CAMPAIGN: Future of Our Planet (2026) Archives - HiveInnovates https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/topic/campaign-future-of-our-planet-2026/ Wed, 22 Apr 2026 18:18:46 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com/cdn-site.mediaplanet.com/app/uploads/sites/114/2019/08/08002146/cropped-Icon-IC-32x32.png CAMPAIGN: Future of Our Planet (2026) Archives - HiveInnovates https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/topic/campaign-future-of-our-planet-2026/ 32 32 Making Climate Knowledge Accessible to the World  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/making-climate-knowledge-accessible-to-the-world/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 16:14:29 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65236 Sophia Kianni shares how translating climate information, empowering young leaders, and building inclusive communication systems can strengthen climate action worldwide. 

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Sophia Kianni shares how translating climate information, empowering young leaders, and building inclusive communication systems can strengthen climate action worldwide. 

What problem in the climate movement led you to build Climate Cardinals, and how has that mission evolved as the organization has grown?

I started Climate Cardinals after realizing that most climate information exists in English, while most of the world does not. When I visited family in Iran, I saw firsthand how communities on the frontlines of climate change couldn’t access basic information about what was happening or what they could do. Billions of people were excluded from the conversations, not because they didn’t care, but because they didn’t have access. The truth is that climate change is a global crisis, yet the knowledge needed to understand and address it is concentrated in one language. 

At first, our mission at Climate Cardinals was simple: translate climate resources into as many languages as possible. What began as a student-led initiative with $500 and a Google Form has grown into one of the largest youth-led climate education organizations in the world. Today, we have mobilized 19,000+ volunteers across 145 countries, launched 85 active chapters globally (84% based in the Global South), and cumulatively translated over 4 million words of climate content into 30+ languages. 

As we’ve grown, our mission has evolved from simply translating content to building infrastructure for inclusive climate communication. We now train fellows through a 14-module leadership curriculum, with 20 fellows in our current cohort and 270 trained to date. Ninety-two per cent of our fellows have reported increased civic capacity. The deeper mission is language justice, ensuring that people everywhere can participate in climate conversations, policymaking, and solutions. 

Access to information by simply translating is just the tip of the iceberg. The deeper mission is language justice, ensuring communities can not only understand climate science, but use it to advocate, organize, and lead. Today, that work is powered by a growing team of four full-time staff, alongside fellows and thousands of volunteers building climate resilience worldwide. 

Climate Cardinals addresses language barriers in climate communication. How do gaps in access to information shape who gets to participate in climate action—and who gets left out?

Access to information determines who has access to power. If climate science, funding opportunities, and policy discussions are primarily published in English, then participation becomes limited to a small fraction of the world. Information gaps determine who can apply for grants, who can influence policy, and who can organize locally. When people don’t have access to credible, localized climate information, engagement can deteriorate. Entire communities, often those who are most impacted, are excluded from shaping the solutions. 

Language barriers don’t just limit awareness, but they also limit leadership. They reinforce inequity. They limit whose ideas get funded and whose stories get heard. They limit representation. If we want a global climate movement, it can’t operate in just one language. 

Where do you think youth-led climate movements are most effective today, and where do they still face real limitations? 

Youth-led climate movements are incredibly effective at mobilizing quickly, building global networks, and ultimately shifting narratives. Because young people understand digital platforms intuitively, they are incredibly powerful in driving public awareness, using digital platforms to scale messaging globally in ways institutions often can’t. In just five years, we’ve grown to 19,000+ volunteer sign-ups and built a chapter network spanning six continents. 

But the limitations still exist in structural power. Youth leaders often lack access to capital, formal political authority, and long-term institutional support. Momentum, therefore, can be high, but sustainability is difficult without infrastructure. 

The next step of youth climate leadership isn’t just amplifying youth voices; it’s policy design, entrepreneurship, institutional leadership, and capital allocation. Through our Fellowship Program, 82% of fellows reported that their experience influenced their academic or professional goals. I believe it is truly urgent to continuously embed youth into systems of governance and long-term decision-making. 

