SSTI Weekly Digest
Wednesday June 30, 2010  |  Volume 15, Issue 24 > Web Version   > Archive   > Subscribe   > Unsubscribe

In This Week's Issue


SSTI News and Analysis

Race for the Renewable Energy Pay-Off: Recent State Actions
Over the past few months, several states have announced efforts aimed at reducing the nation's dependence on oil. While the importance and urgency of such efforts is perhaps magnified in the wake of one of the worst U.S. environmental disasters, the shift to a renewable energy-focused economy also brings with it the expectation of job creation, new product development, and increased revenue for states struggling in the aftermath of the Great Recession.

Governors in Arizona and Rhode Island recently signed legislation supporting renewable energy R&D and offshore wind development, respectively. In California, a measure requiring electric utilities to generate one-third of the state's power from renewable sources is being floated, and in Utah, Gov. Gary Herbert announced a formal planning process to create a 10-year clean energy initiative for the state.

Arizona
Gov. Jan Brewer recently signed into law HB 2370 establishing individual and corporate income tax credits for R&D, production and delivery system costs associated with solar liquid fuels. The measure, which is in effect from 2011 to 2026, specifies that qualified research includes only research conducted in the state.

Solar liquid fuel refers to the process by which concentrated solar energy is used in conjunction with carbon dioxide and water to create hydrocarbons, according to an Arizona State University press release. It is used to create combustible fuels such as methanol and ethanol and additional processing potentially can yield more traditional fuels such as gasoline, diesel and jet fuel.

California
A bill making its way through the Committee on Natural Resources in the California legislature would increase the state's renewable portfolio standard to require utility companies to procure at least 33 percent of electricity from renewable sources by 2020. Although this standard already is in place following an executive order issued last September by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, future governors are not bound to the standard (see the March 17, 2010 issue of the Digest). Gov. Schwarzenegger supports the proposed bill (SB 722).

At the same time, an effort is underway to suspend the state's Global Warming Solutions Act, which set the 2020 greenhouse gas emissions reduction goal into law. Enacted in 2006, the law directs the California Air Resources Board to develop actions to reduce greenhouse gasses and prepare a scoping plan to identify how best to reach the 2020 limit. Reduction measures to meet the 2020 target date would be adopted at the start of 2011.

The measure to suspend the Act qualified for the November ballot last week. If passed, the state would be required to abandon implementation of the program until the unemployment rate drops to 5.5 percent or less for four consecutive quarters. Backers of the initiative say implementing the mandates now will result in increases in certain consumer goods during a time of high unemployment.

Rhode Island
Legislation to facilitate construction of an offshore wind project seen as key to Rhode Island's economic development and renewable energy agenda was signed into law earlier this month by Gov. Donald Carcieri. The legislation (H8083/S2819) "clarifies the General Assembly's original intent to encourage and promote clean, independent, renewable energy in Rhode Island through a demonstration sized, offshore wind project," according to the governor's press release. Specifically, the legislation directs the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission to revisit the contract between wind farm developer Deepwater Wind and National Grid that it rejected in April, reports Providence Business News. The commission must render a decision within 45 days. Deepwater also is required to pay for a consultant to study any economic benefits of a wind farm, the article reports.

The Block Island Project, which is expected to cost about $200 million, would present economic advantages for the state such as attracting jobs and investment dollars of offshore wind turbine manufacturers, blade manufacturers and related businesses, according to the governor's office. Read the press release.

Utah
Gov. Gary Herbert announced earlier this month the formation of a working group to develop a 10-year clean energy plan for the state, an initiative outlined during his State of the State Address. The plan, which is due by the end of the year, will focus on creating energy-related manufacturing jobs, developing cutting-edge technologies that combine traditional fuels with renewables, modernizing infrastructure, promoting energy efficiency, and enhancing partnerships between industry, universities, governments and communities to address energy opportunities. Gov. Herbert also asked the advisory group to consider how the state can best deal with nuclear issues, including the generation of power and disposal of waste.

