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McMaster-based institutes receive nearly $10M from Canada Foundation for Innovation

CRDCN has been awarded $5.9M to allow its 1,500 researchers from across the country to advance their understanding of key research questions and inform critical areas of public policy. Hosted by McMaster University, the CRDCN is a partnership between a consortium of Canadian universities and Statistics Canada, including the Research Data Centre at McMaster.

Jan 09, 2017

Two McMaster-based institutes have received a combined investment of nearly $10M from the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI).

The awards, funded through CFI’s Major Science Initiative (MSI) Fund, were announced today by Canada’s Minister of Science, the Honourable Kirsty Duncan. MSI funding ensures Canada’s large, complex research facilities that serve communities of researchers have the support they need to continue to operate at the cutting edge.

The Canadian Research Data Centre Network (CRDCN) – headquartered at McMaster since 2010 – was awarded $5.9M to allow its 1,500 researchers from the 27 university-based facilities across the country to advance their understanding of key research questions and inform critical areas of public policy.

CRDCN’s Executive Director, Martin Taylor, says the funding helps the Network in two ways.  “This investment both augments and complements core funding previously awarded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC); but more than that, it signals that the CRDCN is one of Canada’s premier platforms to support advanced social sciences and health research in Canada.”

Hosted by McMaster University, the CRDCN is a partnership between a consortium of Canadian universities and Statistics Canada, co-funded by CIHR and SSHRC as well as the CFI.  It facilitates access to Statistics Canada’s microdata, including census, social and health surveys, as well as an increasing number of administrative data files.

McMaster’s Vice-President of Research, Rob Baker, says CFI’s investment – in both basic and social science – epitomizes the breadth of McMaster’s expertise and the promise of its researchers to drive Canada’s innovation and economy.

“This funding is secured for projects that will strengthen Canada’s national and unique research facilities.  It’s specifically designed to bolster world-class research and, the fact that McMaster has received funding for two very distinct projects, is a testament to our strengths across the disciplines and our central role in training the country’s future leaders.”

The Canadian Centre for Electron Microscopy (CCEM) – which houses some of the world’s most advanced suite of tools and capabilities – received $3.75M guaranteeing the facility and its users will build on the last decade of scientific excellence and remain competitive on the international stage.