Manning Innovation Awards
Encyclopedia
The Ernest C. Manning Awards Foundation has been recognizing and encouraging innovation
in Canada since 1982. By means of a nomination, Canadian resident citizens, who have demonstrated recent innovative talent in developing and successfully marketing a new concept, process or procedure, may be eligible for one of these awards: Principal Award ($100,000), Award of Distinction ($25,000), Innovation Awards (2 at $10,000).
It was a bright idea and it needed a prominent Canadian who would champion the notion. He found the right person in former Alberta Premier Ernest Manning
, who commanded national respect and agreed to attach his name to the concept.
From that seed, the Manning Innovation Awards grew into one of Canada's most prestigious annual awards programs for Canadian innovators.
"It really stemmed from a thought that Canadians seemed to have to go somewhere else before they were recognized," says Mitchell, president of the Manning Innovation Awards Foundation and former president, chief executive officer and chairman of Alberta Energy Company.
Together, Mitchell and Manning built a nucleus of highly respected Canadian scientists and business people who became the first trustees of the new foundation. Manning visited the Nobel Prize organization in Sweden and the Ford Foundation in the United States to seek advice in structuring the made-in-Canada program.
To ensure the program's credibility, Manning, Mitchell and the other trustees agreed that an independent committee of expert evaluators would choose the award winners - and their decision would be final. The Manning Foundation has been run that way since day one, Mitchell notes. "Ernest Manning himself crystallized those ideas."
The first year of the program consisted of one $75,000 award - a significant cash prize nearly two decades ago. Now each year the Manning Foundation distributes $165,000, including the $100,000 Manning Principal Award, among four leading Canadian innovators, plus an additional $20,000 among eight young Canada-Wide Science Fair winners. In its first 25 years, the Foundation awarded more than $3.6 million to encourage and recognize Canadian innovators.
Canadian innovations recognized by the Manning Foundation have ranged from the artificial knee to a humane device that silences dog barking, from a rapid DNA sequencing machine to the V-chip which blocks unwanted television programming. Award winners "have come from all across Canada," Mitchell says.
Mitchell received the Outstanding Contribution to the Alberta Science and Technology Community Award from the Alberta Science and Technology Awards Foundation in 2000. With characteristic understatement, he says his greatest reward in creating the Manning Foundation has been "the pleasure of getting to know really bright, dedicated, wonderful Canadians...that's a real privilege."
. Each project receives $500, which is presented at the Science Fair award ceremonies. A further judging process then selects four projects from the eight to receive $4,000 Manning Young Canadian Innovation Awards at our annual Awards Dinner and Ceremony. Learn more about our Young Canadian Award Winners.
Innovation
Innovation is the creation of better or more effective products, processes, technologies, or ideas that are accepted by markets, governments, and society...
in Canada since 1982. By means of a nomination, Canadian resident citizens, who have demonstrated recent innovative talent in developing and successfully marketing a new concept, process or procedure, may be eligible for one of these awards: Principal Award ($100,000), Award of Distinction ($25,000), Innovation Awards (2 at $10,000).
Foundation history
Alberta Energy Company chief executive David Mitchell decided in 1980 that Canada needed some home-grown heroes. Canadians who turned their creative genius into beneficial technology deserved recognition within their own country.It was a bright idea and it needed a prominent Canadian who would champion the notion. He found the right person in former Alberta Premier Ernest Manning
Ernest Manning
Ernest Charles Manning, , a Canadian politician, was the eighth Premier of Alberta between 1943 and 1968 for the Social Credit Party of Alberta. He served longer than any premier in the province's history, and was the second longest serving provincial premier in Canadian history...
, who commanded national respect and agreed to attach his name to the concept.
From that seed, the Manning Innovation Awards grew into one of Canada's most prestigious annual awards programs for Canadian innovators.
"It really stemmed from a thought that Canadians seemed to have to go somewhere else before they were recognized," says Mitchell, president of the Manning Innovation Awards Foundation and former president, chief executive officer and chairman of Alberta Energy Company.
Together, Mitchell and Manning built a nucleus of highly respected Canadian scientists and business people who became the first trustees of the new foundation. Manning visited the Nobel Prize organization in Sweden and the Ford Foundation in the United States to seek advice in structuring the made-in-Canada program.
To ensure the program's credibility, Manning, Mitchell and the other trustees agreed that an independent committee of expert evaluators would choose the award winners - and their decision would be final. The Manning Foundation has been run that way since day one, Mitchell notes. "Ernest Manning himself crystallized those ideas."
The first year of the program consisted of one $75,000 award - a significant cash prize nearly two decades ago. Now each year the Manning Foundation distributes $165,000, including the $100,000 Manning Principal Award, among four leading Canadian innovators, plus an additional $20,000 among eight young Canada-Wide Science Fair winners. In its first 25 years, the Foundation awarded more than $3.6 million to encourage and recognize Canadian innovators.
Canadian innovations recognized by the Manning Foundation have ranged from the artificial knee to a humane device that silences dog barking, from a rapid DNA sequencing machine to the V-chip which blocks unwanted television programming. Award winners "have come from all across Canada," Mitchell says.
Mitchell received the Outstanding Contribution to the Alberta Science and Technology Community Award from the Alberta Science and Technology Awards Foundation in 2000. With characteristic understatement, he says his greatest reward in creating the Manning Foundation has been "the pleasure of getting to know really bright, dedicated, wonderful Canadians...that's a real privilege."
The Young Canadian Award Program
The Young Canadian Program, introduced in 1992, recognizes eight innovative projects selected by a team of judges at the annual Canada-Wide Science FairCanada-Wide Science Fair
The Canada-Wide Science Fair is an annual science fair in Canada coordinated by . Started in 1962, it is the highest level of competition in Canada, and approximately 400 projects and 500 students are judged at the fair...
. Each project receives $500, which is presented at the Science Fair award ceremonies. A further judging process then selects four projects from the eight to receive $4,000 Manning Young Canadian Innovation Awards at our annual Awards Dinner and Ceremony. Learn more about our Young Canadian Award Winners.