The governor tasked the group with accomplishing the goals without the use of tax incentives, according to an Associated Press article. An outline of the initiatives and objectives is available at: http://www.utah.gov/governor/docs/Energy-Initiatives-Imperatives.pdf.

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$29.5 Million in NYSTAR Budget Extends Matching Grants Program
The $68.2 million FY 11 budget approved last week for the New York State Foundation for Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR), allows the foundation to continue to provide 10 percent matching funds for research institutions and businesses in order to attract federal, private and industry funds. The budget allocates $29.5 million in FY11 for a matching grants program started with ARRA stimulus funding and $5.2 million for the state's six Centers of Excellence.

The appropriation is scaled down from Gov. David Paterson's original budget recommendation that would have provided $100 million for the program (see the issue of the Jan. 27, 2010 issue of the Digest). The NYSTAR budget also includes $1.5 million for state matching funds for the Manufacturing Extension Program and $343,000 for the Research Development Program.

A. 9705, providing the budget detail, is available at: http://public.leginfo.state.ny.us.

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Illinois Approves Angel Investment Credit, Extends R&D Credit
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn recently signed legislation approving a new tax credit to encourage angel investment and extending the state's R&D tax credit one more year. The Innovation Development and Economy Act (SB 2093) allows eligible angel and early-stage institutional investors to take a 25 percent tax credit on investments in small, technology firms. Up to $2 million may be claimed on an individual investment for a $500,000 tax credit. The program is capped at $10 million and will be effective on Jan 1, 2011.

Passed unanimously by the Illinois General Assembly, SB 3655 extends the state's R&D tax credit for one more year. The provision allows for a tax credit equal to 6.5 percent of qualifying expenditures that increase R&D activities in Illinois. These expenditures include, for example, technological and experimental research whose purpose is to develop new or improved components, functions, performance, reliability or quality.

SB 2093 is available at: http://ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/96/PDF/096-0939.pdf.

SB 3655 is available at: http://ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/96/PDF/096-0937.pdf.

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SC Changes Endowed Chairs Program & Manufacturing Incentives
Touted as a tool to help the state attract and retain jobs, South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford last week signed into law H. 4478, the Economic Development Competitiveness Act. The new law directs one-third of the state's endowed chairs money be administered by the Coordinating Council on Economic Development — a reform measure that the governor says will help shift its focus to job creation and allow private sector investment to lead public sector investment. Funding previously was administered by an academic panel. The Act also provides several incentives for manufacturing, including renewable energy tax incentives.

To support the state's manufacturers and attract new facilities, the Act includes the following incentives:

  • A renewable energy facility tax credit equal to 10 percent of the cost of a company's qualifying investments in plant and equipment for renewable energy operations;
  • An amendment changing the South Carolina Life Sciences Act to make it the South Carolina Life Sciences Act and Renewable Energy Manufacturing Act, extending benefits to renewable energy manufacturing facilities, including tax credits for machinery and equipment and job creation; and,
  • A reduction to the industrial property tax on warehouses located on a manufacturing site from 10.5 percent to 4 percent, an incentive to help the state attract distribution centers.

The Economic Development Competitiveness Act is available at: http://www.scstatehouse.gov/sess118_2009-2010/bills/4478.htm.

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New Era Outlined in U.S. Space Policy
A national space agenda based on competition and national pride — the space race as it has been called — fits bygone times, according to the new National Space Policy statement released by the Obama administration on June 28. The new era outlined in the 14-page document calls for space-venturing nations to embrace shared principles of responsibility, peace, transparency, no claims of national sovereignty, and recognizing "purposeful interference" with another nation's space systems is an infringement of that nation's rights and grounds for self-defense or deterrence.

U.S. leadership in space is expected to be maintained through space-related research, assured access to space (e.g., using American-manufactured vehicles for payload launches), enhanced spaced-based global positioning, navigation satellite and timing systems, quality of space professional workforce and interagency cooperation.

