1 / 13

The Issue of Technology Readiness Level

The Issue of Technology Readiness Level . One of the current issues being discussed by the Department of Energy’s Technology Transfer Working Group is the issue of Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs). The Issue of Technology Readiness Level .

limei
Télécharger la présentation

The Issue of Technology Readiness Level

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level One of the current issues being discussed by the Department of Energy’s Technology Transfer Working Group is the issue of Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs).

  2. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level The Riskier the Technology, the less likely it will get Development Funding.

  3. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level There is a lot of Technology Transfer Related Legislation in the Pipeline Some identify the issue of TRL. Technology Transfer Legislation –TRANSFER Act √ –National Defense Authorization Act –EINSTEIN Act –America COMPETES Reauthorization Act (House Democrats) √ –America COMPETES Reauthorization Act (Senate Bipartisan) √ –America INNOVATES Act –Technology Transfer Invention, Innovation, and Implementation Act –21st Century Innovation at the National Labs Act of 2013 √ .

  4. Technology Transfer Legislation Title: America COMPETES Reauthorization (House Democrats) Bill Number: DRAFT Sponsor: TBD – House Democrat Alternative – Science Committee Ranking Member Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX-30) Tech Transfer Provisions: •Gives National Lab Directors authority to sign-off on tech transfer agreements under $500,000, including CRADAs, non-federal WFO, and ACT agreements •Makes ACT authority permanent, and expands eligibility to include non-federal entities that have received federal funding for project-related activities •Clarifies the definition of technology transfer activities to include technology maturation •Gives DOE’s Tech Transfer Coordinator the authority to distribute funds from the Technology Commercialization Fund created in EPACT 2005 Other Provisions: •5-year reauthorization, with annual budget increases of 5% for NSF, DOE’s Office of Science, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) •Supports Regional Innovation Clusters and manufacturing innovation centers •Authorizes ARPA-E, Energy Frontier Research Centers, and Energy Innovation Hubs •Repeals the 20% cost share requirement for basic research grants •Implements a Federal Strategic Plan for STEM Education .

  5. Technology Transfer Legislation Title: TRANSFER ACT (Technology and Research Accelerating National Security and Future Economic Resiliency Act of 2013) Bill Number: H.R. 2981 Sponsor: Reps. Chris Collins (R-NY-27) and Derek Kilmer (D-WA-6) Tech Transfer Provisions: •Directs agencies with Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs to use a small portion of its STTR set-aside for grants to universities, non-profit research institutes, and National Labs to support innovative approaches to tech transfer •Defines “innovative approaches to tech transfer” to include: –Early stage proof of concept activities for translational research; –Identification of technologies with potential for accelerated commercialization; –Technology maturation activities such as prototype construction, experiment analysis, product comparison, and collecting performance data; –Technical validations, market research, clarifying intellectual property rights position and strategy, and investigating commercial and business opportunities; and –Advice, mentoring, entrepreneurial education, project management, technology and business development expertise for innovators and recipients of technology transfer licenses to maximize commercialization potential. •Institutional grants of $1 million; project grants of $150,000 •Requires grant recipients to create a program oversight board

  6. Technology Transfer Legislation Title: 21st Century Innovation at the National Labs Act of 2013 Bill Number: DRAFT Sponsor: Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) Tech Transfer Provisions: •Makes Agreements for Commercializing Technology permanent •Authorizes the use of LDRD to enhance tech transfer activities, including to demonstrate the commercial potential of promising early stage research and technologies •Creates a pilot allowing national lab directors to enter into WFO, CRADA, User Facility, and Other Transaction agreements without prior approval by DOE •Expands the PEMP process to include a category on “technology impact” Other Provisions: •Makes National Lab Policy Council permanent •Consolidates positions of Under Secretary for Energy and Under Secretary for Science •Creates a task force to reduce burdensome DOE regulations on the national labs and strengthen the contractor-assurance system while maintaining necessary oversight of lab operations.

  7. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level Most Laboratory Technologies are developed to the TRL 1 or 2. Generally Companies are only interested in licensing Technologies at TRL 5 or 6. What can be done at the Labs to bridge the TRL gap? Answer - Fund Technology Maturation

  8. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level Expand the Use of Royalty Funding to Include Tech Maturation Funding – Expand the allowed use of royalty income. This would be in conjunction with a license option agreement where the licensee would provide Tech Maturation Funding and have priority for a standard license.

  9. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level 2) Establish an Agency Technology Innovation Program - Provides funding to mature key lab selected with industry input, and then provides funded lab support to licensees. Funded by lab royalty pool. Reinstatement of “maturation funds” at the Department level would provide seed money to help move lab technologies to the marketplace

  10. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level 3) Use specific Program Funds. A process where working in conjunction with several of the DOE Programs, a commercialization strategy is developed, then jointly, the DOE program managers agree to provide funding to mature the technology and to help deploy the technology over a period of 3-5 years.

  11. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level 4) Use Laboratory Overhead Funding for Technology Maturation – Allow the labs to use overhead funds for technology maturation. This provides the Labs the broadest possible use of the funds and doesn’t restrict usage to technologies applicable to only a single [DOE] programs.

  12. The Issue of Technology Readiness Level 5) Establish an agency Tech Maturation Fund - Establish a fund targeted at maturing early stage technology developed at the National Laboratories. Access to funding might be competitively awarded and require relevant industry participation to ensure adoption and commercial success.

More Related