• Soak it up: Can sponge cities save us from flooding?
    Nov 21 2024

    Featured in this episode:

    Kongjian Yu is a Beijing-based landscape architect and founder of Peking University’s College of Architecture and Landscape. His concept of sponge cities — designing cities to absorb water — is being applied in urban areas across the globe.

    Further reading:

    • Landscape architect Kongjian Yu, pioneer of the “sponge city" concept, wins the 2023 Oberlander Prize
    • How letting water be water can lead to better climate resilience
    • Kongjian Yu has a plan for urban flooding: “Sponge cities”
    • Treading water — Toronto is spending billions on flood protection, but experts say it needs to spend billions more
    • Will a $1-billion flooding bill finally make the GTA take stormwater seriously?
    • Toronto’s Don River floods offer urgent planning lessons for climate-challenged cities

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    34 mins
  • Striking a chord: Why neuroscientists believe music could hold the power to cure what ails us
    Oct 24 2024

    Music makes us feel better — for most of us, this is an intuitive truth. But scientists are only now beginning to understand the remarkable ways that music affects our brains. With the help of innovation, researchers are working to assess and codify the whats, whys and hows that could help us harness this power as a therapeutic tool to treat people grappling with everything from mood disorders to Parkinson’s disease. Their data is helping prove that music could be one of our most vital, valuable and accessible forms of medicine.

    Featured in this episode:

    Dan Levitin is a best-selling author, music producer, renowned neuroscientist and professor emeritus in psychology at McGill University. His latest book, I Heard There Was a Secret Chord: Music as Medicine was released in August.

    Frank Russo is a cognitive neuroscientist and psychologist who serves as the chief science officer at LUCID, a Toronto-based company that uses AI to create personalized music therapy to help people with mental health challenges. He’s also a professor of psychology at Toronto Metropolitan University, where he heads up the Science of Music Auditory Research and Technology (SMART) lab.

    Jessica Grahn is a neuroscientist and a professor at Western University. She studies how the brain processes music and its power to activate music in people with mobility issues brought on by neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s.

    Charlotte Cumberbirch is a professional choral singer who leads an online vocal health group for older adults at the Cummings Centre in Montreal. Many of her participants are recovering from strokes or dealing with brain diseases, such as Parkinson’s.

    Further reading:

    • The sound of science: How music can transform our brains
    • AI to benefit humanity: Innovations in senior care
    • The big idea: could we use music like medicine?
    • AI is unlocking the human brain’s secrets
    • How does music affect your brain?
    • This is your brain. This is your brain on music

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    34 mins
  • Solve for X S3 Trailer
    Sep 27 2024
    In season 3 of Solve for X, we meet the innovators and entrepreneurs solving for climate change, economic disparity, diseases and more. Subscribe and listen beginning September 26.Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.
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    1 min
  • The methane hunter: Meet the man who is tracking down emissions — from space
    Sep 26 2024

    With more than 80 times the short-term warming power of carbon dioxide, methane is a significant climate threat. But finding and fixing methane leaks is no small feat and ground-based detection methods struggle to pinpoint this colourless, odourless gas. In this episode of Solve for X, host Manjula Selvarajah sits down with Stéphane Germain to discuss how his company’s fleet of microsatellites is transforming methane detection. By capturing data from orbit, this satellite technology offers new insights into methane sources, reshaping how we monitor and reduce emissions for a cleaner future.

    Featured in this episode:

    • Stéphane Germain is the CEO and founder of GHGSat, a global leader in satellite-based methane monitoring. With a background in aerospace engineering, he leads the development of microsatellites that detect greenhouse gas emissions from space, delivering critical data for climate action.

    Further reading:

    • UN climate summit host Azerbaijan’s gas flaring hits decade-high, study shows
    • How MethaneSAT Will Track an Invisible Climate Menace From Space
    • Global methane emissions rising at fastest rate in decades, scientists warn
    • Methane emissions from gas flaring being hidden from satellite monitors
    • New satellite will detect and share CO2 data from individual facilities

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    25 mins
  • Beast mode: Can technology help protect some of the world’s most endangered animals?
    Jan 4 2024

    We’re facing a global ecosystem crisis. Within the last 50 years alone, wildlife populations across the world have declined by a shocking 69 percent. But technology, with help from citizen science, is emerging as one of wildlife’s greatest allies. In this episode of Solve for X, we explore how remote sensing, robot boats and DNA analysis could revolutionize wildlife preservation, offering hope for everything from insects to whales.

    Featured in this episode:

    • James Snider is the vice president of science, knowledge and innovation at World Wildlife Fund Canada.
    • Elizabeth Clare is an associate professor of biology at York University in Canada. Her research studies biodiversity at all levels, developing novel genetic methods that address some of the biggest challenges in biodiversity science.
    • Peter Fretwell is a scientist at the British Antarctic Survey. He’s the principal investigator of the Wildlife From Space Program, studying wildlife using satellite imagery.
    • Madeleine Bouvier-Brown is a marine project scientist at Open Ocean Robotics. She handles the deployment of robot boats, retrieving data and analyzing it to deepen our understanding of the oceans.

