Companies pitch defence applications as government funding swells
With $1.2 million from the Alberta government joining the growing pot of funding for defence, companies are finding ways to tailor their existing work for that industry.
"The experience that we've had involves that unique (place) between things that are defence-related and things that are infrastructure- or community-related," RUNWITHIT Synthetics CEO Myrna Bittner said during her winning pitch at the Rapidly Enabling and Advancing Disruptive Innovation (or READI) competition, which took place during the Alberta Aerospace & Defence Summit in Edmonton on May 4. Bittner cited work with American government agencies that straddles the line between defence and other fields.
The winning pitch earned Bittner a plaque made from Morinville grain elevator wood and the prestige of being selected in a room full of industry leaders. The competition was judged by representatives of Boeing Canada, SkyAlyne (which manages training for the Royal Canadian Air Force), and BDC. Vancouver's M2M Tech, which provides secure AI for mission-critical industries, came in second. SpectraCann, Elementiam, and Phase Metron also pitched at the summit, put on by Alberta Aviation, Aerospace and Defence.
RWI, as it's called for short, makes synthetic twins, which combine geography and multi-layered datasets to produce visualized simulations to model the future. Their latest covers all of Canada.
"If you've ever wondered what would happen if you put Google Earth together with SimCity, and you got to play as grownups, dial forward, have some agency in the future, look for opportunities to invest better, to have more resilience, to respond to security scenarios and develop civilian infrastructure — that's been our life for the last 12 years," Bittner said.
The company has worked with the American government and defence bodies such as the U.S. Air Force, the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Much of that work took place before interest in dual-use technologies heated up. In February, the federal government released Canada's Defence Industrial Strategy, backed by billions in spending.
At the summit on May 4, the province announced $1 million for Alberta Aviation, Aerospace and Defence to support a new initiative called Leading Industry Forward Together, or LIFT. It's meant to "help position Alberta-based businesses as key players in growing the sector and competing for national and international defence industry contracts." Another $200,000 went to Community Futures Entre-Corp for work on a drone testing range in southern Alberta.
"Alberta's government is investing in defence and dual-use industry development to help grow innovation, support jobs and position Alberta companies to compete in domestic and global markets," Joseph Schow, Alberta's minister of jobs, economy, trade, and immigration, said in a release. "With strong industrial capabilities, skilled labour and innovation capacity, Alberta is well-positioned to support Canada's defence and security objectives while building a more resilient and diversified economy."