With climate urgency increasing alongside public fatigue, what approaches do you believe are most effective in sustaining meaningful engagement and long-term action?

Fear alone doesn’t sustain movements; agency does. When climate change feels overwhelming or abstract, people disengage. But when information is localized, accessible, and connected to their lived experience, engagement becomes personal. 

At Climate Cardinals, that meant breaking language barriers so more communities could access and act on climate knowledge. But we also need clear pathways for action, tangible roles for individuals, and systems that allow better choices to be made more easily. Long-term engagement relies on progress that people feel they can participate in through everyday decisions. 

That philosophy has influenced my work beyond Climate Cardinals as well. At Phia, we are proactive in creating avenues that make sustainable choices easier, clearer, and more intuitive. Overconsumption and waste are systemic drivers of emissions; technology, therefore, shouldn’t just make it easier to buy, it should make it easier to decide. 

We need to move from doom to direction—from telling people how bad things are to showing them where they can lead. Long-term action happens when people feel not just informed, but empowered to act in ways that fit into their daily lives. 


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Why Experiencing Nature Is the First Step to Protecting It  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/why-experiencing-nature-is-the-first-step-to-protecting-it/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 16:09:22 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65232 Through his lens, Paul Zizka invites people into fragile wilderness and reflects on how art, restraint, and firsthand experience can inspire stronger environmental stewardship.

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Through his lens, Paul Zizka invites people into fragile wilderness and reflects on how art, restraint, and firsthand experience can inspire stronger environmental stewardship.

How has spending time in remote and fragile environments shaped your view of nature and our responsibility to protect it? 

It’s only through spending time in those special places that I’ve gained a true appreciation for their fragility and remoteness. By committing the time and engaging with these environments through the lens, I strengthen that connection and my desire to preserve them, and become a better, more acute observer. 

How do you hope your images inspire people to take action toward conservation and protecting the planet? 

I believe appreciation is the first step toward preservation. When we experience a place deeply, we develop a desire to protect it so others can feel that same sense of wonder. My hope is that my images invite people into wild, beautiful landscapes and spark the kinds of experiences that lead to care, connection and stewardship. 

How do you ensure your photography practice respects these environments, and what lessons can other creatives take from this approach when engaging in nature?

I do my best to leave as little trace as possible, moving through places in a way that preserves both their physical integrity and their sense of wildness for those who follow. Many of the landscapes I work in are fragile and vulnerable to human impact, and when I can’t operate without leaving a lasting mark, I believe it’s important to have the restraint and integrity to stay away. Some places, especially the most sensitive ones, are simply not meant to be photographed. 

What advice would you give for fostering a deeper connection with nature, and how can this inspire more sustainable choices in everyday life? 

If you want to foster a deeper connection with nature, you have to make time for it—even when that means sacrificing other things. I recommend people consider heightening their experience by engaging in some form of art that encourages them to notice the small things, whether it’s through painting, photography or writing. But simply being in the landscape works, too. It’s that personal experience that ultimately inspires more thoughtful, sustainable choices in everyday life. 


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Forests for the Future: Canada’s Path to Climate Resilience  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/forests-for-the-future-canadas-path-to-climate-resilience/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:57:37 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65219 Canada’s forests are powerful allies in the fight against climate change but only if managed responsibly. FSC is helping Canadians understand that sustainable forestry is a real climate solution. Canada’s forests are more than landscapes — they are our identity, our climate allies, and our legacy. From coast to coast, forests sustain wildlife, regulate water, and store immense amounts of carbon. Yet their … Continued

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Canada’s forests are powerful allies in the fight against climate change but only if managed responsibly. FSC is helping Canadians understand that sustainable forestry is a real climate solution.

Canada’s forests are more than landscapes — they are our identity, our climate allies, and our legacy. From coast to coast, forests sustain wildlife, regulate water, and store immense amounts of carbon. Yet their future depends on one crucial factor: how responsibly we manage and source products that come from the forest. 

