Celebrating Curiosity, Discovery & Innovation

Awards

The Canada-Wide Science Fair celebrates excellence in youth STEM achievement through an array of prestigious awards and recognition. Each year, nearly $1.3 million in prizes, scholarships, and exclusive opportunities are presented to Canada's top young scientists and innovators.

Prior year award recipients can be found here

Awards Ceremony

Northern Alberta Jubilee
Thursday, May 28 – 7:00-9:00 pm MDT

Celebrating Canada's Top STEM Students

CWSF 2026 Results

Please join us in congratulating all participants, with special recognition to the Best Project and Platinum award winners highlighted below. Each finalist should be immensely proud of their accomplishments - participating in the Canada-Wide Science Fair is an achievement in itself!

  • Liam Desre

    Best Project - Discovery

    ΛCDM+S - Thermodynamic Cosmology: Simulating The Universe's Expansion Without Dark Energy

    For nearly 30 years, cosmologists have attributed the universe’s accelerating expansion to dark energy, a force that has never been directly detected and whose physical nature remains unknown. Desre proposed that the same thermodynamic laws governing black holes also apply to the universe’s outer boundary, and that the natural accumulation of entropy at this boundary drives cosmic expansion. His project, ΛCDM+S – Thermodynamic Cosmology: Simulating the Universe’s Expansion Without Dark Energy, reproduced standard cosmological predictions with 93.4 percent accuracy while also offering potential explanations for two long-standing measurement discrepancies that have challenged the field for years.

  • Gurnoor Kaur

    Best Project - Innovation

    Eigenpulse: Eliminating Demographic Bias in Pulse Oximetry and Remote PPG from First Principles

    The small clip-on sensors hospitals use to check blood oxygen levels work by shining light through the skin. Kaur identified the source of a persistent reading error as a second pulsing signal, synchronized with blood flow but originating from a different part of the vascular system, that affects oxygen calculations differently in darker skin. Her project, Eigenpulse: Eliminating Demographic Bias in Pulse Oximetry and Remote PPG from First Principles, isolates and removes this signal from the measurement process, reducing demographic bias from 2.3 percent to less than 0.15 percent.

  • Siddharth Patel

    Platinum Awards - Discovery - Junior

    Automating Asteroid Detection Criteria to Strengthen Citizen Science for Planetary Defense

    Patel, who has personally discovered two asteroids through the International Astronomical Search Collaboration, developed an automated system that helps volunteer astronomers determine whether faint moving objects in telescope images are genuine asteroids, improving the accuracy and reliability of citizen science efforts in planetary defence.

  • Audrey Cowen

    Platinum Awards - Discovery - Senior

    Harnessing Inhibition of Efflux to Reverse Antifungal Resistance

    Cowen identified compounds that block the molecular pumps used by a common drug-resistant fungus to expel antifungal medication, restoring the drug’s effectiveness in killing the infection while confirming minimal toxicity to healthy human cells.

  • Willem Vuurmans

    Platinum Awards - Innovation - Junior

    EXODEC: A Rational Design Framework for BBB Ligand Evaluation and De Novo Peptide Engineering

    Vuurmans built a computational tool to evaluate potential treatments for brain diseases across five stages of crossing the blood-brain barrier, the biological filter that prevents most drugs from reaching the brain.

  • Siddharth Rajesh

    Platinum Awards - Innovation - Intermediate

    APTAi: De Novo Aptamer Design for Proteomic Biomarker Detection Using a Physics-Informed AI Model

    Rajesh developed an AI-powered platform to design aptamers, short DNA sequences used to detect disease-related proteins, providing a rapid alternative to the expensive, months-long laboratory process currently required to develop diagnostics for conditions such as sepsis.

Live Streams

Award Categories

  • Grand Awards

    The Grand Awards represent the pinnacle of achievement at the Canada-Wide Science Fair, recognizing projects that demonstrate exceptional innovation, scientific rigour, and the potential to create meaningful change in our world. These prestigious awards highlight the very best young scientific minds in Canada.

