Propel receives $2.9-million ACOA grant to continue virtual accelerator program until 2026
The Government of Nova Scotia committed $1.05 million to Propel in May.
The Government of Nova Scotia committed $1.05 million to Propel in May.
Ventures on the accelerator’s 2021, 2022 lists have collectively raised over $1.67 billion.
Applications are open for its third cohort set to begin in March.
Origo will offer Québec-based pre-seed and seed-stage startups with $150,000 CAD in funding.
The organization is also welcoming an even mix of Canadian and international companies to its 2023 class.
Participants include Decoda Health, Greenlite, LifestyleRX, Spine AI, Tempo Labs, Terminal, and VaultPay.
Three startups represent Canada in a cohort of 11 North American companies.
Founded by a trio of Vancouverites, Reworkd has nabbed funding from Panache.
The accelerator aims to help FinTech companies using AI and machine learning in financial services.
Google piloted the cloud accelerator in Canada, then extended it to US startups this year.
Three Canadian startups were selected for each program last year.
Next AI participants can receive up to $100,000.
Both programs award seed funding and mentorship support to tech founders.
The accelerator will support startups building AI applications in the cloud.
Volta started offering virtual residency to startups in 2021.