IPON has made $6.6 million in investments in the last year.
Ontario’s intellectual property (IP) agency is investing $4.6 million into post-secondary institutions to help them better commercialize ideas and products.
The investment, which comes from Intellectual Property Ontario (IPON), includes $2.9 million for 10 new institutions, which include Brock University, Carleton University, George Brown College, McMaster University, Georgian College, Sheridan College, Toronto Metropolitan University, and the Universities of Ottawa, Toronto, and Windsor.
“This funding will help institutions across the province more effectively translate research into commercializable innovations.”
IPON’s announcement did not include mention of what the funds will specifically be used for by those institutions.
The agency is also investing $1.7 million to expand its existing pilot funding program, involving a total of 10 universities. IPON launched this program with an initial $2 million to fund 10 post-secondary institutions to improve their support and resources related to IP commercialization efforts and improve their internal IP knowledge.
The post-secondary institutions involved in that pilot include Collège La Cité, Conestoga College, Durham College, Lambton College, Niagara College, York University, and a joint initiative led by Laurentian University, Trent University, Lakehead University, and Nipissing University.
“This funding will help institutions across the province more effectively translate research into commercializable innovations, while ensuring the IP at their foundation is appropriately developed and protected,” Dan Herman, CEO of IPON, said in a statement.
Following the recent investments, IPON’s investments over the past year total $6.6 million, distributed among eight colleges and 12 universities.
RELATED: East coast latest Canadian region to act to protect its intellectual property with new program
According to IPON’s statement announcing the new funding, the agency is currently leading a working group focused on commercialization metrics, and is exploring ways to best support technology transfer and applied research offices within Ontario’s research community.
Last month, IPON announced that Herman would serve as the agency’s first permanent CEO. Prior to Herman’s appointment, the CEO role was held on an interim basis by Peter Cowan since the agency’s creation in 2022.
BetaKit was first to report Cowan would lead the agency, and in January, Cowan left IPON and was named president and CEO of Innovate BC.
In recent years, IP creation and protection have been a key focus for the federal government and a number of Canadian provinces. In January, the University of Calgary announced plans to fully launch ElevateIP Alberta, the Albertan iteration of the federal IP program, and similar programs were launched in British Columbia and Atlantic Canada in 2023.
Feature image courtesy Unsplash. Photo by Narciso Arellano.