That’s where the Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) comes in. For over 30 years, FSC has set the global gold standard for responsible forestry ensuring that wood, paper, and other forest-based products bearing the FSC check-tree logo come from forests where biodiversity, Indigenous rights, and worker well-being are safeguarded. 

How to Recognize an FSC-Certified Product 

Look for the check-tree logo. The FSC symbol appears on everything from lumber to furniture to paper. It means the product came from responsibly managed forests verified by independent audits. 

There are three label types: 

  1. FSC 100% – products which are made of 100% virgin material from FSC-certified forests. 
  1. FSC MIX — products which are made with a combination of FSC virgin fibre, and/or recycled materials with controlled virgin fibre. 
  1. FSC Recycled — products which are made with 100% recycled fibre, including both pre- and post-consumer waste. The mobius loop in the top left-hand corner identifies the percentage of recycled fibre. 

How FSC is adding quantifiable data to forestry as a climate solution 

Responsible forestry isn’t just an ethical choice; it’s a climate solution. Research commissioned by FSC Canada and FSC US shows that forests in Canada managed to FSC standards store 0.28 Tonnes CO2e per acre more carbon than forests managed with common practices. Natural Resources Canada further recognizes that improved forest management and increased carbon storage in forests and wood products are important tools to help meet Canada’s greenhouse gas reduction goals on the path to netzero emissions by 2050. 

Through programs such as  Verified Impact, FSC helps forest managers and investors measure, validate, and communicate real environmental impacts — like carbon storage, water protection, and biodiversity conservation. This transparency strengthens accountability and helps businesses demonstrate how their actions contribute to tangible climate outcomes.  

Indigenous leadership and knowledge are also integral to FSC Canada’s work. By weaving traditional ecological practices with scientific methods, these collaborations are redefining what forest resilience looks like. 

Choosing FSC-certified products is one of the simplest and most meaningful ways Canadians can protect forests. Whether building a home, buying furniture, or choosing paper products, the FSC logo signals that your purchase helps sustain forests that, in turn, sustain us. 

This Earth Day, and every day, Canadians can take one small but powerful step: choose products marked with the FSC logo. Because every choice, and every forest, matters for the future of our planet. 


Buy FSC-certified wood and paper products. Learn more today.  

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How EPRA Is Building a More Accessible Electronics Recycling System  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/how-epra-is-building-a-more-accessible-electronics-recycling-system/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:42:14 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65214 Recycle My Electronics programs offer safe, secure electronics recycling for Canadian residents, businesses, and the environment. As an award-winning, industry-led, not-for-profit organization, the Electronic Products Recycling Association (EPRA) has been setting the standard for safe, secure electronics recycling in Canada for the past 15 years through its Recycle My Electronics programs.  Recycle My Electronics programs … Continued

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Cliff Hacking

President & CEO,  Electronic Products Recycling Association


Recycle My Electronics programs offer safe, secure electronics recycling for Canadian residents, businesses, and the environment.

As an award-winning, industry-led, not-for-profit organization, the Electronic Products Recycling Association (EPRA) has been setting the standard for safe, secure electronics recycling in Canada for the past 15 years through its Recycle My Electronics programs. 

Recycle My Electronics programs have recycled over 1.4 million tonnes of electronics, diverting them from landfill and illegal export. Whether it’s providing residents with convenient drop-off locations or offering customized electronics recycling solutions for businesses, EPRA helps Canadians make a positive impact on the environment. When it comes to recycling electronics and small countertop appliances, the message is simple: Bring It.

A national collection network

EPRA’s Recycle My Electronics programs continue to make electronics recycling convenient for Canadians, regardless of where they live. With an extensive network of over 3,200 drop-off locations across the country, the programs make recycling electronics safe, secure, and easy for both residents and businesses. 

“Recycle My Electronics programs offer accessible electronics recycling through a national network of approved drop-off locations, as well as special collection events and business pick-ups,” says Cliff Hacking, the founding president and CEO of EPRA. “Accessibility is central to our mandate, whether it’s in an urban centre or a remote community.” 

