Partners in Science: Federal Technology Transfer Act (FTTA)
What's New
- National Ecosystem Services Research Partnership
(PDF, 2pp., 2.7MB, about PDF) - Collaborations for Development of EPA's ToxCastTM
Program for Predicting Toxicity
(PDF, 3pp., 23KB, about PDF) - EPA Expands Agreement to Further Work in Green Chemistry
- Identification of Bacterial DNA Markers for the Detection of Human Fecal Pollution in Water
- EPA FTTA Patent Catalog (PDF, 20pp., 1.10MB, about PDF)
The EPA seeks opportunities to transfer federal technologies into the marketplace, and collaborate on environmental research and development projects with outside entities, such as industry, consortia, academia, trade associations, and state and local agencies. The Federal Technology Transfer Act (FTTA) provides a mechanism for these cooperative research and development partnerships. Through the FTTA program, federal agencies can conduct joint research with non-federal partners and protect intellectual property that may be developed. The alliance that is formed through the FTTA program supports and improves US competitive positions worldwide, helps remove barriers to collaboration, and encourages cooperative research and development with the goal of commercialization.
EPA FTTA program partners benefit from cooperative research and development agreements (CRADAs) by tapping into EPA's resources and knowledge base to conduct joint research and technology commercialization. Other benefits include:
- Access to EPA laboratory facilities. By entering into CRADAs, non-federal partners can conduct research in EPA's scientific facilities;
- Collaboration with EPA scientists and engineers to work on cutting-edge research projects;
- Opportunities for licensing patented technologies and bringing new technologies to the marketplace.
Quick Reference
- EPATechmatch.com - A website to search all EPA patents, as well as view lab capabilities, EPA tech needs and more. View Press Release
- EPA Patents
- FTTA Factsheet
(PDF, 1pp., 615KB, about PDF) - EPA Laboratories and Research Centers
- Model CRADA documents
There are also many benefits of cooperative research and development to the public at large. These include:
- Research projects that lead to better protection of human health and the environment;
- Government research reaches the marketplace;
- Collaboration enhances the quality of products;
- New environmental technology reaches the field quickly.
CRADAs are negotiated agreements between specific laboratories and non-federal partners that outline the terms and conditions under which work will be performed. CRADAs set out the project scope, resources to be provided by each party, and will often contain provisions regarding licensing, commercialization, and patent development. While laboratories cannot transfer funds to the cooperating partner under a CRADA, they can exchange personnel, equipment, or services. CRADAs can be established between interested parties to transfer resources from non-government organizations to the federal government so that both parties can share jointly in research and development patents. Licensing agreements and royalty rights are also covered under these agreements.
FY 2007 Patent Statistics
- New Inventions Reported: 16
- New Patent Applications: 15
- New Patents Issued: 10
- Royalties on EPA Inventions: $543K
Support Provided by EPA's Technology Transfer Staff
- Assist in identifying research suitable for cooperative efforts
- Assist EPA researchers in identifying potential partners
- Assist partners in identifying opportunities for EPA collaboration
- Market assessment of technologies developed by EPA researchers
- Tracking and reporting
- Coordination with General Counsel on intellectual property protection
FY 2007 CRADA Statistics
- Number of new CRADAs: 18
- Total Resources: $8.9M
For more information, please contact
Sarah Bauer at (202) 564-3267 or
bauer.sarah@epa.gov
Valerie Blank at (202) 564-1720 or
blank.valerie@epa.gov