Canada's leading research universities, represented by the U15 Group, have voiced significant concerns over the Foreign Influence Transparency Registry, part of the Countering Foreign Interference Act known as Bill C-70. This registry aims to increase transparency around activities conducted on behalf of foreign governments or state-linked entities, but university leaders warn it could create a substantial administrative burden and deter vital international collaborations essential to cutting-edge research.
The U15, comprising Canada's top 15 research-intensive universities such as the University of Toronto, University of British Columbia, and McGill University, highlighted these issues in a detailed submission to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security in June 2024. They emphasized that while protecting national security is paramount, the registry's broad scope risks capturing everyday academic activities, potentially stifling the open exchange of knowledge that defines higher education.
Understanding the Foreign Influence Transparency Registry
The Foreign Influence Transparency and Accountability Act (FITAA), enacted through Bill C-70 in June 2024, establishes a public registry managed by a dedicated Foreign Influence Transparency Commissioner. Individuals or organizations entering into 'arrangements' with a 'foreign principal'—defined as foreign governments, state organs, or their agents—must register if those arrangements involve activities like communicating with the public on political or governmental matters, distributing funds, or influencing Canadian democratic processes.
Non-compliance carries severe penalties, with proposed regulations from January 2026 outlining administrative monetary penalties up to $1 million for individuals and $5 million for organizations. The registry is designed to be country-agnostic, addressing threats from any nation, amid heightened awareness of foreign interference in elections, diaspora communities, and critical infrastructure.
By April 2026, implementation is advancing: draft regulations underwent public consultation ending in February, and a nominee for the commissioner role—a former British Columbia chief electoral officer—was announced in March. Public Safety Canada anticipates around 1,767 initial registrants, with ongoing monitoring to adapt to emerging threats.
U15 Universities' Core Concerns
The U15 submission outlined three primary worries. First, institutional liability for individual researchers' private arrangements. With thousands of faculty engaging in global networks, universities cannot feasibly track and report every collaboration within the mandated 14-day window, a task described as 'simply impossible' for large institutions.
Second, the vague definition of 'arrangement' might encompass legitimate research partnerships or funding from foreign public entities like the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), UK's UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), or Germany's Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG). In 2023 alone, Canadian higher education institutions received $150 million in foreign grants, fueling breakthroughs in health, climate science, and AI.
Third, disseminating research findings—through peer-reviewed journals, conferences, teaching, or media—could qualify as registrable 'public communications,' especially if touching on policy areas like international relations or economics. This, U15 argues, would infringe on academic freedom, the cornerstone allowing unfettered pursuit and sharing of knowledge.

Broader University Sector Echoes the Alarm
Universities Canada, advocating for all 96 Canadian postsecondary institutions, echoed these points in their own committee brief and a February 2026 submission on the draft regulations. They noted the registry could duplicate existing transparency mechanisms, such as mandatory disclosures of funding sources, author affiliations, and conflicts of interest under the Tri-Agency Framework for the Responsible Conduct of Research.
Administrative burdens would disproportionately affect smaller or emerging research programs, potentially isolating them from global opportunities. For instance, a law faculty advocating on climate policy might trigger scrutiny for a science department's partnership with an overseas funder, necessitating constant vigilance across decentralized campuses.
Real-World Examples of Potential Impacts
Consider a University of Alberta researcher collaborating with European partners under Horizon Europe, the world's largest research program, where Canada gained associate status in 2023. Funding from the European Commission—a potential 'foreign principal'—supports joint projects on sustainable energy. Registration requirements could complicate these, deterring partners wary of public listings.
At McGill University, medical researchers often secure NIH grants for cancer studies. If grant conditions involve public outreach on health policy, does this necessitate registry entry? Similarly, UBC's climate scientists partnering with Chinese academies on Arctic modeling might face hurdles amid geopolitical tensions.
These scenarios illustrate a 'chilling effect': researchers self-censoring collaborations to avoid paperwork, lost funding, or reputational risks, ultimately slowing innovation in fields critical to Canada's economy and society.
Photo by Trnava University on Unsplash

Government's Rationale and Research Security Context
Public Safety Canada positions the registry as a transparency tool akin to Australia's Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme or the U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), enabling public scrutiny without criminalizing legitimate engagement. It complements universities' proactive measures: since 2018, the Government-Universities Working Group has developed the National Security Guidelines for Research Partnerships (2021) and the Policy on Sensitive Technology Research and Affiliations of Concern (2022).
Budget 2022 allocated funds for campus research security offices, now operational at most U15 institutions. These vet partnerships, train researchers, and mitigate risks from state actors seeking intellectual property or influence. Officials testified that the registry targets covert activities, not open academic exchange, with regulations allowing exemptions for certain classes.
Stakeholder Perspectives: A Balanced View
Opposition parties, like Conservatives, championed the registry to expose interference, citing public inquiries revealing meddling in 2019 and 2021 elections. Civil liberties groups, such as the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group, raised Charter concerns over vague definitions potentially chilling free expression.
Experts like Benjamin Fung from McGill advocate a two-tier model: light-touch for open activities, stricter for covert ones. The Canadian Bar Association flagged solicitor-client privilege risks in compliance advice.
University administrators stress shared goals—secure, open research—but urge tailored exemptions. U15 CEO Chad Gaffield affirmed commitment to federal partnerships while seeking regulatory clarity.
Implementation Timeline and 2026 Developments
Post-Royal Assent in June 2024, consultations shaped regulations published January 3, 2026, for 30-day review. Key provisions include online registration portals, annual returns, and commissioner oversight. By April 2026, the commissioner nominee awaits parliamentary approval, with full operations eyed for mid-year.
Universities are preparing: enhancing research security advisors, auditing partnerships, and lobbying for academic carve-outs. Universities Canada's February submission reiterated calls for exemptions covering teaching, research dissemination, and scholastic activities, as flagged in initial 'What We Heard' consultations.
Potential Solutions and Exemptions
Bill C-70's section 6(1) empowers regulations to exempt classes of persons or activities. Stakeholders recommend:
- Explicit academic exemptions for peer-reviewed publications, conferences, and teaching.
- Thresholds for low-risk arrangements, like grants under $50,000.
- Simplified reporting for institutions, focusing on high-risk cases via existing security offices.
- Guidance distinguishing research from influence activities.
Aligning with international norms, such as UK's limited FARA equivalent, could balance security and openness.
Implications for Canadian Higher Education
Canada's research prowess—top G7 per capita R&D—relies on global ties: 20% of Tri-Council grants involve international partners. A chilling effect could exacerbate faculty shortages, with 15% vacancies at U15s, and deter top talent amid student caps.
Broader ripple: reduced policy input from academics, as legislators hesitate consulting 'registered' experts. Innovation lags in AI, quantum, biotech—fields hungry for cross-border expertise.

Future Outlook and Path Forward
As FITR launches, collaboration between government, commissioner, and universities is key. Pilot programs testing exemptions, enhanced training, and metrics tracking collaboration impacts could mitigate risks.
Optimistically, refined rules preserve Canada's welcoming research ecosystem, safeguarding academic freedom while countering threats. Stakeholders urge ongoing dialogue to ensure transparency serves security without compromising the pursuit of knowledge that benefits all Canadians.