Responsible recycling and compliance

Recycling with EPRA ensures devices are diverted from landfills and recycled responsibly for sustainable material recovery, including plastic, glass, gold, silver, and copper, all of which can be recovered and reused without losing their properties and reintegrated back into the manufacturing supply chain.

Many Recycle My Electronics programs are also expanding their list of obligated products accepted for recycling. This ensures diversion of e-waste from landfills and contributes to the circular economy.

EPRA has been named a SERI Champion of Electronics Sustainability, a designation that highlights the company’s industry-leading commitment to responsible electronics reuse, recycling, and circularity. The recognition reflects EPRA’s longstanding work to integrate the Responsible Recycling (R2) standard into its recycling operations, ensuring used electronics are managed with environmental and data security compliance. 


To learn more about what and where to recycle, visit recyclemyelectronics.ca.

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Working Together to Build Long-term Forest Resilience https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/working-together-to-build-long-term-forest-resilience/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:35:48 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65205 Forests Canada is creating a National Working Group on Post-Fire Forest Recovery Practices to improve outcomes for Canada’s forests. Canada’s forest landscapes are experiencing unprecedented impacts from wildfire, creating urgent and complex challenges for post-fire recovery, regeneration, and long-term forest resilience. To support coordinated national action, knowledge exchange, and the development of best practices for forest resilience, national charity Forests Canada is establishing a National Working Group on … Continued

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Jess Kaknevicius

Chief Executive Officer, Forests Canada


Forests Canada is creating a National Working Group on Post-Fire Forest Recovery Practices to improve outcomes for Canada’s forests.

Canada’s forest landscapes are experiencing unprecedented impacts from wildfire, creating urgent and complex challenges for post-fire recovery, regeneration, and long-term forest resilience. To support coordinated national action, knowledge exchange, and the development of best practices for forest resilience, national charity Forests Canada is establishing a National Working Group on Post-Fire Forest Recovery Practices

Last year, Forests Canada supported the planting of over four million trees across the country, with more than two million being planted to restore forests ravaged by storms, invasive species, and wildfires.  

“There is a need for national dialogue to share best practices and new approaches to ensure we are creating the most resilient forests possible,” Jess Kaknevicius, Chief Executive Officer, Forests Canada, says. “There are so many questions this national working group will explore: How are we prioritizing what gets planted after wildfires? Are species selections changing and can the supply chain handle it? What unique training do planters need? How are planting plans evolving to ensure better long-term outcomes?” 

In the last three years alone, the demand for Forests Canada’s restoration expertise, science-based data analysis, and investment in forest recovery efforts has increased significantly – and one of the driving factors of that increase has been the devastating impacts of recent wildfires.  

“With this new National Working Group, we will be able to gain new insights from a diverse group of participants so that we can all work together to help create lasting and positive outcomes for Canada’s forests,” Val Deziel, restoration ecologist and Director of Restoration Ecology and Research, Forests Canada, says.


To support the health and sustainability of Canada’s forests, including post-fire restoration initiatives, visit www.ForestsCanada.ca.

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Out of Sight Isn’t Out of Mind: Why Businesses Need to Ask Harder Questions About Recycling https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/out-of-sight-isnt-out-of-mind-why-businesses-need-to-ask-harder-questions-about-recycling/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:28:19 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65195 As sustainability expectations rise, waste-to-landfill is no longer just an operational issue: it’s a matter of accountability and oversight. For many organizations, their recyclable materials disappear the moment a truck pulls away from the loading dock. But that journey — and whether the material is truly recycled — often remains cloudy and largely invisible to … Continued

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Tullio Bugada

CEO, Waste Reduction Group


As sustainability expectations rise, waste-to-landfill is no longer just an operational issue: it’s a matter of accountability and oversight.

For many organizations, their recyclable materials disappear the moment a truck pulls away from the loading dock. But that journey — and whether the material is truly recycled — often remains cloudy and largely invisible to the businesses that generate it.

