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Canadian Competition Bureau
OrganisationCA

Canadian Competition Bureau

Canadian federal antitrust regulator; reviewing the Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger.

Last refreshed: 17 May 2026

Key Question

Why does Canada's antitrust watchdog have a say over a European AI merger?

Timeline for Canadian Competition Bureau

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Common Questions
Why does Canada need to approve the Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger?
Cohere is a Canadian AI company. The Canadian Competition Bureau must review the merger under Canadian competition law when a Canadian company is involved in a significant acquisition, regardless of where the counterparty is based.Source:
How does the Canadian Competition Bureau review tech mergers?
The Canadian Competition Bureau conducts a pre-merger review to assess whether an acquisition would substantially lessen competition. For the Cohere-Aleph Alpha deal, the Bureau's review was running in parallel with Germany's Bundeskartellamt.Source:
What is the Canadian Competition Bureau and what powers does it have?
The Canadian Competition Bureau is Canada's independent federal law enforcement agency responsible for enforcing competition law. It can block mergers, require divestitures, and impose fines for anti-competitive behaviour.Source: canada.ca/competition-bureau

Background

The Canadian Competition Bureau is one of two regulators — alongside Germany's Bundeskartellamt — required to clear the Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger announced on 24 April 2026, which values the combined entity at $20 billion. The Bureau is Canada's federal competition authority and has jurisdiction because Cohere is a Canadian company (incorporated in Toronto). The Bureau's review timeline and approach to AI-sector consolidation will influence whether the deal proceeds on schedule.

Established under the Competition Act 1985, the Bureau operates independently of the Canadian government and enforces rules on mergers, cartels, and deceptive practices. For mergers, it uses a market-impact test similar to EU and US frameworks. The Bureau has become more active in technology-sector reviews since 2022, following legislative changes that strengthened its powers and increased pre-merger notification thresholds.

The Cohere-Aleph Alpha case is the Bureau's first high-profile AI-sector merger review of the 2026 cycle. Its outcome matters for European tech sovereignty because the merged entity would be one of the few non-US large language model providers of significant scale, and any remedies imposed by Canadian or German regulators could reshape the company's data governance commitments to European customers.