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Nanotech Investment held steady throughout the financial Crisis

Published: Friday 20 August 2010

Market research and advisory firm Lux Research has published a report comparing ‘nanotech innovation and technology development in 19 countries in order to provide government policymakers, corporate leaders and investors a detailed map of the nanotech’s international development landscape.’

Entitled ‘Ranking the Nations on Nanotech: Hidden Havens and False Threats’, the report found ‘global investment in nanotech held steady through the recent financial crisis, drawing $17.6 billion from governments, corporations and investors in 2009, a 1% increase over 2008’s $17.5 billion. Only venture capitalists dialed back their support, cutting investments by 43% relative to 2008.'

The press release notes that Lux Research set out to analyse ‘the emerging possibility that ambitious new government funding in Russia and China represented a threat to U.S. dominance in nanotech innovation,’ but found that ‘while the field certainly gained momentum in both countries as a result of the increased funding, both countries have economic and intellectual property protection issues that prevent them from being real threats just yet.’

Excerpts from the report summary:

  • The U.S. continues to dominate in nanotech development… for now. Last year saw the U.S. lead all other countries in terms of government funding, corporate spending, VC investment, and patent issuances. But its capacity to commercialize those technologies and leverage them to grow the economy is comparatively mediocre. U.S. competitiveness in long-term innovation is also at risk, as the relative number of science and engineering graduates in its population is significantly lower than it is in other countries.
  • Other countries stand to get more bang for their nanotech buck. Japan, Germany, and South Korea continued their impressive trajectories from 2008, earning top spots in publications, patents, government funding, and corporate spending. Compared to the U.S., all three also remain more focused on nanotech and appear more adept at commercializing new technology. The relative magnitude of the technology manufacturing sectors in these three countries are the world’s highest, meaning their economies stand to benefit the most from nanotech commercialization.
  • Russian and Chinese investment in nanotech yields slow progress. While both governments launched generous nanotech investment programs last year, the technology hasn’t gained momentum in either country’s private sector, both of which have a history of skimping on R&D. The relative lack of momentum was further underscored by the abysmal number of new nanotech patents for either country last year.

Follow these links to find out more about Lux Research, or to download the full report (for purchase or Lux Research clients only).

 
Related Links:
According to the latest ‘State of the Market’ Report, published by Lux Research, intermediate nanotechnology-enabled promise the biggest return on investment. (22nd January 2009)