Canadian AI unicorn Cohere and Germany-based Aleph Alpha announced plans to merge, forming a transatlantic AI alliance valued at $20 billion that aims to provide enterprises and governments with a sovereign alternative to US and Chinese AI giants.

The deal combines Cohere's global scale with Aleph Alpha's research excellence and institutional relationships, creating what the companies call a "globally competitive AI champion" anchored in Germany and Canada. Schwarz Group, one of Aleph Alpha's major backers and an international retail leader, will lead Cohere's upcoming Series E round with a $600 million structured financing commitment.

The partnership targets the rapidly growing sovereign AI market, which McKinsey estimates will represent nearly $600 billion of the $1 trillion annual AI services market. The combined entity will focus on highly regulated sectors including public sector, finance, defense, energy, manufacturing, telecommunications, and healthcare.

"Organizations globally are demanding uncompromising control over their AI stack," said Cohere co-founder and CEO Aidan Gomez. "This transatlantic partnership unlocks the massive scale, robust infrastructure, and world-class R&D talent required to meet that demand."

The merged company will partner with Schwarz Group's sovereign cloud service STACKIT to deploy AI solutions that comply with local laws, cultural contexts, and institutional requirements—particularly important for European organizations subject to strict data protection standards.

"Together with Cohere, we are building a real counterweight for organizations that refuse to outsource control over their AI to a single provider or jurisdiction," said Ilhan Scheer, co-CEO of Aleph Alpha.

Founded in 2019, Cohere has raised approximately $1.6 billion from investors including Nvidia, AMD Ventures, Salesforce, and Oracle. The deal remains subject to closing, with the Series E round expected to complete later this year.