing a large program. Horizon 1 is a single tower-sited node with a rural or Indigenous ISP partner and one instrumented municipal deliberation, fundable within existing NRC-IRAP and CIRA envelopes if the strategy recognizes the stream. Each subsequent horizon is gated on published evidence from the last. The metrics are committed in advance and published whether favourable or not: recovery time from shocks, bridging scores across lines of prior disagreement, decision latency and durability, and validated trust deltas. Recovery time deserves emphasis as the headline indicator because it is the field-measurable form of the early-warning signal the 2026 cascade exhibited at global scale — systems approaching their thresholds recover more slowly — and because a strategy that shortens its country's recovery time has, by definition, brought resilience.
Nothing in these recommendations requires new legislation. Recommendations 1 and 2 are statements of strategic design; Recommendation 3 is an eligibility clarification; Recommendation 4 is a partnership; Recommendation 5 is one pilot. The cost of adopting them is small. The cost of the alternative was demonstrated, at global scale, between February and June of this year.
CLOSING
The 2026 cascade showed that the binding constraint on national resilience is no longer compute, capital, or even energy — it is coordination capacity, and coordination capacity is now partly an infrastructure question. Canada holds the mandate, the research base, the democratic lineage, and the Indigenous data-governance leadership to build that infrastructure first, and to build it in the distributed form that cannot be switched off from outside or captured from within. We ask that the next chapter of the strategy say so, and we stand ready to demonstrate it at pilot scale within two quarters of program recognition.
Contact: theFlux.ca. Attachments: (1) The 2026 Cascade as the Case for Sovereign Sense-Making, Draft 1.0 (whitepaper); (2) Cascade Model Specification; (3) interactive cascade simulator; (4) Briefing Note to the Minister, July 2026. This submission may be published in whole or in part; no portion is confidential.