NEW RULES FOR THE ATP EMPHASIZE PARTNERING, ENCOURAGE TEAMING LARGE COMPANIES WITH SMALL

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Contact: Michael Baum
Dec. 9, 1997 (301) 975-2763
   
  NIST 97-32

The Commerce Department’s National Institute of Standards and Technology today announced several changes to the rules that govern the Advanced Technology Program. The major impacts of the new rules, published in the Federal Register, are to strengthen the ATP’s emphasis on research ventures and consortia with a broad range of participants, and to ensure that large companies pay a majority of costs on their projects.

The changes are the result of a study of the ATP initiated by Commerce Secretary William M. Daley last March. Conducted by the Department’s Technology Administration, the study solicited comments from the public and experts on research and technology on strategies to strengthen the program and increase its effectiveness.

The Advanced Technology Program provides funding to industry, on a cost-shared basis, to carry out research and development on high-risk, high-payoff emerging and enabling technologies. The program concentrates on those technologies that offer significant, broad-based benefits to the nation’s economy but that are not likely to be developed in a timely fashion without the ATP’s support because of the technical risks involved. The subjects of the ATP research projects are proposed by industry. Awards are made on the basis of announced competitions that consider the technical and business merits of the proposed projects.

The most important changes to the ATP introduced by the new rules include:

The new rules also include some changes to ATP administrative and clerical procedures to provide greater clarity and consistency to the process. The multistep ATP selection process, while not changed, is more clearly defined in the new rules.

The new rules take effect immediately and will apply to future ATP competitions. They do not apply retroactively to ongoing ATP projects. The Federal Register notice announcing the new ATP rules may be read on the ATP World Wide Web page (http://www.atp.nist.gov). Individual copies may be obtained from the ATP by calling 800-ATP-FUND.

As a non-regulatory agency of the Commerce Department's Technology Administration, NIST promotes U.S. economic growth by working with industry to develop and apply technology, measurements and standards.

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