News Bulletin: Uni Contributions To Business
NZVCC Electronic News Bulletin Vol. 8 No. 18 29 October 2008
Lead item …
Multiple contributions by universities
to business success
The contributions to business
success from the commercialisation of university research
are multiple, according to Auckland UniServices CEO Dr Peter
Lee. They include not only the formation of new companies
but also licences and contracted research to support the
needs of existing businesses. Dr Lee made this observation
at last week’s launch of University research
commercialisation – paying dividends for New Zealand
at a function at the University of Auckland. The joint
NZVCC – University Commercialisation Offices of New
Zealand (UCONZ) publication sets out the success story which
sees university research commercialisation currently
generating a billion dollars for the New Zealand economy
through the market capitalisation of spin-out
companies.
Dr Lee noted that many businesses were
realizing that the current financial situation was tougher
than normal but some nevertheless saw it as a time of
extraordinary opportunity. “Often in today’s financial
climate one hears questions about the value of academic
research and the explanations from researchers are often
discounted as self serving. The technology transfer
offices, which work at the interface between academic
research and business, are in a good position to speak to
the value of this investment. We say that there might be no
better way and no better time than the present to seek new
commercial directions for business by linking business need
with the potentially game changing opportunities inherent in
our research laboratories.”
Dr Lee’s comments
followed similar sentiments expressed by NZVCC chair
Professor Roger Field who told the launch audience that
linkages among universities, other research providers and
private business were especially important in a small
country like New Zealand. Statistics NZ’s research and
development survey showed that research in this country’s
eight universities was worth $593 million a year. In 2005
the universities’ commercialisation entities set up UCONZ
to promote the sector which was now thriving with a turnover
of $350 million a year. UCONZ also provided a forum for the
exchange of ideas on how to advance research
commercialisation and the benefits it brought to New
Zealand.
The university research commercialisation
publication sets out six case studies where the commercial
potential of university research outputs has been realised.
They involve the application of research centred on safe
transmission of electric currents, cheap and efficient
energy generation in the home, environmental management and
medical advances.
Auckland Cancer Society Research
Centre Director Professor Bill Denny also spoke at the
publication launch. The centre is based in the University
of Auckland’s School of Medical Sciences and its mission
is the development of new drugs for cancer therapy, with
about 40% of its income coming from commercial
collaborations. Engagement with industry is underpinned by
complementary skills – universities being the creation
engine and companies, the development engine. The three
types of commercial collaborations are fee-for-service
research, joint ventures and spin-out companies. However,
the benefits to the university from commercial engagement
are even wider, including research funding from overseas,
downstream investment in New Zealand and cutting-edge
clinical trial research opportunities for clinicians in this
country.
A PDF of University research
commercialisation – paying dividends for New Zealand
is available from:
www.nzvcc.ac.nz/files/u2/NZVCC_Uni_ResearchFIN_1C59D.pdf
Other
items …
New look NZVCC for
2009
Massey University Vice-Chancellor Steve Maharey will attend his first NZVCC meeting this week after some four weeks in the role on a full-time basis while University of Canterbury Vice-Chancellor elect Dr Rod Carr will take up his new post in February 2009. They represent the first change in the composition of the NZVCC since the appointments of Victoria University of Wellington Vice-Chancellor Professor Pat Walsh and Waikato University Vice-Chancellor Professor Roy Crawford in 2005.
From a corporate and government background, Dr Carr is currently Managing Director of Christchurch-based Jade Software Corporation. Prior to joining Jade in 2003, he was Deputy Governor and Director of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. He has also held senior positions within the Bank of New Zealand and the National Australia Bank. He has LLB (Hons) and BCom (Hons) degrees from the University of Otago, an MBA from Columbia University Graduate School of Business (New York), and MA and PhD degrees from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
Woolf Fisher Scholarships for 2009
Jennifer Haskell (University of Canterbury), Andrew Haines (University of Otago) and James McNamara (Victoria University of Wellington) have won Woolf Fisher Scholarships for 2009 and will study at Cambridge University. Administered by the NZVCC, Woolf Fisher Scholarships were established in 2003 and are tenable at Cambridge or Oxford University for three or four years of postgraduate research leading to a doctoral degree or equivalent.
Now aged 21, Jennifer Haskell is a former dux of Chilton St James School in the Hutt Valley and will graduate from Canterbury at the end of this year with a BE (Hons) in civil engineering. At Cambridge she will work under the supervision of Dr Gopal Madabhushi and her PhD research will focus on seismic design of foundations using the geotechnical centrifuge at the Schofield Centre. A New Zealand representative in both ice and inline hockey, Jennifer hopes to play for the Cambridge women’s ice hockey team.
Andrew Haines is also 21 and attended Taieri College where he was dux, deputy head prefect and captain of the 1st XI. He will graduate from Otago with a BSc (Hons) in physics and mathematics and hopes to study with Professor Jeremy Baumberg in the nano photonics group at Cambridge. His PhD research will investigate self and directed assembly of metamaterials which has applications in fields such as telecommunications but may also be applied to the development of a wide range of technologies.
James McNamara is aged 24 and attended Wellington College where he was dux in 2002. He has completed an MA in classics with distinction at Victoria, having majored in Latin, Ancient Greek and German at undergraduate level. James will work towards a PhD in classics at Cambridge, researching the historiography of the Roman historian Tacitus. He is looking to expand on an earlier project on the exploitation of fear as a command tool in the Roman Empire.
Australian university infrastructure investment fast-tracked
Universities Australia has come out in support of the Australian Government’s decision to fast-track investment in university infrastructure from the Higher Education Endowment Fund (HEEF) returns. The organisation has welcomed a decision by the federal government to allocate almost A$700 million for spending on university infrastructure and research facilities. The money has been fast-tracked to next year's funding round. Announcing the decision last week, Education Minister Julia Gillard and Science and Research Minister Senator Kim Carr said the move was in line with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's earlier announcement to bring forward the government's "nation building agenda". A total of 14 universities from a field of 55 applicants have been selected to develop their proposals for the 2009 funding round. The proposals cross the teaching, learning and research spectrum, including disciplinary areas such as education, creative arts, engineering and science.
The ministers said the government had already delivered A$500 million for university infrastructure through its Better Universities Renewal Fund. Universities Australia said the fast-track decision would further reduce massive backlogs in teaching and research facilities while supporting economic activity and enhancing graduate skills, productivity and exports. The HEEF will soon be subsumed into an A$11 billion Education Investment Fund (EIF) and Universities Australia has recommended that the first EIF funding round be brought forward to July 2009. Universities Australia also wants an ability to draw down the fund’s capital to be made available.
Canadian universities eligible for infrastructure funding
The Canadian federal government has announced that Canadian universities and colleges are eligible recipients for the government’s Building Canada infrastructure plan. Project proposals from universities and colleges must have formal municipal support and demonstrate that they benefit the broader community in which the institution is located. The Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada reports that a number of Building Canada investment categories may be of interest to its members, including those related to sports and cultural infrastructure, as well as broadband and “brownfield” (abandoned or under-used industrial and commercial facilities available for re-use) redevelopment.
The governments of Canada and Quebec have also announced the signing of the Canada-Quebec framework agreement under the Building Canada plan. Worth nearly C$4 billion between this year and 2014, the agreement includes funding for the expansion of Université Laval’s physical education and sports building. Federal funding for the project under the framework agreement will be C$37.5 million, with matching funds from the Quebec government and C$10 million from Quebec City.
ENDS