Computerworld

Govt’s $7.8 million funding boosts NZ hi-tech start-ups

“The incubators programme is an important part of growing new industries for New Zealand in areas like ICT and hi-tech manufacturing."

Science and Innovation Minister Steven Joyce has welcomed a successful first year for innovative start-ups receiving repayable grants from the new technology incubators funded through Callaghan Innovation.

The Technology Incubator Programme has so far approved funding of $7.8 million for 18 hi-tech companies through the repayable loan scheme, with each receiving up to $450,000 over two years.

The technologies invested in cover the ICT, sensing and automation, food and beverage technology, advanced material, design and manufacturing, and biotech industries.

“The incubators programme is an important part of growing new industries for New Zealand in areas like ICT and hi-tech manufacturing,” Joyce says.

“Some of the proposals have the potential to dramatically disrupt a variety of sectors in the global market.

“For example one of the technologies, which aims to reduce the cost of water removal and recovery, could be a game changer worldwide.

“Cost reduction in this process could have global implications for the cost of a range of everyday products. Technological breakthroughs such as these are why the scheme exists.

“Growing many more new companies in our hi-tech sector is crucial to maintaining a strong diversified economy.”

Technology-focused incubators are privately-owned businesses that concentrate on commercialising complex intellectual property sourced primarily from publicly funded research organisations such as universities and Crown research institutes.

They are modelled on the successful Israeli incubator system and include Powerhouse Ventures, Astrolab and WNT Ventures.

Joyce says cabinet agreed in Budget 2013 to allocate $31.3 million in new funding over four years for the repayable grants - Government funding is matched 1:3 by incubator owners contributing up to $150,000.

The grants will be repayable out of each company’s revenue.