Aleph Alpha and Cohere Merge to Form a Sovereign AI Powerhouse Backed by Governments
The German government is pushing for closer German-Canadian cooperation to reduce reliance on U.S.-based AI providers. In Berlin, Heidelberg-based AI firm Aleph Alpha and Canadian company Cohere announced their merger in the presence of German Digital Minister Karsten Wildberger (CDU) and his Canadian counterpart, Evan Solomon.
"This will create a global AI champion," Wildberger told reporters. The companies stated: "Our goal is to provide businesses and governments with an independent and sovereign alternative in an era of growing AI concentrationāand to ensure that such an option exists."
The joint venture will collaborate with the Schwarz Group, whose companies are providing around ā¬500 million in "structured financing," to develop sovereign AI solutions. The focus will be on delivering "a secure alternative for AI applications," particularly in government, finance, defense, energy, telecommunications, and healthcare.
"Together, we will rapidly and securely deliver applications to more businesses and governments in Canada, Europe, and worldwideāwith the absolute certainty that their data remains under their control," said Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez.
Wildberger described the partnership as a strong signal for Germany's AI sector and a step toward a secure, sovereign, and competitive German-Canadian AI model. "This creates a true alternativeāmade in Germany, made in Canada," he said.
The Schwarz Group, parent company of Lidl and Kaufland, aims to position itself as a European alternative to cloud computing leaders like Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure. As part of this effort, it is investing ā¬11 billion in a new data center in Lübbenau, in Brandenburg's Spreewald region.