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Tech Update: New funding for cutting-edge climate satellites and other tech innovations

Plus, whale watching in space, greener guidelines for Canadian companies and NATO taps Area X.O for strategic tests.

Updated
2 min read
HWAC.jpg

Researchers at the University of Saskatchewan are developing innovative cameras as part of the High-altitude Aerosols, Water vapour and Clouds (HWAC) mission, a collaboration with scientists at the Canadian Space Agency and NASA. This rendering shows the elements that the multi-satellite Atmosphere Observing System intends to monitor.


The federal government has announced more than $515 million in funding for groundbreaking projects at 32 research institutions across the country through the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI). The projects vary in focus; this year’s recipients are exploring everything from medical imaging equipment for Type 2 diabetes to coastal erosion in P.E.I. to medications that can manage opioid-use disorder.

While all of the researchers have lofty ambitions, a team from the University of Saskatchewan may be aiming the highest — literally. In collaboration with the University of Toronto and the Canadian Space Agency, the USask crew will be working on the High-altitude aerosols, Water vapour and Clouds (HWAC) mission, which may help Canada gain ground in the modern-day space race. Propelled by $17 million in CFI funding, the mission is to develop, basically, “fancy cameras on low Earth-orbiting satellites,” says Adam Bourassa, a professor in USask’s department of physics and engineering physics. The optical instruments will be part of a bigger constellation of NASA-affiliated satellites launching between 2028 and 2030.

Rebecca Gao writes about technology for MaRS. Torstar, the parent company of the Toronto Star, has partnered with MaRS to highlight innovation in Canadian companies.

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