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Waterloo Engineering is known for encouraging and supporting entrepreneurship. But it was only in her fifth co-op term that Kayli Dale (BASc ‘20, chemical engineering), co-founder and CEO of Friendlier, understood the impact a founder can make and set out to launch her own business.  

In 2020, Dale and her friend Jacquie Hutchings (BASc ‘20, chemical engineering) launched Friendlier—a company aligned with their values and committed to eliminating single-use packaging with reusable containers.  

Dr. Mahla Poudineh, Assistant Professor and Director of the IDEATION Lab in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, is one of five researchers to receive funding from the Ontario government.

Dr. Poudineh won the award for her project titled: A new transdermal patch to continuously and without pain track and treat diabetes.

AutoCate, a newly-launched membership-based platform geared toward women, aims to reduce fraud and discrimination in the auto repair industry.

Founded in 2020 by Waterloo Engineering alum Stefanie Bruinsma (BASc '15, mechanical engineering and MBET '21), the platform connects people in need of car repairs or advice with trusted experts and educators.

Dr. Peter Huck has been honoured for his commitment to graduate students’ success with an Award of Excellence in Graduate Supervision.  

Huck, a professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the NSERC Chair in Water Treatment, has graduated close to 100 PhD and master’s students and supervised more than 15 postdoctoral scholars. 

Waterloo Engineering research received a boost from the Innovation Fund under the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) and the Canada Research Chairs (CRC) program. 

Dr. Dipanjan Basu, a civil and environmental engineering professor, Dr. Kaan Erkorkmaz and Dr. Hamid Jahed, both mechanical and mechatronics engineering professors, Dr. Chris Eliasmith, a philosophy and systems design engineering professor, and Dr. Luis Ricardo Sandoval, a chemical engineering professor, were awarded over $19 million in funds to support their research projects and renewed chairs.   

A Waterloo Engineering research team has developed technology that can remove harmful nanoplastics from contaminated water.  

Dr. Tizazu Mekonnen, professor of chemical engineering and Canada Research Chair in sustainable multiphase polymers, and grad student Rachel Blanchard’s (BASc ‘22, chemical engineering), innovative research can clear nanoplastics from wastewater systems with 94 per cent efficiency. 

Dr. Sebastian Fischmeister, a professor in the Department of Computer and Electrical Engineering, and his team are working to safeguard Canada's economic future by bolstering its critical infrastructure against the threat of cyber attacks.

Their research develops new security controls that shield against potential threats within the energy sector's vital supply chains.

Future unicorns and community-changing innovations could be amongst the final-year engineering student projects on display at the annual Capstone Design symposia, which runs from March 13-17 on the 2nd floor of E7 at the University of Waterloo.  

Over 1,000 students across 12 programs will present more than 350 projects they have spent months designing and building. New for 2024 is the Interdisciplinary symposia of projects, which will wrap up the events on March 27th.  

The Trust in Research Undertaken in Science and Technology scholarly network (TRuST), was launched to address the declining levels of trust in science and academic institutions.  

Dr. Mary Wells, dean of Waterloo Engineering and founding member of TRuST, speaks to the importance of strengthening trust in science and technology to positively advance society.