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Cleantech Forum in Toronto to bring together Indian, Chinese and Canadian business community

This week's Cleantech Forum, held on March 21st at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, brought together industry leaders from Canada, China, and India to discuss the future of green technology. The event, organized jointly by the Canada China Business Council and the Canada-India Business, marks the first time that representatives from all three countries have come together to discuss cleantech opportunities.

"Ontario's Minister of Research and Innovation Glen Murray and the Chairman of the Cleantech Group Nicholas Parker will be the event's keynote speakers."

"A first-of-its-kind event, the China-India Cleantech Forum brings together Chinese and Indian companies looking to invest in cleantech in Canada, and Canadian firms doing business in China and India. The diverse participation and distinctive networking that we'll see on Monday underscores the importance of bilateral relationships in Canada's environmental cooperation with China and India."

"The event will examine key environmental issues in five plenary style sessions-, emphasizing investment opportunities in cleantech sectors in Canada, India, and China. Sectoral breakout rooms will facilitate private meetings and networking between companies."

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original source Sify News

Jewellery designer also educates customers

The Toronto Star writes on local jewellery designer and small business owner, Jennifer Shigetomi. Shigetomi specializes in handcrafted rings and necklaces which she designs and sells as at her North Toronto store Matsu Jewellery. Because her pieces tend to cost more than the competition--due to the fact that she handcrafts each one--Shigetomi employs social media to explain to her customers the work that goes into each unique creation.

"When your product costs twice as much as the competition's, making a sale takes a little more convincing. For Jennifer Shigetomi, it's probably the hardest part of running a small, independent business."

"I spend a lot of time educating people as to why it costs so much," says Shigetomi. "There's a big difference between something that's hand-crafted to order and something that gets put out by a machine."

"Getting the word out has been a lot easier thanks to social media, she adds. Although she's done some advertising in magazines, she doesn't have the budget to do it as often as she'd like. Instead, she updates her Facebook page with her latest projects or sends out tweets when she's appearing at trade shows".

"I've really only been doing it for the last year or so, but it's been great. A lot of our business is really word of mouth, so when somebody 'likes' our Facebook page, all of their friends see it, and it's like a stamp of approval," says Shigetomi, who estimates about 80 per cent of her customers come from client referrals."

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original source Toronto Star

Ontario sees surge in gaming industry

The Toronto Star writes on Ontario's booming video game industry. The Province's gaming industry--largely centered in Toronto--has seen burgeoning growth in the past three years due, in part, to support from the Ontario government. The provincial programs designed to support digital media startups include the Ontario Digital Media Tax Credit and The Ontario Media Development Corporation (OMDC).

"Financial incentives and industry growth have helped foster a supportive and creative environment, said Kristine Murphy, the OMDC's director of industry development."

"Ontario is a thriving independent game development jurisdiction," she said. "There's growth in the independent games, (particularly) for games being developed for a variety of platforms: the iPhone, BlackBerry, all of the small hand-held devices (and) social media games."

"A puzzle game like Critter Crunch, developed in Toronto by Capybara Games, can be played on the iPhone or the online PlayStation Network."

"The tight-knit industry has also helped keep talent in Ontario, Murphy said."

"The founders of DrinkBox Studios, a small independent video game producer, wanted to keep working in Ontario when they set up shop in 2008."

"We were all working here in Toronto at another game company and that game company dissolved," said Chris Harvey, one of the founders. "We didn't want to leave the city because we were already here. It seemed like the support for the game industry in Ontario was increasing."

"Toronto is the hub of Ontario for game development, Harvey said"

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original source Toronto Star

Toronto company helping to solve our plastic problem

As reported by the Globe & Mail, Toronto-based GreenMantra Recycling Technologies is working hard to solve Ontario's plastic problem (in 2009 alone Ontario used 235,000 tonnes of plastic packaging and recycled less than a quarter of it). Founded 7 years ago by entrepreneur Pushkar Kumar, GreenMantra diverts plastic from our landfills by converting it into useful waxes and oils.