Across Canada’s commercial sector, companies are increasingly expected to account for their environmental footprint. While the government continues to introduce more environmental regulations, such as Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), responsibility for properly diverting recyclable materials from landfills is still being passed on from facility to service providers. In practice, many businesses and institutions frequently rely on service providers to manage the process with little verification or documentation.

“It may just be that these organizations that generate recyclable materials aren’t thinking about it at all,” says Tullio Bugada, CEO of Toronto-based waste and recycling management company, Waste Reduction Group. “They’re either knowingly or unknowingly handing off responsibility and accountability to their service provider.”

The accountability gap

That lack of oversight can create a gap between intention and outcome. Businesses often invest a lot of time and resources into sorting recycling internally, only for those materials to be consolidated and disposed as waste further down the chain. Because waste moves through a network of collectors, transfer stations and processing facilities, its final destination can become difficult to trace. 

The challenge is particularly evident with materials that are harder or more expensive to recycle — such as mixed recyclables (metal, glass, and plastics) and organic waste. While high-value materials like scrap metal or cardboard are almost always recovered because of their inherent financial value, other recycling streams can be more complicated. 

“Certain materials are simply more expensive to process properly than to send to landfill,” Tullio explains. In major urban regions such as the Greater Toronto Area, limited infrastructure can further complicate matters. Facilities capable of processing mixed recyclables or organics are relatively few and far between, meaning material handling costs are higher, and hauling the material is more time-consuming and costly. In fact, the cost to recycle materials or compost organics can be up to 50 per cent higher than waste-to-landfill.

At the same time, the regulatory environment is evolving quickly. Government Policies such as the Environmental Protection Act and the recently introduced Extended Producer Responsibility Act are intended to place greater accountability on the organizations that generate waste in the first place. As sustainability reporting and ESG commitments expand, transparency around waste and recycling streams is increasingly becoming a matter of governance and risk management — not simply environmental optics.

Making recyclables visible

For businesses, the first step toward accountability is understanding where their materials actually go. According to Tullio, organizations should be able to verify where their waste and recycling material is delivered and request documentation from their service providers to confirm that the loads reach legitimate recycling or composting facilities.

“Real responsibility and leadership starts with asking more from your waste and recycling service providers,” he says. “They should be sharing contamination photos and material delivery tickets, and arrange site visits to recycling facilities.”  

Providing that level of transparency and assurance is central to the approach taken by Waste Reduction Group for the past 25 years. The company works with some of the most sustainable organizations, ranging from universities, hospitals and commercial property owners to small businesses, helping them design custom waste diversion programs and tracking where their materials ultimately end up. By providing their expertise, guidance, traceability, and documentation on proper sorting and contamination standards, Waste Reduction Group helps clients ensure that waste, recycling and organics programs function as intended.

As expectations and public accountability around sustainability continue to grow, analysts say businesses can no longer afford to treat recycling and waste management as an afterthought. The organizations that ask the right questions — and demand clear answers — won’t just meet expectations; they’ll set a new standard for accountability in how recycling is managed.



For organizations looking to better understand and take responsibility for all of their waste streams, visit wastereductiongroup.ca.

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Cleared for Climate : Canada’s Airways Take on Clean Flight  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/cleared-for-climate-canadas-airways-take-on-clean-flight/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:54:21 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65160 Air travel didn’t always get attention for its negative climate impact. In fact, for decades, emissions were minimal. Things changed in the late 1930s when commercial planes allowed more people to fly and cargo planes became common, then jet planes came in the 1960s, and deregulation in 1978 stopped the government from controlling airlines’ prices … Continued

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Terran Fielder

Media Specialist, EARTHDAY.ORG 


Air travel didn’t always get attention for its negative climate impact. In fact, for decades, emissions were minimal.

Things changed in the late 1930s when commercial planes allowed more people to fly and cargo planes became common, then jet planes came in the 1960s, and deregulation in 1978 stopped the government from controlling airlines’ prices and routes, allowing more airlines to compete and reducing airfare costs. Suddenly everyone was in the air and aviation waste and carbon emissions skyrocketed. Today, aviation produces roughly 2–2.5% of global carbon dioxide and about 4% of human-caused warming. 