    Further reading:

    • Loss of sea ice causes catastrophic breeding failure for emperor penguins
    • Adventure on high seas inspired ocean drone
    • Global wildlife populations have declined by 69 percent since 1970, WWF report finds
    • Scientists can suck animal DNA literally out of thin air
    • Caribou are vanishing at an alarming rate. Is it too late to save them?

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    25 mins
  • Changing tastes: Can technology sustainably feed the world?
    Dec 14 2023

    Climate change is putting many of the foods we love at risk. Add in rapid population growth — the planet will be home to 9.7 billion people by 2050 — and it’s clear we need to reimagine how we feed ourselves. As food security expert Leonore Newman says, “we are running short on planet.” But is society ready for replacement proteins and lab-grown meats? Whether it’s cell-grown salmon or chili lime crickets, the plate of the future is going to look a little bit different. In this episode of Solve for X, we discuss the revolution in what we eat — and why it’s as much about technology as it is about safeguarding our planet’s future.

    Featured in this episode:

    • Lenore Newman, director of the Food and Agriculture Institute at the University of the Fraser Valley, is an expert in food security and technology and holds a UFV Research Chair in Food and Agriculture Innovation.
    • Preeti Simran Sethi teaches sustainable food systems at the University of Gastronomic Sciences. She’s also the author of an award-winning book on agrobiodiversity, Bread, Wine, Chocolate: The Slow Loss of Foods We Love.
    • Journalist and author Larissa Zimberoff explores the evolving relationship between food and technology in her work. Her book, Technically Food: Inside Silicon Valley’s Mission to Change What We Eat, delves into the transformations in our diets and the startups driving this shift.
    • Darren Goldin is a co-founder of Entomo Farms, an insect-based farming company that produces cricket flour, cricket powder and insect protein. He’s also the vice president of farming operations, overseeing the three barns on Entomo’s property.

    Further Reading:

    • Protein shakeup: Are crickets and lab-grown meat the future of food?
    • The foods humans ate into extinction
    • How to grow fish from stem cells
    • Our global food system is the primary driver of biodiversity loss
    • The future of food: What will you be eating in 2050?
    • Lab-Grown Meat Approved for Sale: What You Need to Know

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    22 mins
  • Decade of decisions: How better infrastructure can transform our world
    Nov 30 2023

    From Wi-Fi to power stations, roads to pipelines, our infrastructure is stressed. Built for a climate that no longer exists, our systems are failing at an increasing pace. But to fix what’s broken goes beyond structural repair — we also need to address the inequities baked into our infrastructural systems and injustices from past developments. Amid these challenges, we have the chance to reimagine the future of infrastructure for a better world. On this episode of Solve for X, we sit down with Deb Chachra, author of the new book How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World, to rediscover the hidden beauty of infrastructure and how we can harness the collective power these systems bring to our lives.

    Featured in this episode:

    • Deb Chachra, professor of engineering at Olin College and author of How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World. Her work spans across multiple disciplines, including engineering education, gender issues, materials science and the intersection of technology and culture.

    Further Reading:

    • It’s time for a radical rethink on Canada’s infrastructure planning
    • How changes in building infrastructure can truly combat climate change
    • How infrastructure has historically promoted inequality
    • New report finds costs of climate change impacts often underestimated
    • Three Infrastructure Issues To Solve In 2023

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    23 mins
  • The electric afterlife: What are we going to do with all those EV batteries?
    Nov 16 2023

    The future of the automobile is electric. Yet the surge in electric vehicles raises critical concerns regarding battery creation, disposal and recycling. What will happen once all those cars reach the end of the road? In this episode of Solve for X, we address the environmental footprint of EV batteries, confront the challenges posed by the existing regulatory landscape and highlight opportunities for second-life applications. It turns out that batteries are capable of more than you might expect, and can teach us a lot about how to design for the future.

    Featured in this episode:

    • Andy Latham is the founder and CEO of Salvage Wire, an auto recycling consultancy based in the United Kingdom. As an automotive engineer and entrepreneur, he teaches auto salvagers how to safely handle EV batteries, aiming to promote advancements in auto recycling globally.
    • Jessica Dunn is a senior analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists. Her research looks at the potential of recycling and repurposing of lithium-ion batteries.
    • Claus Eckbo is the owner and director of God’s Pocket Resort, an off-grid scuba lodge in British Columbia that uses repurposed EV batteries for both energy generation and storage.
    • Edward Chiang is the co-founder and CEO of Moment Energy. The company’s innovative solution converts electric vehicle batteries into sustainable energy storage systems for microgrid, commercial and industrial customers.

    Further Reading:

    • Canada is pouring billions of dollars into the electric vehicle industry
    • Cars Are Going Electric. What Happens to the Used Batteries?
    • Guiding Principles for EV Battery Recycling Policy
    • God’s Pocket Scuba Diving Resort Goes Green with Moment Energy
    • How old electric car batteries could power the future

    Solve for X is brought to you by MaRS, North America’s largest urban innovation hub and a registered charity. MaRS supports startups and accelerates the adoption of high-impact solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges. For more information, visit marsdd.com.

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    22 mins