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for greater use of biomass-based products, feedstock production, and processing and <br />conversion. <br />A 1982 study found that small businesses Itad 2.5 times as many innovations per <br />employee as large businesses, while large businesses were nearly t/tree times as likely <br />to receive government assistance. As a result, the SBIR Program was established to <br />provide funding to stimulate technological innovation in small businesses to meet <br />federal agency research and development needs. After more than a decade, the STTR <br />program was launched. The major difference is that STTR projects must involve <br />substantial (at least 30%) cooperative research collaboration between the small <br />business and a non profit research institution. <br />What are SBIR and STTR? Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small <br />Business Technology Transfer (STTR) are U.S. Government programs in which federal <br />agencies with large research and development (R&D) budgets set aside a small fraction <br />of their funding for competitions among small businesses only. Small businesses that <br />win awards in these programs keep the rights to any technology developed and are <br />encouraged to commercialize the technology. <br />How much money is set aside? Each year, the federal agencies that participate in SBIR <br />and STTR set aside 2.5% and 0.3%, respectively, of their extramural R&D budgets. For <br />the DOE in FY 2005, these set-asides correspond to $102 million and $12 million, <br />respectively. <br />How do these programs work at DOE? Each year (typically around the beginning of <br />October), DOE issues a solicitation inviting small businesses to apply for SBIR/STTR <br />Phase I grants. It contains technical topics in such research areas as energy production <br />(Fossil, Nuclear, Renewable, and Fusion Energy), Energy Use (in buildings, vehicles, and <br />industry), fundamental energy sciences (materials, life, environmental, and computational <br />sciences, and nuclear and high energy physics), Environmental Management, and <br />Nuclear Nonproliferation. Grant applications submitted by small businesses MUST <br />respond to a specific topic and subtopic during an open solicitation. <br />Phase I? What phases are there and how do they work at DOE? SBIR and STTR <br />have three distinct phases. Phase I explores the feasibility of innovative concepts with <br />awards up to $100,000 for about 9 months. Only Phase I award winners may compete <br />for Phase II, the principal R&D effort, with awards up to $750,000 over atwo-year <br />period. There is also a Phase III, in which non-Federal capital is used by the small <br />business to pursue commercial applications of the R&D. Also under Phase III, Federal <br />agencies may award non-SBIR/STTR-funded, follow-on grants or contracts for <br />products or processes that meet the mission needs of those agencies, or for further <br />R&D. <br />What are the chances of winning? Proposal-to-award ratios are about 5-to-1 for <br />Phase I and 2-to-1 for Phase II. <br />I&I-Funded Technologies <br />