New partnership between U of T and OVIN Incubators to advance vehicle technology, including EVs, chargers, vehicle-to-grid and more

Left to right: Mona Eghanian, Assistant Vice President, Ontario Centre of Innovation; Chris Yip, Dean, U of T Engineering; Raed Kadri, Head of OVIN; Claudia Krywiak, President & CEO, Ontario Centre of Innovation; Jim Banting, Assistant Vice President of Innovation, Partnerships & Entrepreneurship, U of T. (photo by Tyler Irving)
A new partnership between U of T and the Ontario Vehicle Innovation Network (OVIN) creates a framework for advancing innovation across the automotive and mobility value chain.
Through this partnership, U of T will join the OVIN Incubators program. This strategic collaboration brings together U of T’s research excellence with OVIN’s extensive automotive and mobility network to accelerate both the conversion of research into market-ready technologies, and also the creation of new, Ontario-based ventures.
On May 19th, senior leaders from U of T and OVIN gathered at the U of T Engineering Partnerships offices at 800 Bay to mark the start of the new partnership.
“Ontario is creating the framework for continued automotive excellence, seizing the opportunity to create the jobs and solutions needed for today and the future,” says Raed Kadri, Head of OVIN.
“As OVIN Incubators continues to expand and partner with the province’s leading post-secondary institutions, Ontario’s research excellence will power sustained economic growth and job creation, by harnessing Ontario-made IP and Ontario-based talent to build the companies of the future.”
OVIN Incubators is creating an open innovation and start-up creation platform for automotive and mobility researchers, entrepreneurs, start-ups and scale-ups. The goal is to commercialize Ontario-made intellectual property into new homegrown ventures that stretch across the entire value chain, from raw materials to consumer products.
U of T is home to leading-edge researchers and long-standing academic-industry collaborations in several areas that the automotive sector has determined as being highly in demand, including critical minerals, artificial intelligence, energy grid optimization and battery technology.
Examples include:
- A long-term partnership between Ontario-based Litens Automotive Group and researchers at the U of T Electric Vehicle Research Centre
- A multi-year partnership agreement with Nissan North America, launched in 2025 and facilitated by the Lawson Climate Institute
- The NSERC CREATE in Thermal Management of Electrification Technologies (TherMET) project, directed from U of T’s Electrification Hub, which focuses on thermal management for large-scale lithium ion batteries, including those used in vehicles and chargers
In addition to research collaboration, another key component of the OVIN Incubators program is support for new venture creation.
“Through this partnership, U of T researchers who’ve made an invention disclosure or applied for a patent can get support for creating a minimum viable product and spinning that out into a new, made-in-Ontario company,” says Adriano Vissa, Executive Director, Partnerships at U of T Engineering.
“That will help keep those innovations here at home and further strengthen the ecosystem that creates so much value for Ontarians.”
Major industry players such as Mercedes-Benz, Infineon Technologies, and Schaeffler have already partnered with OVIN Incubators. The initiative also includes a technology scouting component, a process by which industry needs can be matched with emerging technologies from Ontario start-ups and scale-ups.
“Here in the heart of the GTA, we’re very blessed to have such a rich network of small, medium-sized and large players, including U of T spin-off companies, in Ontario’s vibrant automotive sector,” says Chris Yip, Dean of U of T Engineering.
“This new framework agreement with OVIN will further strengthen our connections with that network and create new pathways to translate inventions from the lab to the marketplace. We’re very excited to see it flourish over the years to come.”
(By: Tyler Irving)