Ottawa, Ontario
Canadian cleantech entrepreneurs are making huge strides on solutions to the world's most pressing challenges, including technology for energy-efficient buildings, advances in sustainable agriculture and innovation in water security. This is good for our economy, good for workers and good for our environment.
Today, the Honourable François-Phillippe Champagne, Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, announced investments totalling $68.2 million in 17 Canadian cleantech companies through Sustainable Development Technology Canada (SDTC). These companies work in a wide range of cleantech sectors, such as agriculture, transportation, waste management and energy conservation. The SDTC funding will help them develop clean technologies with the potential to deliver significant environmental and economic benefits for Canadians.
The companies, according to the sector, are:
Energy exploration
- Arolytics ($0.4 million) of Calgary, Alberta - a women-led cleantech start-up that is developing software that enables oil and gas companies to identify cost-effective solutions to their emission management challenges.
- Carbonova ($2 million) of Calgary, Alberta - a women-led company that is developing a process that employs captured CO2 and methane to create carbon nanofibers used to improve the mechanical strength of concrete and other materials.
Energy utilization
- 3E Nano ($5 million) of Toronto, Ontario - a growing energy utilization company that is developing a nano-thin solar coating that can be used on skylights, greenhouses and plexiglass windows to greatly lower heating and cooling costs.
- BrainBox AI ($6.5 million) of Montréal, Quebec - a pioneering company developing a digital control solution that uses artificial intelligence to optimize heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems to make buildings more energy efficient.
Power generation
- Aurora Hydrogen ($3.9 million) of Edmonton, Alberta - a start-up cleantech company that is pioneering an innovative process that uses microwaves to produce turquoise hydrogen, with no direct CO2 emissions or water consumption.
- Next Hydrogen ($5 million) of Mississauga, Ontario - a start-up cleantech energy company that is developing an innovative electrolysis technology to break water into hydrogen and oxygen, significantly decreasing the cost of hydrogen production while reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Transportation
- Nano One ($10 million) of Burnaby, British Columbia - a groundbreaking cleantech company that is carrying out a project that will further efforts to cut CO2 emissions and industrial waste by simplifying the supply chain for electric vehicle battery production.
- Visual Defence ($4 million) of Richmond Hill, Ontario - a scale-up clean technology company that is advancing an AI-enabled solution to help cities monitor road conditions in real time, increasing operational efficiency and sustainability while reducing costs.
Agriculture and agrifood
- Future Fields ($5 million) of Edmonton, Alberta - a women-led biotechnology company that is scaling up its revolutionary process to produce the proteins needed to culture more cost-effective, less carbon-intensive meats.
- Hortau ($6.8 million) of Lévis, Quebec - an agricultural technology company that is developing a crop management platform that uses wireless sensor networks and artificial intelligence to anticipate crop stress and optimize plant growth.
- New School Foods ($5 million) of Toronto, Ontario - a start-up cleantech innovator that is developing a plant-based alternative to cuts of fish.
- Synergraze ($1.3 million) of Calgary, Alberta - a women-led agricultural company that is developing a seaweed-derived feed additive capable of cutting methane emissions from cattle digestion by up to 90%, reducing the environmental impacts of cattle-rearing.
Waste management
- Cyclic Materials ($3.6 million) of Kingston, Ontario - a start-up waste-management company that is advancing a unique technology to recover rare earth elements from magnetic waste, reducing landfill and increasing Canada's supply of these vital materials.
- Enim (Seneca experts-conseils) ($3 million) of Anjou, Quebec - a visionary cleantech company that will build and operate a pilot facility for the hydrometallurgical extraction of metals from old, printed circuit boards to reduce and recycle electronic waste.
- Provision Analytics ($2.6 million) of Calgary, Alberta - a leading-edge software company that is advancing its digital platform, using analytics and machine learning, to monitor food safety and quality data to discover ways to minimize waste across the food supply chain.
- Symbient Environmental ($1.5 million) of Mississauga, Ontario - a start-up wastewater treatment company that is pioneering a low-cost system to disinfect wastewater using performic acid instead of chlorine, reducing impacts on aquatic environments.
- ZS2 Technologies ($2.6 million) of Calgary, Alberta - a construction technology pioneer that is developing a process to make low-carbon magnesium cement by combining waste products while reducing environmental impacts.
Through investments like these, the Government of Canada and SDTC are committed to growing our economy and creating good jobs for workers across the country, while leaving a healthy future for generations to come.