"Used plastic is, to put it mildly, plentiful. According to Stewardship Ontario, the province alone used 235,000 tonnes of plastic packaging in 2009. Only about a quarter of that was recovered."

"Noting this fact, about seven years ago, Mr. Kumar decided to look for a solution. A metallurgical and materials engineer, he worked with his father, a chemical engineer, on the project.They reasoned that all plastics are polymers made of molecules found in many other materials. Once broken down, those polymers could be converted into other things. But what could they convert the plastic into? And what kind of process would accomplish it?"

"The Kumars eventually found what seemed the ideal answer to the first question. Synthetic waxes are usually a byproduct of oil refining, but refiners can make more money � especially in today's world of $100-a-barrel oil � from creating gasoline than from waxes, which are used to make floor wax, shoe polish and car waxes."

"So they have been altering their processes to produce less wax. That has reduced supplies, Mr. Kumar explains, which is driving wax prices up."

That creates an opportunity. GreenMantra won't compete for raw materials with existing suppliers and will have lower upfront costs than they do, he says. Does that mean GreenMantra can produce the products for less cost than established producers? Mr. Kumar says he isn't sure whether he can undercut their prices, but he is sure he can compete � and, he says, "at least I can guarantee that the prices are stable."

"The challenge, explains Lyle Clarke, vice-president of innovation and blue box at Stewardship Ontario, is efficiently recovering and realizing value from the many different grades of plastics consumers put out for recycling. GreenMantra, Mr. Clarke says, is "going at the heart of the challenge in the system."

"Mr. Kumar says his process can handle a variety of plastics, including bags and bottles. Perhaps most important, he can process mixed loads of material, potentially eliminating the time-consuming job of sorting, since existing recycling processes are mainly limited to a particular type of plastic."

"A key to making this work was finding a catalyst to drive the chemical process that breaks up the molecules. Loads of plastics are bound to contain impurities � bits of metal, glass or other materials � and GreenMantra needed a process that would continue working despite those impurities. The company found a catalyst a couple of years ago and has been refining its methods since.The beauty of GreenMantra's business model is its simplicity, argues James Sbrolla, entrepreneur-in-residence at the MaRS Discovery District, the Toronto technology incubator that has helped Mr. Kumar build his company. "They're not trying to change the world. They're picking a very simple niche that they can do well at."

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original source Globe & Mail

Toronto startup creates gloves that work with touch screens

The National Post writes on Glider Gloves, a new Toronto company that produces winter gloves that work with touch screen devices. The gloves are created from conductive yarns, allowing users to play with their touch screen phone while keeping their fingers warm. Launched less than a year ago by three young Toronto entrepreneurs, Glider Gloves are available online as well as in Rogers, Telus, and Wind Mobile stores.

"My partner came up with the idea last year. While taking off his gloves, he spilled coffee all over his iPhone," said Amar Thiara, 28, marketing manager for Glider Gloves. "He thought, there has to be a better way of doing this."

"The solution was to make gloves from conductive yarns. Touch screens work by passing a small current across their surface; when the user presses a finger to the screen, that current is altered. The device knows where the finger is, based on where the current fluctuates. But with normal gloves, the user's fingers are insulated, and the screen doesn't register any fluctuations."

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original source National Post

Canadian researchers first worldwide to generate pluripotent stem cells from horses

Researchers from Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital have discovered how to generate pluripotent stem cells from horses. As reported by Medical News Today, this breakthrough, "a world first", is groundbreaking as it opens up the possibility for new types of cell regenerative therapies in veterinary medicine.

"In a world first, pluripotent stem cells have been generated from horses by a team of researchers led by Dr. Andras Nagy at the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital and Dr. Lawrence Smith at the University of Montreal's Faculty of Veterinary Science. The findings will help enable new stem-cell based regenerative therapies in veterinary medicine, and because horses' muscle and tendon systems are similar to our own, aid the development of preclinical models leading to human applications. The study was published in the February 28 issue of the leading journal Stem Cell Reviews and Reports."