The policy statement outlines numerous guidelines related to international, environmental, radiofrequency spectrum power, sector (commercial and civil), and space use issues as well. As a result, the brief policy statement may help state and regional space-related TBED strategies focus or refocus investment priorities going forward in areas like identifying research thrusts, exploiting new space-related technologies, and new commercial space opportunities.

The National Space Policy of the United States of America is available at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/national_space_policy_6-28-10.pdf.

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Recent Research

Deloitte: U.S. Manufacturing Competitiveness to Decline through 2015
U.S. manufacturing competitiveness will continue to decline, according to the 2010 Global Manufacturing Competitiveness Index (GMCI). Index projections suggest, by 2015, Brazil will have overtaken the U.S. for fourth in the global rankings behind China, India and the Republic of Korea. The report concludes the increasing talent pools worldwide, coupled with higher U.S. wages, have placed U.S. manufacturing at a disadvantage in the global markets. However, the U.S. should remain at the forefront of manufacturing innovation due to a focus on strengthening science and technology research, the strong intellectual property rights (IPR), technology transfer policy, and STEM initiatives.

The report was created through a partnership between Deloitte's Global Manufacturing Industry group and the U.S. Council on Competitiveness. Based on survey responses from more than 400 senior global manufacturing executives and key government decision makers, researchers developed an index that ranked the "10 drivers of global manufacturing competitiveness." Respondents also were asked to rate the overall manufacturing competiveness of 26 countries for 2010 and 2015.

Worldwide, respondents agreed that talent-driven innovation is the top ranked driver of global manufacturing. The "Asian juggernauts" (i.e. China, India and Korea) and other nations expected to increase their competiveness (e.g. Brazil, Russia and Poland) have successfully cultivated and retained a strong talent pool comprised of skilled workers, scientists, researchers, engineers, and teachers. Workers capable of fueling innovation and improving production efficiency have overtaken the availability of "cheap labor," which finished third in the global rankings.

Executives with businesses operating in the United States found the U.S. to have two advantages, but also face several disadvantages in manufacturing competiveness. Intellectual property protection (75 percent of respondents) and technology transfer & adoption (61 percent) are the strongest contributors to U.S. competitive advantage in manufacturing. They are seen to increase U.S. competiveness due to increased royalty revenues and they create incentives for further investments in R&D. These advantages keep the U.S. at the cutting edge of manufacturing innovation. However, government policies and laws pertaining to immigration (32.7 percent of respondents), product liability (42.9 percent), healthcare (51.0 percent) and corporate tax (53.1) were reported to be disadvantages to U.S. competiveness. These policies are seen to increase the cost on producers and "discourage capital investments." Due to the recent financial interventions (e.g. "bailouts"), government intervention and ownership in companies was ranked as the number one disadvantage (59.2 percent of respondents) to U.S. competitiveness in manufacturing. In the long-term, respondents believe that government financial intervention and ownership will hurt American competiveness.

The 2010 Global Manufacturing Competitiveness Index is available at: http://www.deloitte.com.

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Useful Stats

Federal R&D Obligations by State, FY 2002-07
In 2007, the federal government dedicated $111.4 billion to R&D, an amount roughly equal to 0.81 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), according to a recent report from the National Science Foundation (NSF). While research-intensive states, such as California, Maryland, Massachusetts and Virginia are the leading targets for federal R&D spending, several other states attracted a comparable amount of federal funding relative to their economies between 2002 and 2007. Montana, Washington, Utah, Tennessee and Colorado led the country in expanding their federal R&D obligations during that five-year period. The District of Columbia and New Mexico rank with the top states in federal obligations relative to their gross state product (GSP). Despite a general pattern of positive growth around much of the country, federal obligation rates fell in many southern states during this period.

