| Small Businesses Grow Big Environmental 
    Technologies 4/1/2008
 
 Washington, DC -
 The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Small Business Innovation 
    Research (SBIR) program is a "small" program with tremendous success 
    stories. EPA today announced $1.75M in SBIR contracts to 25 small businesses 
    to research and develop new environmental technologies. As one example of 
    previous SBIR success, Edenspace Systems developed plants that effectively 
    extract arsenic from soil, avoiding digging up large tracts of residential 
    properties. The plants were used by the U.S. Army to clean up contaminated 
    areas of Spring Valley in Washington, D.C., a process that is called 
    phytoremediation.
 It might be a surprise to some that a small business created such an 
    innovative and successful product. But it really isn’t unusual - the 
    majority of U.S. new technologies are developed by America’s 25 million 
    small businesses, which also employ more than 50 percent of workers. To 
    participate in EPA’s SBIR program, a small business must have fewer than 500 
    employees, and at least 51 percent of the business must be owned by U.S. 
    citizens.
 
 "There are huge new opportunities for profits in the booming green 
    technology business sector," said Dr. George Gray, assistant administrator 
    for the Office of Research and Development. "Many large corporations are 
    already investing heavily in environmental applications. Through the SBIR 
    program, EPA is helping small businesses also make significant contributions 
    to new technologies that are both environmentally friendly and profitable."
 
 Today’s awards will help small businesses develop new technologies in five 
    areas: nanotechnology and pollution prevention, biodiesel and ethanol 
    biofuels, solid and hazardous waste, air pollution control, and homeland 
    security. Each company will receive $70,000 for Phase I or "proof of 
    concept" awards. If Phase I is successful, the companies can apply for Phase 
    II awards to commercialize their technology. EPA will be accepting 
    submissions for the next year’s Phase I SBIR awards until May 21, 2008.
 
 SBIR was established to ensure that new technologies are developed to solve 
    priority environmental problems, and is just one example of EPA's commitment 
    to achieving real world environmental results though the use of innovative 
    technology. In 2006, EPA established the Environmental Technology Council 
    (ETC) to increase the Agency's role as a facilitator in development and 
    commercialization of technologies that measurably improve specific 
    environmental problems. Since its inception in 1982, EPA’s SBIR program has 
    helped fund more than 600 small businesses.
 
 EPA is one of 11 federal agencies that participate in the SBIR program, 
    enacted in 1982 to strengthen the role of small businesses in federal 
    research and development, create jobs, and promote U.S. technical innovation 
    in the United States.
 
 SOURCE: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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