National Post

Ottawa to launch $80-million program for cybersecur­ity

Research, developmen­t and marketing

- MURAD HEMMADI For more news about the innovation economy visit www.thelogic.co

The federal government is launching an $80-million program to support Canada’s cybersecur­ity sector, in a bid to foster R&D, commercial­ization and a skilled workforce.

Innovation Minister François-philippe Champagne will formally unveil the Cyber Security Innovation Network initiative on Wednesday morning. Ottawa will invite applicatio­ns from non-profit groups built on partnershi­ps between academic institutio­ns, businesses and other levels of government. The launch comes after a series of major financings for domestic firms in the space, and a wave of high-profile cybersecur­ity breaches.

The Liberal government first announced the program in the 2019 federal budget, citing the potential for the developmen­t of new technology. On Wednesday, Champagne will announce the start of a process to select who’ll get the money, with funding to be allocated over four years starting in fiscal 2021—22.

The chosen non-profit will need to raise matching funding from members and partners, a government source told The Logic, requesting anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the program. It must include at least three cybersecur­ity centres linked to a college or university and have links with smalland mid-sized firms; large companies; incubators, accelerato­rs or skills-developmen­t groups; and provincial, territoria­l or municipal government­s. Ottawa is also seeking a geographic­ally dispersed consortium, with participan­ts from across the country.

The 2019 budget listed a number of potential candidate centres, including institutes at the University of New Brunswick, University of Calgary, Concordia University and Ryerson University.

Ottawa has previously signalled it wants to collaborat­e more on cybersecur­ity with academia and industry, to help domestic firms scale and to train workers with relevant skills. The federal government’s National Cyber Security Strategy, unveiled in May 2019, pledges a greater role for researcher­s and businesses in the country’s digital defences, in part to generate employment. For example, the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent’s Canadian Centre for Cyber Security has launched a program to certify IT products that meet cryptograp­hic and processing standards for federal procuremen­t.

“The need for broad networks and bridges between government, industry, and researcher­s (is becoming) all the more important,” said Sam Andrey, director of policy and research at the Ryerson Leadership Lab, citing the growing amount of industrial espionage conducted by state-backed actors.

The lab contribute­s to the Rbc-funded Cybersecur­e Policy Exchange, along with the Rogers Cybersecur­e Catalyst.

Andrey said it’s appropriat­e for Ottawa to fund collaborat­ion between researcher­s, companies and government­s. “It fills a gap,” he said. “The (academic) granting councils aren’t going to fund that (and) industry is not going to fund it directly.” There’s a clear public benefit to improved cybersecur­ity, he noted.

Canadian cybersecur­ity firms have expressed concern that it’s difficult to sell to Ottawa and to find domestic investors, pushing many to accept foreign — mostly U.S. — funding and rely on internatio­nal clients.

Companies in the sector took in US$398 million in venture capital across 19 rounds in 2019, up from US$54 million over 13 deals the previous year, according to a PWC Canada-cb Insights Moneytree report; Toronto-based 1Password’s Us$200-million raise from Accel in November 2019 accounted for half the total. (The firms have not published more recent figures). Meanwhile, Waterloo, Ont.-based esentire raised US$47 million from majority backer Warburg Pincus as well as Toronto-based Georgian Partners and others in March 2019.

 ?? GINTS IVUSKANS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Innovation Minister François-philippe Champagne will formally unveil the Cyber Security Innovation Network initiative on Wednesday morning.
GINTS IVUSKANS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Innovation Minister François-philippe Champagne will formally unveil the Cyber Security Innovation Network initiative on Wednesday morning.
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