NSF's Federal Funds for Research and Development series illustrates trends in the federal government's funding obligations for science and engineering R&D. The series tracks federal support to government agencies, academic institutions, research centers, state and local governments, nonprofit organizations, as well as private companies. It provides detailed information on funding agencies and research performers by state.

Using the most recent report from this series, SSTI has prepared a table showing federal R&D obligations by state for each year from 2002 to 2007. The table includes data on the change and percentage change in funding between FY06 and FY07. It also includes data on funding changes over the five-year period and the size of federal R&D obligations relative to gross state product. The table is available at: http://www.ssti.org/Digest/Tables/063010t.htm (See the May 26, 2010 issue for SSTI's data and analysis on federal R&D obligations to industry by state.).

During the five-year span between 2002 and 2007, federal R&D obligations increased by 32.7 percent, though spending slowed considerably in 2006 and 2007. Because of the nature of federal R&D funding, the data on annual change in funding levels can be misleading. Specific projects, particularly the construction of facilities, can cause single-year jumps in funding levels that do not continue into the next year.

California, which continues to be the country's leading federal R&D funding recipient, also experienced the largest increase in funding between 2002 and 2007. Federal obligations grew by 35.9 percent, from $15.7 billion to $21.3 billion. Maryland, Virginia, Massachusetts and Texas round out the top five overall recipients in 2007, all of which increased their obligations by more than the national average during the five-year period.

A single-year obligation in Montana skewed the performance data for that state in 2007 putting it among the top performers relative to its smaller economy. A nearly one-half billion dollar, intramural construction investment by the National Institutes of Health for a national biocontainment laboratory placed Montana at the top of the list for one-year and five-year relative growth. In 2007, the state ranked sixth in federal obligations relative to GSP. During the other years of the study, however, Montana received obligations consistent with the lower rates relative to previous funding and GSP common in the Mountain states.

During fiscal years 2002-2007, many southern states saw their federal R&D obligations greatly reduced. Fourteen states experienced cuts during that five-year period. Four of the five states with the largest cuts were in the South, including Georgia, Mississippi, Kentucky and Alabama. Louisiana, Oklahoma, Missouri and West Virginia also had their federal R&D funding reduced.

This pattern in the South is exacerbated by a few single-year funding anomalies, including an unusually high-level of funding in Georgia in 2002. Even given these quirks, funding throughout the South (except in North Carolina and Tennessee) did not keep pace with the national average.

Federal Funds for Research and Development: Fiscal Years 2007-09 is available at: http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/nsf10305/pdf/nsf10305.pdf.

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Staff Picks

U.S. Dept of Commerce Holding Regional Forums on Role of Universities
The U.S. Department of Commerce and its Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurship at the Economic Development Administration announced four forums to be held across the country with university leaders and key stakeholders to discuss the role of universities in innovation, economic development, job creation and commercialization of research.  Read more ...

Broadband Availability to Expand
The Obama administration is seeking to nearly double the wireless communications spectrum available for commercial use over the next 10 years, an effort that could greatly enhance the ability of consumers to send and receive video and data with smartphones, according to the New York Times.  Read more ...

Supreme Court Loosens Patent Eligibility
The Supreme Court loosened the limits on the kinds of inventions that are eligible for patent protection. The Court rejected a lower court's reasoning that only inventions involving machinery or physical "transformations" are eligible for patents.  Read more ...

Science Foundation Arizona Has $153M Economic Impact
Science Foundation Arizona's total economic impact reached $153 million between 2007 and 2009, according to a new economic impact report. The $50 million in grants were directly responsible for 1,151 jobs.  Read more ...

University Tech Commercialization Gets National Attention
The New York Times provides an overview of some of the activity occurring at universities, including proof-of-concept centers.  Read more ...

Recession's Impact Reaches Half Adult Population
The recession has directly hit more than half of the nation's working adults, pushing them into unemployment, pay cuts, reduced hours at work or part-time jobs, according to a new Pew Research Center survey.  Read more ...

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