A stark reality is that in much of Canada, flying is essential. From northern communities to cross-country business routes, aviation keeps the nation connected. The challenge we seek to mitigate isn’t whether Canadians will fly; it’s how to make those flights cleaner and smarter. 

Put Your Emissions Where Your Engines Are 

One thing we don’t talk about enough is how much progress is being made. Modern aircrafts are about 70% more fuel-efficient than they were 40 years ago, and over the past decade we have found ways to make planes 20% more efficient. 

Many Canadian airlines are also taking big steps to reduce their emissions. For instance, Air Canada is aiming to cut 20% of emissions from flights and 30% from airport operations by 2030, as they pursue the goal of net-zero emissions by 2050. They are putting their money where their mouth is, with a $50 million fund supporting cleaner aircraft, carbon reduction strategies, and sustainable aviation fuel (SAF); a lower-carbon alternative that can cut emissions by up to 80%. 

The hurdle? SAF still makes up less than 1% of global jet fuel, so scaling it will take more investment and infrastructure. 

Fueling Change on the Tarmac 

Canada’s airports are stepping up, too. Operators are upgrading heating and cooling systems to be energy efficient, swapping diesel vehicles for electric ones, recycling construction materials, and using safer firefighting foams that no longer contain PFAS; “forever chemicals” that can build up in our bodies and are linked to a plethora of health issues. Twenty Canadian airports are participating in international carbon accreditation programs, measuring emissions, reporting publicly, and taking action to reduce their footprint. 

Passenger Power 

The people who make planes and airports are trying to help, but they cannot do it alone. That’s where consumers have power. Choosing non-stop flights, flying economy, packing lighter, or combining trips sends clear signals to airlines and policymakers that we value less emissions and waste in our air travel. 

That’s why the 2026 Earth Day theme from EARTHDAY.ORG is “Our Power, Our Planet,” a reminder that environmental progress can be made when people work together. 

Aviation keeps Canada connected, and Canadians can help make those connections cleaner and smarter, one decision at a time. 


Learn more at EARTHDAY.ORG.

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How One Firm Supports Sustainable, Socially Responsible Infrastructure https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/how-one-firm-supports-sustainable-socially-responsible-infrastructure/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:46:11 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65150 One of Canada’s leading engineering firms is advancing an approach to infrastructure that’s grounded in asset durability, data-driven decisions, and long-term sustainability. Canada’s infrastructure is aging rapidly. With only 55 per cent of core assets rated as being in “good” or “very good” condition and an estimated $300 billion needed for repairs and replacement, the … Continued

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Bernard Gaudreault

Director of Asset Management, Norda Stelo

Sophie Boisvert

Director of Asset Durability, Norda Stelo


One of Canada’s leading engineering firms is advancing an approach to infrastructure that’s grounded in asset durability, data-driven decisions, and long-term sustainability.

Canada’s infrastructure is aging rapidly. With only 55 per cent of core assets rated as being in “good” or “very good” condition and an estimated $300 billion needed for repairs and replacement, the situation is dire.  

Norda Stelo, a purpose-driven engineering and consulting firm, champions a new approach to closing Canada’s infrastructure investment gap — one grounded in creating not just economic value, but also social and environmental value.

“Assets are reaching a point where failures can disrupt services, and that’s a big risk for our society,” says Bernard Gaudreault, Norda Stelo’s Director of Asset Management. “The cost of failure can also be 5 to 15 times the cost of doing the work before it fails.”

“We cannot build anew every time,” says Sophie Boisvert, Norda Stelo’s Director of Asset Durability.

Instead, the greatest value is found in extending the life of assets, acting early to avoid major failures, and preventing unnecessary replacements. This route has a significantly lower carbon footprint, supporting sustainability goals.

The approach is rooted in asset durability — infrastructure’s capacity to deliver reliable service throughout its lifecycle while meeting safety, resilience, and performance standards.

Data also plays a central role, and its quality and consistency are crucial. 

