Friday, August 24, 2007

Nano finally gets the push it needs!

The central government of India has decided to make a budgetary provision of Rs. 1,000 crore for nano research in the country. This fund would be utilized over the next four to five years. This initiative would help the industry to tap the growing potential of nanoscience and technology in the country. The nanotechnology market over the world is estimated to grow beyond $1 trillion by 2015 from the current market of around $15 billion.

Prof. C.N.R. Rao, chairman, Science Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, said that a part of the fund would be used to set up six nano researh institutes across India. These institutes would be formed within a period of next five years. The fund will also be used to set up nanotechnology innovation centres, which will be situated in NCBS Bangalore and IIT Madras, Chennai.

He added: “Fund is not the basic problem for us. Having the right capability is more important. We believe that several hundred people would be recruited in next few years in the nano field in India. We would start doing the research at the upcoming nano research centers without waiting for the buildings to come up.”

M.N. Vidyashankar, secretary to the Government, Department of IT, Biotechnology and Science & Technology, added: “The nano centre will be driven by the industry and focus more on nano applications. These centres would operate as total autonomous bodies.”

The Nano Science and Technology Initiative (NSTI) in India is funding about 100 basic science projects till date and about Rs. 20 crores of the total fund (about Rs. 60 crores) has gone toward setting up the six centers for nanoscience at leading science and technology institutes in the country, such as IISc., Bangalore and the various IITs. These centers are focusing at producing a product or device within a certain time frame. A total of 14 national institutions, including some top universities and IITs, have been supported under the NSTI.

India growing in nano space“Though the country is in its nascent stages in nanoscience and technology, Indian laboratories, especially from Bangalore, have been contributing well in the space of new nano materials. We, in India, know the technology, but we have not been making any products. This is the right time for us to tap the potentials of this technology,” said Prof. Rao. The important discovery of Y-juction nanotubes is a significant contribution from C.N.R. Rao’s group at the JNCASR.

Globally, nanotechnology has already created a revolution. In the US, nanotechnology projects have attracted more than $800mn in public funds. It is the largest research project since the Apollo moon landing.

The European Union is also committed to an ensuring balanced approach in developing the nanotechnology. Japan is the largest after the US in terms of government investment in nanotechnology. South Korea and China as well have improved their national initiatives. India happens to be the latest in the list to take initiatives to promote nanotechnology projects in the country.

Bangalore, which is already emerged as the hub of IT and biotechnology, has taken the first step toward creating a business environment for the development of nanotech industry by planning the Bangalore Nano 2007 in December. The event has already received positive responses from the industry as well as the scientists.

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Bangalore Nano 2007 to bridge research-industry gap

The first Bangalore Nano 2007 Convention, a two-day event on nanoscience and technology, was officially launched on August 22, 2007. The event is to be held on December 6-7, in association with Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR). It would focus on the integrated roles of technologies, applications and market for the successful commercialization of nanotechnology. The theme of the event is: ‘Bridging the research-industry gap in Nanotechnology’.

C.N.R. Rao, honorary president, JNCASR and the Chief Mentor of Bangalore Nano 2007, said at a press conference: “Nanotechnology, which has a global business potential of nearly $1 trillion, has many valuable societal application for the unprivileged in the country, including the creation of a more efficient filtering systems for producing clean drinking water and the provision of cheap and clean energy.

“The government must support through policies and financial grants to pursue larger social and environmental goals that could build capacities of our nation,” he added. He said that Indian laboratories, especially from Bangalore, had been contributing to a large extent in the field of new nanomaterials.

M.N. Vidyashankar, secretary to the Government, Department of IT, Biotechnology and Science & Technology, said that the event would create an opportunity for researchers, innovators as well as venture capitalists to showcase the latest advancements in the field of nanotechnology and to identify the investment opportunities for the future.

“Around 20,000 people are working on nanotechnology globally and the trends in information technology, biotechnology and nanotechnology are in convergence. Nanotechnology has vast applications in semiconductor industry as well,” Vidyashankar said during his welcome note. He added that such initiatives would help Bangalore become the home of nanoscience and technology in the very near future.

Bangalore Nano 2007 is the first major event of its kind in the country and is likely to host renowned global scientists and industry veterans in the field of nanotechnology.