Siemens Canada is increasing its footprint at its Saskatoon R&D hub by 10,000 square feet to advance industrial AI focused on semiconductor design and development, underlining the region's growing tech talent and collaboration with local academia.

  • 10,000 square foot expansion within existing Saskatoon R&D location
  • Up to 100 new high-skilled jobs in AI and software engineering
  • Strengthening semiconductor design with advanced electronic design automation

What happened

Siemens Canada announced an expansion of its R&D hub in Saskatoon by 10,000 square feet at the Innovation Saskatchewan Research and Technology Park, increasing its total space to approximately 45,000 square feet. The expansion does not involve building new infrastructure but is an increase within the current facility footprint.

This growth is targeted at advancing Siemens’ efforts in industrial artificial intelligence, specifically enhancing their semiconductor design capabilities through electronic design automation (EDA) technology. The company expects to add up to 100 high-skilled roles in software engineering, AI research, and customer application expertise over the next two years.

Why it matters

Saskatoon's expansion reflects Siemens’ confidence in the region’s growing deep-tech talent pool and its collaborative relationship with the University of Saskatchewan, where Siemens supports an EDA Chair position. It marks a notable investment in semiconductor innovation within a province looking to strengthen its stature in technology development.

Despite Canada not having a standalone semiconductor strategy, this move signals progression toward building domestic capabilities in a critical global industry. The expansion also contributes to the broader goal of positioning Saskatchewan as a hub for industrial AI and advanced semiconductor technology, boosting economic growth and innovation competitiveness.

What to watch next

Monitoring Siemens Canada’s recruitment efforts for the new R&D roles will provide insights into the evolving talent ecosystem in Saskatchewan’s tech sector. The expansion is an opportunity to observe how the company scales AI-powered semiconductor design within a growing Canadian industrial base.

In parallel, attention should be paid to how the federal government’s broader AI and innovation strategies complement or influence similar investments, along with potential developments in Canada’s semiconductor policies. Collaboration outcomes between Siemens and academic institutions like the University of Saskatchewan may also reveal future breakthroughs in chip design and manufacturing.

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