    • Best Project Awards

      The highest honour at CWSF, recognizing the best project in each of Discovery and Innovation. 

    • Platinum Awards

      Awarded to the top project in each of Discovery and Innovation, for each of the grade categories.

    • Youth Can Innovate Awards

      For each grade category, recognizing exceptionally innovative and original STEM projects that demonstrate a practical application in advancing the economic, medical, social, or environmental well-being of society.

  • Excellence Awards

    Excellence Awards recognize outstanding STEM achievement in each grade category. These medals represent a significant accomplishment among Canada's brightest young minds.

    • Gold

      Awarded to the 10 highest-scoring projects in each grade category

    • Silver

      Awarded to 20 exceptional projects in each grade category

    • Bronze

      Awarded to 30 outstanding projects in each grade category

  • Challenge Awards

    The Youth Science Canada Challenges target issues that are important to Canada's youth, the future of our country, and the world. Challenge Awards at the CWSF, recognize the top project in each of the following categories:

    • Aerospace

      Projects that help advance atmospheric or space science, aviation or aerospace technologies, or enable humans to explore and live in space, on the Moon, or beyond.

    • Agriculture, Fisheries and Food

      Projects that help ensure food security, sustainability or competitiveness in agriculture, fisheries or food production.

    • Curiosity and Ingenuity

      Projects that help improve our understanding or address a problem in an area of STEM not covered by the other challenges.

    • Digital Technology

      Projects that help improve our quality of life or transform existing products and services through digital devices, methods or systems.

    • Disease and Illness

      Projects that help enhance our diagnosis, treatment or understanding of disease, or the management of physical or mental illness.

    • Energy

      Projects that help improve our use of current energy sources, enable the transition to alternative energy sources, or reduce our energy footprint.

    • Environment and Climate Change

      Projects that help ensure the quality of water, air, soil or the diversity of living things, or manage the impact of climate change.

    • Health and Wellness

      Projects that help prevent disease or promote physical, social, emotional, spiritual, environmental, occupational, or intellectual wellbeing.

    • Natural Resources

      Projects that help ensure the sustainable management, use, reuse or recycling of Earth's finite or renewable natural resources.

  • Additional Awards

    CWSF also offers a diverse range of recognition sponsored by leading organizations, institutions, and corporations. These awards celebrate specialized expertise, innovation in specific fields, and provide pathways to educational opportunities through scholarships and university partnerships.

    • Special Awards

      Special Awards recognize outstanding achievement in specific scientific fields and are sponsored by various organizations, academic institutions, and corporations. These awards highlight excellence in specialized areas and often include cash prizes and certificates.

    • Scholarships

      Various universities across Canada offer entrance scholarships to CWSF medalists, providing financial support for their post-secondary education in STEM fields.

Grade Categories

  • Projects at the CWSF are evaluated within three grade categories:

    • Junior

      Grades 7-8

    • Intermediate

      Grades 9-10

    • Senior

      Grades 11-12/Cégep

Project Types

  • CWSF projects fall into two main categories:

    • Discovery

      Discovery projects involve the investigation of a scientific question or hypothesis through experimentation and analysis. These projects follow the scientific method to explore the natural world and expand our understanding.

    • Innovation

      Innovation projects focus on developing new technologies, products, or approaches to solve real-world problems. These projects demonstrate creativity, engineering principles, and practical application.

International Opportunities

  • Top CWSF projects may be selected to represent Canada at prestigious international competitions, including:

    • European Union Contest for Young Scientists (EUCYS)

      Best Project Award winners may represent Canada at this elite European competition.

    • Taiwan International Science Fair

      Outstanding Platinum Award winners may be selected to attend this international fair.

    • Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair

      Select CWSF finalists may be chosen to compete at the world’s largest international STEM research competition for high school students.