荔枝视频

April 17, 2025

U荔枝视频 breakfast debate tackles Canadian cleantech

Industry event hosted by Haskayne explores barriers to technology expansion
A group of people stand together in business casual dress
From left: Judy Fairburn, Leah Bortolin, John Redfern and Yrjo Koskinen Omar Abdelwahhab

On April 9, over 100 people from 荔枝视频鈥檚 business community, faculty, staff and students gathered at the Westin in downtown 荔枝视频 to tackle an increasingly urgent problem: how to scale up Canadian cleantech firms. The hosted the event where guests engaged in animated discussions over breakfast before the panel discussion featuring John Redfern, President & CEO at Eavor Technologies Inc. and Judy Fairburn, Co-Founder, General Partner at The51 began. 

Moderated by , BMO Professor of Sustainable and Transition Finance Haskayne, the panelists discussed Alberta鈥檚 entrepreneurial ecosystem for cleantech firms and why Canada struggles to scale up these innovative firms: struggles the panelists have experienced firsthand. 

As an investor, advisor and serial entrepreneur, Redfern drew on his experience founding Eavor Technologies here in Alberta, and why the company looked to Europe when it was time to put ideas into action. 

荔枝视频 is a great place to find angel investors and government support for research and development, but Redfern says, 鈥淚t gets a little more complicated when you start getting into more institutional money.鈥 When it came time to move out of the lab, venture capital (VC) was nowhere to be found and Redfern, 鈥渆nded up going all the way to Singapore to get our VC money.鈥

Fairburn added to that assessment from an investor perspective, saying cleantech here has earned the nickname 鈥榟ardtech鈥 due to the time and resources needed to scale up a cleantech initiative. 鈥淚t can be years and years to build physical facilities, and there鈥檚 lots of complexities,鈥 adding there is a lot of risk involved. 

Another regional barrier is found in how Calgarians categorize themselves. According to Redfern, you鈥檒l find people who say they鈥檙e oil and gas, and you鈥檒l find people who say they鈥檙e entrepreneurs, but so far, we haven鈥檛 seen enough overlap between those categories. 鈥淲e鈥檝e really got to mix the two, which is where you鈥檒l see the success.鈥

What can Canada do better?

Koskinen steered the conversation from the pitfalls and financial roadblocks encountered by Canadian cleantech firms to how we bridge the 鈥榲alley of death鈥 between a startup and a sustainable venture by asking what we must do better here in Alberta to make sure our companies remain Canadian. 

Redfern cut to the chase: 鈥淎lberta is not going to get rich by installing solar paneling made in China. You get rich by being the country that builds those solar panels.鈥 He went on to explain, 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that we focus on things we know we can do better than anyone else in the world. [...] In the case of geothermal, North America is the expert when it comes to drilling wells, so that鈥檚 something we can own.鈥

In addition to focusing on areas of proven expertise, companies should be looking for new opportunities to use that expertise. When it comes to energy, the demands of artificial intelligence are huge, with data centres looking for greater sources of clean power. Fairburn says, 鈥淲hen people see growth opportunity, they will invest.鈥

As the early morning conversation came to a close, both the advantages and barriers of scaling up cleantech firms in Alberta were clear. We know what we鈥檙e good at. We excel in areas of research, development and innovation. Securing the long-term investment needed to bring those ideas to life is a different matter. The problem is, as Redfern puts it, 鈥減eople want to invest in an industry, not an idea.鈥 

The good news is, when it comes to energy, we know that industry better than anyone. Other countries have already figured out investing in Canadian cleantech entrepreneurs is a good idea. It鈥檚 time Canadian investors do the same. 

Listen to the full conversation .

The BMO Professorship in Sustainable and Transition Finance was established at the Haskayne School of Business with a $500,000 gift from BMO. It aims to provide practical applications for oil and gas companies, investors, policymakers, bankers and investment managers. The professorship, led by Dr. Yrjo Koskinen, concentrates on practical solutions for financing instruments, valuations, risk management and corporate finance practices to facilitate the energy transition.