Thank you very much for that question. I think it's a really pertinent one.
As I said earlier, the partnership programs of the tri-council agencies are a valuable catalyst, because they explicitly connect universities with companies and they incentivize and subsidize those connections by bringing some public sector funding to the table that both the universities and the private sector partner can benefit from.
That said, there needs to be more direct university-private sector engagement. I think some universities are stronger than others. At the University of Calgary, we have ramped up our industry partnerships function. We don't want emails sitting in the inbox of an executive vice-president who's drowning in email. We need to have an office that can answer the same day, do some matchmaking of researchers with companies and have a dialogue of shared interests and shared challenges.
We talk a lot about push-and-pull in science. Actually, paradoxically, often it's the “pull” science, where there's an external partner engaging with universities and asking them if they can help, that can be most impactful, because the “valley of death” is already partially bridged when that's happening. So we are really trying to ramp that up. Can governments—plural—support that kind of industry-university bridging? I think they can, through potential creative programs.
I'll turn it over to Dr. Murphy, if she has anything to add.