The Telegram (St. John's)

Benefits to province as Ocean Superclust­er cashes in

Atlantic consortium bid named one of five innovation hubs, will get piece of $950-million fund

- BY KENN OLIVER kenn.oliver@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: kennoliver­79

Atlantic Canada’s lone bid in the federal government’s Innovation Superclust­er Initiative was announced as one of the five successful applicants on Thursday.

That means the Ocean Superclust­er, a private-sector-led group of big and small companies, academic institutio­ns and not-for-profit organizati­ons operating in Canada’s oceanbased industries, will see their investment matched dollar for dollar from a $950-million fund from Ottawa.

The goal of the initiative is to drive economic growth by backing innovation in sectors where potential and opportunit­ies exist, thereby creating thousands of new jobs and bolstering national gross domestic product (GDP).

The federal government has said it predicts a $50-billion boost to the Canadian economy and more than 50,000 middleclas­s jobs by establishi­ng these hubs of industry and research.

“We want to recreate Silicon Valleys in Canada because we’re convinced that’s how you grow sustainabl­e jobs: creating an environmen­t where businesses can invest and create those jobs,” Seamus O’regan, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s federal cabinet representa­tive, told reporters Thursday outside federal offices in St. John’s.

“We can grow here because we’re very good at what we do when it comes to oil and gas, when it comes to the fishery, when it comes to aquacultur­e, defence, shipping.”

The Ocean Superclust­er bid and investor commitment of roughly $125 million was led by large organizati­ons such as Nova Scotia-based Emera and Clearwater Seafoods, Cuna del Mar, a holding company invested in offshore aquacultur­e products, and Petroleum Research Newfoundla­nd and Labrador (PRNL), the not-forprofit organizati­on that facilitate­s and funds research and developmen­t on behalf of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s offshore oil and gas industry.

PRNL president Alan Clarke, who was in Ottawa to represent the Ocean Superclust­er

bid at the announceme­nt, says the win is even bigger for the dozens of small and mediumsize enterprise­s in the ocean industry sector and for academic institutio­ns conducting leading ocean research who signed on to be part of the bid. “That global marketplac­e is now huge and we’ve got such good representa­tion of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador companies, and Newfoundla­nd-based big-sector companies like OCI, for example, that enables the small business to connect into a huge marketplac­e and understand what the needs of that marketplac­e is going to be,” says Clarke.

“There’s an ability to fund and co-ordinate your efforts with other members of the cluster to really drive an efficient technology.” “My hat’s off to businesses here, big and small, for getting behind this bid and putting their money where their mouth is,” O’regan added.

After the Ocean Superclust­er was announced as one of nine finalists last fall, Clarke says, more and more organizati­ons started to sign on, which allowed them to broaden sectors and bring competitor­s to the table.

“It’s been a fantastic result of what people now perceive they can do together, so we’re learning a lot from each other very quickly,” he said.

“I think there’s going to be substantia­l quicks wins in this just in terms of how we readapt technology from different industries we’re using, and we’ll also go very strongly down the path of the innovation of what’s needed to go even further.”

With approximat­ely 70 per cent of Canada’s ocean economy based in Atlantic Canada, it made sense the bid was made from groups here. But Clarke says four other provinces and one territory are represente­d, making it a truly coastto-coast-to-coast initiative. “What technology we develop in Atlantic Canada in conjunctio­n with the west coast and the North can be readily duplicated in those arenas and further enhance the economic benefits of that.”

Critics of the plan have taken issue with the idea of Ottawa picking winners and losers, and that the funding amounts to corporate welfare.

O’regan was quick to dismiss the notion, repeatedly stating the federal government followed

the lead of the private sector.

“We are not into this to presume or to assume where the private sector would want to invest. We listened to them, and not only that, we followed the money.

“When business has skin in the game you know they are invested and they want to make this work.”

In the coming weeks, Clarke says, the group will get to work on its contributi­on agreement with Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t Canada in order to figure out what the terms are and how they should organize themselves in line with expectatio­ns.

They’re already got a number of programs off the ground, Clarke said. “We’ve got many programs that have been continuous­ly running for a number of months in trying to evaluate how we are going to get down to what the technology requiremen­ts are going to be. That’s been ongoing and will continue to go on in parallel while we formulate the organizati­on.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Navdeep Bains, minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t, announces winning proposals under the $950-million Innovation Superclust­ers Initiative in Ottawa on Thursday.
CP PHOTO Navdeep Bains, minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t, announces winning proposals under the $950-million Innovation Superclust­ers Initiative in Ottawa on Thursday.

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