A decade of government pre-seed investment : report   8 Oct 2015

Article - BusinessDesk

A decade of government pre-seed investment boosts commercialisation of public funded science: report

By Fiona Rotherham

Oct. 8 (BusinessDesk) - More publicly-funded science is being commercialised after a decade of government 'pre-see'd investment, according to an independent review released today.

'Pre-seed' is the earliest form of funding and allows researchers, who usually have little more than an idea, to establish if it’s worth taking to market and to help accelerate them doing so. Because the idea is high risk and unproven at this point, it’s difficult to attract outside investors.

Many New Zealand companies that have developed clever, disruptive, technologies say they would never have got off the ground without the government pre-seed funding.

Stuart McKenzie, chief executive of start-up ArcActive, which is developing a novel carbon nanotube battery technology, said without the $200,000 in two pre-seed injections, matched by Endeavour Capital, “this quality piece of technology from Canterbury University would have died on the vine”.

It’s now setting up a pilot plant to prove large scale manufacturing capability. Sales revenue back to New Zealand from the export of ArcActive’s lead acid battery parts for use in hybrid and electric cars is estimated to be in excess of $250 million in the first five years.

The review is the first commissioned by the Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment into the ministry's Pre-Seed Accelerator Fund (PSAF). It showed 573 projects from 15 universities and crown research institutes between 2003 to 2013 received $42.6 million of government pre-seed investment, matched by co-funding of $66.5 million from research organisations and $24.4 million from external investors.

The projects resulted in more than 386 licences, numerous start-ups, and other commercial deals which have already returned $188.2 million to the research organisations, with many more projects still in development. Typically it takes 11 years from idea to market success and the projects reviewed have an estimated potential to generate at least 460 jobs and up to $3 billion in export revenues.

Many projects could still fail to reach their potential, however a number of start-up case studies included in the report illustrate the projected benefits “are not unrealistic”, it said.

One case study was Canterbury-based Invert Robotics, which received around $100,000 of PSAF investment in 2010 and additional contributions from the University of Canterbury and PowerHouse Ventures, allowing a prototype to be built of its novel climbing robot system. The start-up now sells a range of inspection services to the New Zealand and Australian dairy industries, is expanding into Europe and the US, employs five people, and estimates $10 million of potential export revenue in the first five years.

In another example, Aduro Biopolymers is trialling products made from Novatein resin, which resulted from University of Waikato research into a novel method of manufacturing plastics from blood meal, a natural waste product from meat processing.

Chief executive Darren Harpur said it will start resin production at a pilot plant early next year. He said the pre-seed investment allowed the start-up to be more targeted in its outcome.

Bram Smith, general manager of KiwiNet, which is a consortium of universities and CRIs commercialising research ideas, said MBIE’s annual pre-seed investment of $5.3 million had produced good economic returns for New Zealand. Part of the problem in convincing government to put taxpayers’ money into this high risk area has been being able to demonstrate what difference pre-seed made to a successful company, he said.

Graham Scown, programme and commercialisation director at Auckland University’s Return on Science, said it was important to show that a small, high-risk fund investing before anyone else is willing to do so, can successfully identify risks and accelerate the commercialisation process at a very early stage.

The idea is to “fail fast” on projects that won’t cut the mustard and invest that money into projects that will. Scown says that doesn’t mean interesting scientific research has to end there – there’s still the normal research outcomes of publication and transferring into industry for common good rather than specific commercial outcomes.

The report shows in 2003 there were only a handful of projects receiving pre-seed money while ten years later this had grown to 120 projects a year. That’s despite a flattening of pre-seed investment in recent years, including from government and business investors since the GFC. Frequent short-term rollovers of PSAF contracts, rather than long-term commitments, may also have contributed to the drop-off, the report said.

Government PSAF funding now requires at least a 50 percent co-funding contribution per project, after having dropped in 2007 a requirement for at least 20 percent funding from private sector partners which proved too hard to get because of the risks.

Despite the flattening in total investment, the actual and potential returns from pre-seed investment, along with commercial deals, have risen over time. The report said this was consistent with the growing maturity and capability in leveraging commercial outcomes from scientific research. There has been a prominent increase in the potential export value of pre-seed investments since 2010 compared to earlier investments.

Return on Science and KiwiNet say the PSAF should be increased significantly, as they’re having to reject projects that could be commercially successful.

“More money would very quickly result in more and better outcomes,” Scown said. “In the long-term I’d like the fund to get to $40 million and in the short term $15 million per annum.”