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original source Medical News Today


Grand & Toy establishes five business centers in Toronto

As reported by Area Development Magazine, Toronto will soon be home to five "Grand & Toy Business Centres"-- storefronts that will provide consulting services and work stations to Toronto's small business owners. The business centers are the cornerstone of Grand and Toy's ambitious Canada-wide company reinvention; Grand & Toy announced in 2009 that it hopes to move from a office solution and supply company to a national provider of consulting centres for the small business industry.

"When speaking with our small business customers, they identified a hole in the marketplace that Grand & Toy could fill. Customers were looking for a place to connect with industry experts, learn, and gain access to business solutions to help relieve the growing clerical work they did not have time for," said Kevin Edwards, vice president, Marketing, Grand & Toy. "There's more going on in our new Business Centres than just a new physical layout. Our associates appreciate the passion our customers have for their companies and are trained to provide them with effective business solutions so they can continue to focus on what matters to them most � growing their business."

"The business centers once housed Grand & Toy retail stores. They will serve as local business-to-business hubs. The centers include on-site Business Solutions Advisors, free Wi-Fi, and work stations for drop-in or in-transit customers."

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original source Area Development Magazine

From selling salt at the market

The Toronto Star writes on entrepreneur Andrea Brockie and her St Lawrence Market-based business Selsi Sea Rocks. Brockie got her start selling bath salts at a temporary sidewalk stall outside the St. Lawrence farmer's market on Saturdays. Now, 6-years later, Selsi Sea Rocks has moved to a permanent stall inside, is open seven days a week, and sells over 40 different kinds of salt from around the world.

"Adrea Brockie likes salt. So much so, she's turned it into a business"

"Through Selsi Sea Rocks, a six-year-old company based at the St. Lawrence Market in Toronto, Brockie sells and distributes about 40 different kinds of salt from around the world."

"It's something I enjoy doing, but it's not what I studied for," says Brockie, of Toronto."

"She started with a temporary stall outside the St. Lawrence farmer's market on Saturdays. There were a few problems, and those close to her were skeptical at first."

"Out on the sidewalk, the rain would come and it would start dissolving the salt, so I decided to get a stall inside the market."

"She moved indoors, where the lamps and the increasingly-large selection of salt were safe from the rain, and she could operate five days a week. She rents out warehouse space as she needs it."

"That kind of business discipline was part of the plan she'd developed during a year out of the working world, under a federally-funded program. Anyone on EI can apply to join the program, today called the Ontario Self Employment Benefit Program.It gives successful applicants a year to come up with a business plan, and coaches them how to start and run a small business.Earning income while on EI usually means your benefits are clawed back, but people who make money while in OSEB don't experience this as long as the money is invested in their business."

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original source Toronto Star


Toronto company unveils world's first wireless electric bike

Daymak Inc. -- a Toronto-based company that designs, develops and manufacturers e-bikes--has launched the world's first "wireless power-assisted electric bicycle". As reported by Gizmag, the bike, dubbed the "Shadow EBike" does away with the cumbersome cords and wires of traditional e-bikes by relying exclusively on wireless technology.

"Got a problem with the various gear and brake cables winding their way around your bike frame? If you're riding a standard pedal-powered bike, the answer is probably 'no.' But if you're one of the increasing numbers of people getting around town on an electric bike than your answer may be different, with faulty wiring one of the most common sources of failures found in such vehicles. While some hide their electrical wiring away inside the frame, many e-bikes have wires running down the outside. Like so many of today's electrical devices, the new Shadow Ebike does away with this unsightly mess and potential point of weakness using wireless technology."

"Through the integration of ISM 2.4 GHz wireless using frequency-hopping spread spectrum technology to prevent interference, the Shadow has no brake or gear cables, and no visible electric wires running from the motor to the batteries, the controller or throttle. Turning the electric motor on or off, the magnetic regenerative brakes, the throttle and the pedal assist are all controlled wirelessly via the Daymak Drive controller."

