NCMS RELEASES
BENCHMARK REPORT ON THE
U.S. NANOTECHNOLOGY INDUSTRY
Surveyed
Organizations Are Transitioning Resolutely to the Nano-Future
ANN ARBOR, MI
– July 12, 2006. The National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS)
and the National Science Foundation (NSF) have released a final report
titled “2005 NCMS Survey of Nanotechnology in the U.S. Manufacturing
Industry”. The study, conducted under NSF-sponsorship, documents the
nation’s largest cross-industry survey of nanotechnology applications
being commercialized by the U.S. manufacturing industry. The report is
available at:
http://www.ncms.org or
http://www.nsf.gov/nano/
Nearly 600 U.S. industry executives participated in the online
NCMS-developed survey, providing insights on strategic issues affecting
their organizations’ pursuit of nanotechnology, that included management
views, adequacy of research infrastructure, commercialization readiness,
and a ranking of key barriers. The study compares these industry trends
across U.S. regions, and provides information useful in planning
corporate strategy, government policy and public investments to
stimulate the largely small business-dominated nanotechnology industry,
and help maintain the nation’s lead.
“The survey shows the increased significance of nanotechnology to both
traditional and emerging fields in the last five years. In 2000, one
could identify only a handful of companies with nanotechnology programs.
In 2005, 18% of the surveyed industries are already marketing products,
about 80% expect to commercialize nano-products by 2010, and almost
everyone expressed confidence their organizations will be involved with
nanotechnology in the future after 2010. Such expansion of industrial
relevance has been a goal of the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI),”
said Dr. M.C. Roco, key architect of the NNI, and Senior Advisor for
Nanotechnology at NSF.
“While applications of two-dimensional nanotechnology products such as
coatings, nano-particulates and thin films will proliferate in the
near-term across many major industry sectors, the surveyed executives
indicated close consensus that the key barriers to commercialization of
more complex, three-dimensional nanotechnology products relate to
process scalability, financing and regulatory issues,” said NCMS
Principal Investigator, Dr. Manish Mehta. “These challenges require
concerted and innovative, public-private collaborations with
unprecedented knowledge-sharing to overcome so as to reap the visionary
benefits,” according to Dr. Mehta.
About NCMS
NCMS is the largest cross-industry
collaborative R&D consortium in North America devoted exclusively to
manufacturing technologies, processes and practices. NCMS has 20 years
of experience in the formation of complex, multi-partner collaborative
programs, and is backed by members representing virtually every sector
of the manufacturing community.
For more information contact Dr. Manish Mehta, at (734) 995-4938,
manishm@ncms.org
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