“Data lets us assess risks in aging infrastructure and make smarter decisions and investment planning,” says Boisvert.

Closing Canada’s infrastructure investment gap isn’t about building more; it’s about better management through disciplined prioritization, resilient design, and long-term value-based decisions.


To learn more, visit norda.com/en/our-solutions/asset-management.

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Where Fashion, Climate, and Justice Intersect  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/where-fashion-climate-and-justice-intersect/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:35:26 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65142 Aditi Mayer explores how labor rights, environmental impact, and storytelling are reshaping the future of fashion—and why true sustainability starts with people. 

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Aditi Mayer explores how labor rights, environmental impact, and storytelling are reshaping the future of fashion—and why true sustainability starts with people. 

How do sustainability, fashion, social justice, and climate action intersect in your work to shape more conscious consumer behavior? 

My entry point into sustainability began with labor justice. As a college student, I was deeply affected by the Rana Plaza collapse, which exposed the human cost behind the global fashion industry. That moment pushed me to begin organizing with garment workers in Los Angeles’ garment district, and today I serve on the board of the Garment Worker Center. 

That experience shaped how I understand sustainability: you cannot talk about protecting the planet without also protecting the people who make our clothes. 

Fashion sits at the intersection of environmental impact and human labor. The same systems that extract resources from the earth often exploit the workers who produce garments. Through my photography, writing, and design work, I try to illuminate those relationships—from cotton fields to factory floors to artisan workshops. 

When consumers understand the human and ecological stories embedded in what they wear, consumption begins to shift. Sustainability becomes less about buying a “green” product and more about restoring dignity to the entire system. 

What changes in the fashion industry are most urgent to better protect both people and the planet?

The most urgent shift the fashion industry must make is moving away from a system built on speed and overproduction. 

Today’s fashion economy prioritizes volume above all else—producing enormous quantities of garments at the lowest possible cost. This model places immense pressure on workers while also driving environmental degradation, from water pollution to textile waste. 

We need structural change that re-centres value around craftsmanship, durability, and transparency. That means investing in regional supply chains, supporting fiber agriculture, and ensuring garment workers are paid living wages. 

Ultimately, the future of fashion cannot be defined by producing more. It must be defined by producing with intention. 

How have traditional practices you’ve encountered through your work in India shaped your understanding of sustainability today? 

Working with textile communities in India has profoundly shaped how I think about sustainability. 

For the past five years, I’ve been collaborating with farmers and artisans in Punjab to help revive nearly lost indigenous cotton and rebuild local handloom supply chains that once sustained the region’s textile economy. The effort faced significant structural barriers—from the dominance of industrial cotton varieties to the loss of spinning and weaving infrastructure over decades. 

In many ways, the work has involved rebuilding an ecosystem that had nearly disappeared. 

That work is now evolving into my platform, The Artisan Archive, which is launching its first clothing collection rooted in those revived systems. The garments are made from handwoven cotton produced through years of capacity building—supporting farmers to grow heritage cotton varieties and working with artisans to rebuild knowledge that had been pushed to the margins. 

These traditions reveal that sustainability isn’t a new innovation—it’s a lineage. Many craft practices were already designed around local ecologies, slower production cycles, and garments meant to last. In many ways, the future of sustainable fashion may depend on remembering the systems we once had—and learning how to support them again.

How can photography and journalism drive meaningful, real-world action for environmental change?

Photography and journalism have the power to make distant crises feel personal and immediate. 

Climate change is often discussed through statistics and projections, but storytelling reminds us what is actually at stake: people, places, and ways of life. When we document the lived experiences of communities on the frontlines—from farmers navigating shifting seasons to artisans preserving endangered knowledge—we move the conversation from abstraction to empathy. 

That shift matters. Policy change and consumer awareness are often catalyzed by stories that help people see themselves within a larger narrative. 

For me, photography and journalism are tools of translation—bridging the gap between local experience and global understanding, and helping audiences recognize that environmental stewardship is a shared responsibility. 

Storytelling alone cannot solve the climate crisis, but it can change how we see the systems that shape our lives—and that shift in perspective is often where real change begins. 