(BusinessDesk)

Add a comment

News

Hilary Timmins' Award-Winning UK Documentary Series To Inspire NZ Students

29 Jun 2020 Education
Dream Catchers, produced and directed by Hilary Timmins, celebrates the success stories of more than thirty inspirational New... more

New Zealand reaffirms support for Flight MH17 judicial process

7 Mar 2020 News By Rt HON WINSTON PETERS
Ahead of the start of the criminal trial in the Netherlands on 9 March, Foreign Minister Winston Peters has reaffirmed the need to... more

Business

NZ Government's Economic package to fight COVID-19

17 Mar 2020 Business News By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
The Coalition Government has launched the most significant peace-time economic plan in modern New Zealand history to cushion the... more

NZ Government announces aviation relief package

19 Mar 2020 Business News By Hon Phil Twyford
Transport Minister Phil Twyford today outlined the first tranche of the $600 million aviation sector relief package announced earlier... more

Living

Diversity was Key at New Zealand Trade Tasting in London

6 Jun 2022 Food & Wine
New Zealand Winegrowers Annual Trade Tasting was recently held in London, on Wednesday 4 May, in Lindley Hall. It was the first... more

Kiwi author stuns Behind the Butterfly Gate

12 Jan 2022 Arts By Charlotte Everett
Hidden behind the Butterfly Gate is where the secret has been kept for 76 years...  New Zealand writer Merryn Corcoran’s... more

Property

Fairer rules for tenants and landlords

17 Nov 2019 Property By Minister Kris Faafoi
17 NOVEMBER 2019 The Government has delivered on its promise to the over one million New Zealanders who now rent to make it fairer... more

New Zealand Government will not implement a Capital Gains Tax

17 Apr 2019 Property By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
The Coalition Government will not proceed with the Tax Working Group’s recommendation for a capital gains tax, Jacinda Ardern... more

Migration

Boosting border security with electronic travel authority – now over 500,000 issued

19 Nov 2019 Migration By Hon Iain Lees-Galloway
19 NOVEMBER 2019 We’ve improved border security with the NZeTA, New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority, which helps us to... more

Christchurch reinstated as refugee settlement location

18 Aug 2018 Migration
18 AUGUST 2018 HON IAIN LEES-GALLOWAY The announcement that Christchurch can once again be a settlement location for refugees... more

Travel

Gallipoli Anzac Day services cancelled

19 Mar 2020 Travel & Tourism By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
The New Zealand and Australian Governments have announced this year’s joint Anzac Day services at Gallipoli will be cancelled... more

New Zealanders advised not to travel overseas

19 Mar 2020 Travel & Tourism
New Zealanders advised not to travel overseas more

Sport

The Skipper's Diary: Sir Richard Hadlee honouring his father and NZ's Forty-Niners

27 Oct 2019 Cricket By Charlotte Everett
NZNewsUK London Editor Charlotte Everett spoke to Sir Richard Hadlee about why he’s chosen to publish his father’s... more

PREVIEW: All Blacks v England semi-final

26 Oct 2019 Rugby
The two most convincing quarterfinals winners are set to square off in a semifinal showdown for the ages when the All Blacks meet old... more

Columns

Gordon Campbell on the Gareth Morgan crusade

11 Nov 2016 Opinion
Gordon Campbell on the Gareth Morgan crusade First published on Werewolf The ghastly likes of Marine Le Pen in France and Geert ... more

Gordon Campbell on the US election outcome

10 Nov 2016 Opinion
Column - Gordon Campbell   Gordon Campbell on the US election outcome Well um.. on the bright side, there (probably)... more

Kiwi Success

Congratulations to Loder Cup winner

26 Sep 2018 People By Hon Eugenie Sage
25 SEPTEMBER 2018 The Loder Cup, one of New Zealand’s oldest conservation awards, has been awarded to Robert McGowan for 2018... more

Appointments to New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO

16 Aug 2018 Appointments
16 AUGUST 2018Appointments to New Zealand National Commission for UNESCO HON JENNY SALESA Associate Education Minister Jenny Salesa is... more

Recruitment

Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers

14 Aug 2018 Recruitment By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
14 AUGUST 2018Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers RT HON JACINDA ARDERN HON CHRIS HIPKINS Prime Minister The... more

Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers

22 Aug 2018 Recruitment By RT HON JACINDA ARDERN
14 AUGUST 2018Historic pay equity settlement for education support workers RT HON JACINDA ARDERN HON CHRIS HIPKINS Prime Minister The... more