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original source Gizmag

Highrise: Out My Window nominated for Digital Emmy

As reported by CBC News, Highrise: Out My Window, an NFB produced multimedia documentary (see Yonge Street's feature from November), has been nominated for an International Digital Emmy. Created by Toronto artists and filmmakers, the online documentary explores life in high-rise apartments in cities around the world.

"Highrise: Out My Window, a Canadian multimedia art project that explores life in high-rise apartments, has earned a nomination for the International Digital Emmy Awards."

"Under the direction of filmmaker Katerina Cizek and advisers from the NFB, the online project showcased the residents of 13 apartments in cities such as Amsterdam, Toronto and Havana and presented the footage in a feature-length web documentary as well as in live presentations and on-site installations. The production, the NFB's first nomination for a Digital Emmy, is a contender in the category of digital program: non-fiction..."

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original source CBC News

Huffington Post hails arts integration in Toronto

The Huffington Post writes on Toronto's influential "Learning Through the Arts" (LTTA) program, the arts integration program launched almost 20 years ago by The Royal Conservatory of Music. LTTA, which forges partnerships with schools across Canada, facilitates arts integration by bringing artist-educators into schools, training teachers, and creating arts inspired lesson plans underpinned by academic research.

"There are of course a lot of other reasons to admire [Toronto] which is the cultural, entertainment and financial capital of Canada, and home to more than 2.7 million people, but now another accolade can be added: It has one of the most comprehensive art integration efforts reinventing education in the world."

"The Royal Conservatory of Music based in Toronto, launched "Learning Through the Arts" (LTTA), almost 20 years ago, and they can claim the high ground when talking about preparing the workforce of the future."

"According to Donna Takacs, Managing Director of LTTA, "programs are being implemented across Canada, in (a few places) the US and in about a dozen other countries... LTTA is one of the most extensive differentiated instruction programs in the world."

"�arts integration works and the LTTA program proves it. All LTTA's programs are underpinned by academic research, which show that LATT students score considerably higher in math tests than non-LATT students. Literacy tests also improved, student engagement increased and dropout rates declined."

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original source Huffington Post

Toronto mitten company gets international endorsements

As reported by the Toronto Star MimiTENS--a Toronto company that makes childproof, stay-on mittens--has had a year of international recognition. While the company first went global in 2007, it was only this winter that MimiTens attracted coveted celebrity endorsements and international attention, from Gwyneth Paltrow's website Goop to Vogue Italia to Netherlands' lifestyle website goodsense.nu.

"Anna-Maria Mountfort, 38, created a decorated mitt connected to a long, knit sleeve that runs up the child's arm, almost to the elbow. It is virtually impossible to shake them off, says Mountfort, who got the idea in 2005, constructed a prototype the following year and began marketing the idea almost immediately. She calls her company MimiTENS, a play on the French mes mitaines: my mittens."

"Building a company on the premise of unmovable mittens with no strings attached has kept Mountfort busy for more than five years. "It went global in the first year," she says."

"This winter, Mountfort campaigned to attract high-profile celebrity endorsements, courting big names like Oprah Winfrey and Gwyneth Paltrow...Paltrow's people included the mittens in the most recent instalment of GOOP, the actor's lifestyle newsletter that promotes her brand of the good life under headings such as make, go, get, do, be and see."

"Mountfort is thrilled to be recognized. Paltrow is an inspiration, she says. "She seems really happy and well balanced and this is the kind of thing that drives other people nuts," says Mountfort. "I applaud her for being herself. She doesn't sell ads and she doesn't trade in making people feel bad."

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original source Toronto Star

Toronto's Spin Master earns buzz at New York Toy Fair

As reported by Canadian Business, Toronto-based toy company Spin Master received high-praise at this year's New York Toy Fair. Popular Science singled-out two Spin Master toys--a new set of trading card called Redekai and the Air Hogs Hyperactive remote control car--as among the best 12 new toys featured at the annual event.

