Peter, I concur with Alan, but I expect you to do whatever you wish regardless because people always want more power, despite what the evidence says.
I am a life long canoe enthusiast. I spent most of my youth in the Canadian wilderness in canoes of all sorts, including many motorized canoes.
I used to own a 17' square stern Chestnut prospector I used to haul supplies to a camp ~50 km up a river to support large trekking groups of inexperienced paddlers. I had a whopping 1.5 HP vintage Evinrude powering it and that was all that was needed. Most other guide companies had similar set-ups between 1.5 - 3.5 only the very odd one had a 5 HP despite the ubiquity of 5 HP on other small craft.
Why did most guide operators use far less than 5 HP? Because canoes are very unstable at the speeds that can be reached with a 5 HP motor. BUT most importantly, it is the application of higher torque at low speeds that is especially dangerous.
If there is any steering input on the motor when power is applied, the canoe quickly responds to the turn input (due to the hull shape and motor location), the side of the hull on the outside of the turn tends to roll sharply downward towards the waterline since most canoe hull designs have low initial stability. In many cases the gunnels submerge and the canoe takes on water and sinks.
Canoe hulls are not designed to get up on plane either, and high speeds are just as unsafe, even when modifications to the hull are made as seen in the video you supplied.
You would get along very well with something long the lines of what Alan sugested