While Agnew spent most of his career at Finning International Inc., the world’s largest dealer of Caterpillar machinery, his co-founder Doug Schouten, who’s also Ideon’s chief technology officer, holds a PhD in subatomic physics from Simon Fraser University.
The company also sees opportunities to help oil and gas companies with exploration, but its marketing casts the company as focused on the critical minerals supply chain and finding the metals necessary for the energy transition.
BHP Plc., Teck Resources and smaller junior exploration outfits have experimented with the technology or agreed to do so.
Ideon received $3.7 million under the digital supercluster investment, while its client, junior explorer Fireweed Zinc Ltd., which is exploring a zinc-lead-silver deposit in the Yukon, received $1.2 million. Dias Geophysical, a Saskatoon-based company that conducts magnetic gradient surveys, received the remaining nearly $600,000 to help advance the technology further.
Industry also co-invested nearly $7 million and Mitacs, a national research organization that operates research and training programs in industrial and social innovation, is investing $345,000 to support a team of post-doctoral researchers at Simon Fraser University.
“This project is almost like Star Trek, being able to do scans of the earth with muons,” said John Weigelt, national technology officer for Microsoft Canada, which is supplying cloud computing credits to the project.
The company charges a monthly fee for its services, which can range from $50,000 to $100,000, depending on the size of the campaign, which can take weeks or months depending on the size of the deposit and the geology.
Over the past 18 months, the company has raised about $3.1 million and its investors include the UBC Seed Fund, Mineral & Financial out of London, the Sprout Fund in Edmonton, WUTIF Capital in Vancouver, Highstreet Ventures, and Don Bell, co-founder of WestJet, according to Agnew. The company will look to raise more money in 2022.