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Those spectacular shooting flames associated with oil and gas production aren’t doing a good enough job of protecting the environment.

Known as flares, they play an important role in the reduction of greenhouse gases fueling climate change by converting methane that would otherwise be released into the atmosphere into much less harmful carbon dioxide (CO2).

An innovative Industry 4.0 company, founded by four Waterloo Engineering alumni, has raised $8.1 million to enhance its capabilities in printed circuit board defect detection.

Based in Kitchener-Waterloo, DarwinAI was started in 2017 by Sheldon Fernandez (BASc ’01, computer engineering), Dr. Mohammad Shafiee (PhD ’17, systems design engineering), Arif Virani (BASc ’05, computer engineering) and Dr. Alexander Wong (BASc ’05, computer engineering, MASc ’07, electrical and computer engineering, PhD ’10, systems design engineering). Wong and Shafiee are also professors at Waterloo.

Three companies founded by Waterloo Engineering alumni have made a national list of artificial intelligence (AI) startups to watch over the next year.

Avidbots Corp., DarwinAI and Otto Motors are among 20 startups highlighted by the Vector Institute, a not-for-profit corporation dedicated to research in the field of AI, on its inaugural Vector AI20 for 2023 list.

A professor at Waterloo Engineering has been named a fellowship inductee by Canada’s longest-standing engineering society.

Dr. Alfred Yu is one of 22 new fellows selected by the Engineering Institute of Canada (EIC) for their “exceptional contributions to engineering.” His official fellowship induction will take place in April at the EIC’s annual gala.

A unique fellowship program for Black and Indigenous scholars was recently named first runner-up by a global group of engineering deans for a coveted diversity award.

The Indigenous and Black Engineering and Technology (IBET) PhD Project, led by Waterloo chemical engineering professor Dr. Tizazu Mekonnen, received first runner-up out of three shortlisted projects for the Global Engineering Deans Council’s (GEDC) Diversity Award.

Researchers at Waterloo Engineering are developing a new patch that would offer diabetics an affordable, accurate, pain-free, round-the-clock alternative to traditional tests that require pricking a finger for a blood sample every few hours.

And to make it even more user-friendly, potentially life-saving readings from the patch would be transmitted to people’s smartphones.

A longtime professor at the School of Architecture at the University of Waterloo has been selected for a lifetime achievement award from a major industry association.

Terri Meyer Boake, who earned two undergraduate degrees at Waterloo and has been a teacher at her alma mater since 1986, will be honoured by the American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC) at a conference in Charlotte, North Carolina in April.

A doctoral student and two professors at Waterloo Engineering are developing new floodplain mapping technology that has the potential to impact flood mitigation and response.

Robert Chlumsky, Dr. James Craig and Dr. Bryan Tolson have launched a startup called Blackbird that received a $15,000 funding boost through a Velocity and Waterloo Commercialization Office (WatCo) program for student researchers, founders and recent graduates who are transforming their research into commercial ventures.