McMaster enters Baltic innovation corridor through Canada-led mission
Press Release

McMaster University is building new research connections in a region emerging as a major center for security research and innovation.
The Canada–Baltics Education in Defense Partnership Mission brought Canadian universities together with Baltic partners working in areas like AI, cybersecurity, robotics and health technology. Led by the Canadian Bureau for International Education in collaboration with the Trade Commissioner Service, the mission took place from June 7 to 12 in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Dr. Gianni Parise, Vice-President, Research, and Dr. Steve Hranilovic, Vice-Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies, represented McMaster.
For McMaster, the visit created direct conversations with institutions whose priorities align with the University’s strengths in engineering, digital systems, advanced materials, nuclear research, and health sciences. The Baltic region is drawing growing attention for its work in digital defence and applied research, making it a relevant partner for McMaster as the university expands collaborations connected to technology, health and security.

McMaster has an existing presence in the region through partnerships with Vilnius University and the Lithuanian University of Health Sciences. McMaster researchers have also co-authored recent publications with institutions in Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia. The mission gives McMaster a stronger platform to advance future research partnerships, graduate education opportunities and commercialization pathways connected to European innovation priorities.
“International partnerships are essential to advancing research with global impact. The connections made through this mission position McMaster to collaborate with leading institutions in the Baltics on shared priorities in areas such as digital technologies, health, advanced manufacturing and security,” says Gianni Parise, Vice-President, Research.