"Spin Master believes the [Redekai] cards will be the biggest trading cards since Pokemon and deliver the company its most lucrative hit since Bakugan. They use what the company calls 3Dmatick technology to display animation and automatically track the progress players are making without the need for pen and paper."

"It's completely innovative and will revolutionize the trading card category, even more than Bakugan did to marbles," vice-president Harold Chizick said in an in interview."

"Chizick said the entries, along with girl's jewelry accessory Bizu and the remote control vehicles tied to the upcoming Cars 2 movie, have given Spin Master its best show in its 16-year history."

"Privately held Spin Master is Canada's largest toy maker and the fourth largest in North America."

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original source Canadian Business Online


How Canadian researchers hope to delay onset of Alzheimer's

As reported by the Globe & Mail, Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health is on the forefront of promising new research on ways to slow the onset of Alzheimer's disease. In a paper published recently in the Archives of General Psychiatry, CAMH scientists describe their hope that boosting the production of a specific gene central to memory and learning, could delay the onset of Alzheimer's by keeping brain cells healthy for longer.

"A gene that plays a role in memory and learning also shapes the architecture of the aging brain in ways that may make people more vulnerable to Alzheimer's disease, a team of Toronto researchers has discovered."

"Aristotle Voineskos of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health said the gene causes subtle weaknesses in areas of the brain that are the first to be affected by Alzheimer's. It is a common variant, carried by well over half the population, and is probably one of many risk factors related to the disease."

"If we can manipulate it, we might be able to keep brain cells healthy for longer," he said."About 500,000 Canadians have Alzheimer's and related dementias and that number is expected to double within 20 years. There is evidence that the brain damage that is characteristic of the disease begins long before people begin to experience memory loss."

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original source Globe & Mail


CivicAction holds Greater Toronto Summit 2011

Toronto's CivicAction Alliance recently brought over 700 Toronto-region leaders together for a two day conference on the most pressing issues facing the GTA. On the table were some of Toronto's greatest challenges from transportation to a changing economy. As well as its most exciting assets, from cultural diversity to a thriving arts and culture scene. In the coming months, a report synthesising the much-needed conference could provide a blueprint for how Toronto can work together for a more prosperous future.

"Born under the leadership of the late David Pecaut as the Toronto City Summit Alliance after a 2002 meeting of civic leaders, CivicAction has proven the power of bringing leadership from every sector to bear on thorny regional challenges. Past summits led to initiatives like the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council to help immigrants get their all-important first Canadian work experience, a task force to address barriers that prevent working-age adults from working, and Luminato, the annual festival of arts and creativity."

"CivicAction's 2007 summit produced Greening Greater Toronto to identify and advance ideas to improve the region's environmental health and related business opportunities. One idea was to get landlords and tenants collaborating to drive down commercial building energy use. Greening Greater Toronto has done this, creating an innovative made-in-Toronto strategy to improve this major driver of carbon emissions and air quality."

"The last summit also resulted in DiverseCity, which helps businesses and other organizations capitalize on our unique cultural diversity, and galvanized CivicAction's Emerging Leaders Network � a powerhouse of 350 up-and-coming civic leaders who are spearheading their own projects on issues like economic development, sustainability and municipal electoral reform."

"These and other CivicAction projects have demonstrated the potential of collaborative leadership. They have also shown that social, economic and environmental issues do not respect municipal borders, and neither do the lives of most Toronto region residents. Many of us live in one municipality and work in another, and we regularly travel across the region for events or to visit friends and family.The message going into the summit is clear. On every major issue the Toronto region faces, we need the strong leadership of people from all walks of life and to take a regional and better coordinated approach so that we create more coherent, efficient and effective responses. Now it is up to the summit delegates and other Toronto region leaders to make that happen."

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original source Toronto Star
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