The Department of Energy has a new program designed to help its national laboratories do just what they should: Foster startup companies.
So far, the record for transferring technology from the lab to commercial enterprises is less than stellar. Only about 10 percent of federal patents have been licensed to be commercialized.
Energy Secretary Steven Chu thinks our national labs can do better. We agree.
In what might be the world's first sale on brain power, the program will allow new companies to purchase an option to license technologies developed at the lab for $1,000.
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Previously, the average fees for one to three patents in a portfolio were $10,000 to $50,000. And that money was due upfront.
That's a big burden to shoulder for a startup company with lofty goals but little cash. Being able to license technologies developed at labs like Richland's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory will give innovators and investors a head start toward success.
Lots of startups fail. But the ones that succeed change the world in ways large and small.
DOE will also be trimming the paperwork required in its "America's Next Top Energy Innovator" program. It may not sound as enticing as America's Next Top Model, but in this case the results will actually matter.
DOE is simplifying the licensing process for applicants and has about 15,000 unlicensed patents and patent applications that can be claimed by startup companies.
DOE's goals are on the mark: to increase innovation, assist startup companies on the path to success and create jobs in the clean energy sector.
It is even taking strides to make it easier for collaboration on research and development projects to take place at the labs by lowering the upfront costs for companies that want to work with PNNL and other sites.
PNNL has 319 technologies up for grabs for businesses wanting to turn them into commercial enterprises. They include the "Home Energy Management System," a central control to monitor power consumption on household appliances, and the "Rooftop Diagnostician" for monitoring heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems in commercial buildings.
Opportunities exist for creating the new businesses and industries that will fuel the nation's economic recovery. We only need to tap into the talents that already exist.
"America's entrepreneurs and innovators are the best in the world," Chu said in announcing the new emphasis on technology transfer.
"Today we're challenging them to create new businesses based on discoveries made by our world-leading national laboratories."
The recent changes announced by DOE are making it easier to rise to that challenge.
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