Canadian University Signs Four MoUs in India
UBC
The University of British Columbia (UBC), Canada’s research university, has signed four statements of cooperation involving the Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IIT-M), Tata Consultancy Service Limited (TCS), Mitacs and T-Hub Foundation to collaborate on academic and research activities and initiatives.

All the four agreements were signed during the visit of Santa Ono, President, Vice-Chancellor, UBC.

The collaboration with UBC and IIT-M will focus on courses offered by University of British Columbia in the area of urban resilience. 

Projects will be in the areas of economic development, bio-diversity, alternative water sources, community resilience against climate change- specifically, climate adaptation at the neighbourhood scale, forest wild-fire exposure, and earthquake resilience expertise development. 

Students will work with global virtual and local community teams to address resilience challenges of cities in the 100 Resilient Cities (100RC) network with exchange of scholarly information and research with participation from students, faculty and staff in this project.

The alliance between UBC and Tata Consultancy Service Limited (TCS) puts emphasis on collaborative research activities on the topics of urban resilience, smart cities, material genomics and personalised medicine. 

The collaboration will include joint conferences, seminars, workshops and other academic interaction meetings along with exchange of visiting scholars, researchers and students for research through inbound and outbound sabbaticals or internships.

The partnership between UBC and Mitacs focuses on institutional collaborations that can contribute to advancing energy research to meet the needs of society in both Canada and India.

This alliance also provides opportunities for Masters and PhD students to gain international research experience involving students from UBC and partner institutions in India.

The MoU between UBC and T-Hub Foundation focuses on the area of entrepreneurship training, support and international partnership.

The partnership will support aspiring student entrepreneurs from both countries- India and Canada- in solving problems of global relevance and importance through co-creation of a market access bridge allowing growth stage start-ups and scale ups from both countries to enter Indian and Canadian market successfully as part of their global expansion.

Speaking on the occasion of signing of these partnerships, Professor Santa Ono, President and Vice-Chancellor of University of British Columbia (UBC) said, “The collaborations will be landmark projects and will take research to a level. Our goal is to establish research links and encourage student exchange between India and Canada drawing talent and building synergies between the countries”.

“All the agreements underscore UBC’s commitment and continued focus on developing meaningful partnerships with the Indian institutions,” he added