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Building a Resilient Future for Canadian Agriculture  https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/environment/future-of-our-planet-2026/building-a-resilient-future-for-canadian-agriculture/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 20:27:28 +0000 https://www.innovatingcanada.ca/?p=65138 Heath MacDonald discusses how innovation, sustainable practices, and collaboration are helping farmers strengthen resilience while supporting Canada’s climate and food security goals. 

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The Honourable Heath MacDonald

Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food


Heath MacDonald discusses how innovation, sustainable practices, and collaboration are helping farmers strengthen resilience while supporting Canada’s climate and food security goals. 

As Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, how do you see Canada’s agriculture sector contributing to the country’s broader climate and sustainability goals?

Canadian farmers are the cornerstone of our national food security, and their economic and environmental resilience is essential to Canada’s food supply. 

Over the years, farmers across Canada have faced severe droughts, wildfires, flooding, and storms that have taken a heavy toll on their crops, livestock, and livelihoods. From Prince Edward Island to British Columbia, and everywhere in between, farmers and ranchers continue to confront significant challenges that threaten their operations and long-term resilience. 

Despite these challenges, farmers across the country are adopting innovative practices and clean technologies that reduce emissions, enhance soil and water stewardship, and strengthen biodiversity—playing a vital role in helping Canada meet its climate and sustainability goals while growing our economy. 

More than ever, governments and industry need to work together to help farmers strengthen their resilience and stability by investing in agricultural innovation, removing barriers to trade, and cutting red tape. 

What steps is the federal government taking to support farmers as they transition toward more sustainable and climate-resilient practices and technologies?

The Government of Canada is investing in innovations and technologies that are helping farmers reduce their environmental footprint—while keeping their businesses strong and growing. 

For instance, our On-Farm Climate Action Fund has already helped more than 8,000 Canadian farmers adopt sustainable practices covering almost three million hectares across Canada. 

Sustainable practices, such as nutrient management, cover crops, and rotational grazing, and technologies, including those rooted in precision agriculture, are helping farmers improve soil health, reduce emissions, and capture more carbon while increasing production and saving on input costs. 

We are also working very closely with provinces and territories through the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership to strengthen the competitiveness, innovation, sustainability, and resilience of the agriculture and agri-food sector. This includes programs such as the Resilient Agricultural Landscape Program, which helps producers maintain and improve the resilience of agricultural landscapes by supporting the adoption of on-farm land-use and management practices that maximize benefits for the environment and society. 

How is your department supporting innovation that balances productivity, environmental responsibility, and economic growth? 

We need to recognize that sustainability and economic prosperity go hand-in-hand. 

If we want to build a strong, sustainable economy that strengthens food security, we need to start by supporting farmers. That means looking at sustainability through both an environmental and practice lens. Real progress on resilience happens when solutions work for producers on the ground. 

Effective environmental measures are those that advance environmental goals and reinforce the economic resilience of farm operations. For example, today, almost 75% of field crop area in the west is now under no-till—a farming system that leaves crop residue on the soil to reduce erosion and sequester carbon in the soil—while saving the farmer on input costs such as fuel and labour. 

By forging meaningful partnerships and investments, we will continue to empower innovators across the country to develop and scale the clean technologies that will keep our farms competitive and our environment healthy for generations to come. 

What gives you the most optimism about Canada’s ability to build a resilient and sustainable food system for the next generation?

I’m very optimistic about the future of the agriculture sector! Farming is generational, and producers work incredibly hard to build farms that are stronger and more sustainable for the next generation. 

Thanks to the great work of our farmers, over the past two decades, the GDP of the Canadian agriculture sector has doubled—while net agricultural emissions fell by nine per cent. 

Meanwhile, our agricultural soils have gone from being a carbon emitter to a carbon sink. 

Producers are always looking for new solutions to adapt to current challenges, using the latest technology and knowledge available to improve productivity, conserve the resources on which they depend, and make a good living to ensure a viable industry that feeds Canada and the world. 


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