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Art Borups Corners

Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario
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      • Milkweed to Market
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Home / Climate Entrepreneurship

Climate Entrepreneurship

What Climate Entrepreneurship Means for the Future of the Canada Environment
Climate entrepreneurship is an emerging field of study and the practice of developing innovative, sustainable, and community-driven solutions that address the urgent challenges posed by climate change. In regions like Manitoba, Nunavut, Northwestern Ontario, and Minnesota, where the impacts of environmental change are deeply felt, climate entrepreneurship empowers local leaders, youth, and innovators to respond with creativity, cultural knowledge, and economic opportunity.
Exploring Climate Entrepreneurship
This category highlights projects that blend green innovation, land-based learning, and entrepreneurship training to foster climate resilience in remote, Northern, and Indigenous communities. From regenerative agriculture and renewable energy to arts-based engagement and digital storytelling, climate entrepreneurs are reimagining how we live, work, and care for our environment in the face of a changing planet.
 

An overhead view of the Melgund Township recreation complex, which supports the communities of Dyment and Borups Corners and area in Northwestern Ontario.

Growing with the Framework for Recreation in Canada!

It's June, and this month, we're starting an exciting journey to explore the Framework for Recreation in Canada 2024 Update.
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These early white blossoms belong to the Saskatoon bush (Amelanchier alnifolia), one of the boreal forest’s most generous and resilient plants. For generations, Saskatoon berries have nourished communities, supported pollinators, and thrived in northern climates. This year, we're proud to be adding Saskatoon bushes to our food production project—deepening our connection to the land, strengthening local food systems, and honouring traditional knowledge through action.
Community Garden

Saskatoon Berry Blossoms Signal Spring Across Northern Forests

Across northwestern Ontario and Manitoba forests this May, delicate white blossoms are beginning to emerge on a native plant with deep roots in the cultural…
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Year two of our arts incubator land lab's food security program is in full swing! We've grown dozens of beautiful apple pippins from seed since February, excited to expand our sustainable agriculture project. But moving them outdoors brought an unexpected challenge: environmental shock! Seeing those dried, stressed leaves was a learning moment. We're now focused on helping them recover through careful "hardening off" – gradually reintroducing them to the outdoor environment. This means starting in a sheltered spot, slowly increasing their exposure to sun and wind, and ensuring consistent, proper watering.
Recreation

Sustainable Apple Care: Tips for Young Trees & Environmental Stress

Expanding our food security program, our land lab moved dozens of indoor-grown apple pippins outdoors. We faced unexpected environmental shock, leading to dried leaves.
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Hello, spring! Overwintered raspberry shoots are bursting with life, a beautiful sign of success in our Northwestern Ontario sustainable agriculture pilot. Building local food production and supporting Indigenous food systems with partners.

Local Food Production Activities Flourish in Northwestern Ontario

Exciting progress in Northwestern Ontario! Our sustainable agriculture pilot project, supported by Manitoba Agriculture and Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership, enters phase two. See how overwintered…
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Strawberries are waking up in our northern garden, part of a project building community resilience through fresh food.

Sowing Sustainability: Early Growth in Our Strawberry Patches

After months of dormancy, the plants are pushing up healthy green leaves, showing us just how much life has been waiting underground.
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Small-scale farms in the Kenora District of Northwestern Ontario are helping to strengthen local food systems, create rural jobs, and boost Ontario’s economy. From direct-to-consumer sales and CSA programs to renewable energy and women-led operations, agriculture in Northern Ontario is growing with resilience and purpose.

Small Farms, Big Impact: Agriculture in the Kenora District of Northwestern Ontario

Learn how small-scale farms in the Kenora District of Northwestern Ontario are boosting food security, creating jobs, and contributing millions to Ontario's economy—while advancing sustainability…
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2023-2024 Activities, Impacts And Outcomes Report

2023-2024 Activities, Impacts And Outcomes Report

Introducing Our 2023-2024 Activities, Impacts, and Outcomes Report We’re thrilled to share our 2023-2024 Activities, Impacts, and Outcomes Report! This year has been transformative, as we…
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Tony Eetak is an emerging youth artist and culture connector originally from Arviat, Nunavut and a founding member of the @1860 Winnipeg Arts collective. With a growing interest in photography, music and visual arts, Tony has been a dedicated volunteer for participatory arts events in his community, working for more than five years with organizations and projects including the Arviat Film Society, Global Dignity Canada, Inclusion in Northern Research, Our People, Our Climate and Niriqatiginnga. In 2021 he completed his first Creativity for Entrepreneurship online college course through University of Minnesota Duluth Continuing Education and with support from the UMD Cultural Entrepreneurship program. In June 2022 Tony presented some of his creative photography and experiences for the Auviqsaqtut Inuit Studies Conference in Winnipeg, Manitoba with the Our People, Our Climate project and support from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. In 2023, Tony was a founding member of Niriqatiginnga, a Winnipeg-based non-profit program that explores arts-based and participatory approaches to addressing food security. Also, in 2023 Tony was named a National Role Model by the non-profit organization Global Dignity Canada.

Tony Eetak

Tony Eetak is an emerging youth artist and culture connector originally from Arviat, Nunavut and a founding member of Art Borups Corners and the @1860 Winnipeg Arts collective. 
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Latest Local News

  • Government of Canada announces beginning of proposed Nuclear Waste DGR Impact Assessment
  • Share Your Insights on Nuclear Waste, Diet and Land Use
  • Tiny Details, Big Possibilities
  • Colours to Dye For: Rob Franklin’s Tie-Dye T-Shirts Steal the Show
  • Summer Arts: Wild Clay Experiment Shows Promising Early Results

Nuclear Waste Management

The Nuclear Waste Management Organization is inviting residents and land users in the area of Canada's proposed Deep Geological Repository for used nuclear fuel to participate in a Diet and Land-Use Survey. The information collected will help inform local perspectives as the project moves through the federal regulatory process.

The survey can be completed online or through an in-person interview at the Ignace Learn More Centre. It is open until September 7, 2026, and participants will have the opportunity to enter a draw to win one of twenty C$125 gift cards redeemable at local businesses.

ART BORUPS CORNERS SOCIETY

Art Borups Corners is a non-profit arts incubator based in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario. We bring artists, youth, and local residents together through hands-on creative projects, workshops, and storytelling rooted in everyday life in the North. Our focus is on making space for people to try things, share skills, and build confidence through art that grows out of where they live.


We’re also a place for testing ideas and working across different ways of making — from land-based practice to digital work and everything in between. Much of what we do happens through partnerships and shared projects, connecting local creative work with wider conversations while keeping things grounded, practical, and community-led.


BN: 790519573RC0001

ESTABLISHED WITH FUNDING FROM

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

This program was seeded with funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse program. This program allowed us to explore strategic arts innovation, capacity building and new technologies. Programming was also supported by the OpenAI Researcher Access Program, the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program and the Province of Ontario. We thank them for their support.

PROGRAMMING SEEDED BY

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
© 2026 Arts Incubator Winnipeg. All rights reserved.