| Exponential
Rise in Indian Nanotech
Nanotechnology
publications and patents have grown exponentially in India
since the launch of a national initiative in the sector eight
years ago, an analysis reveals.
Universities and government-funded institutes
have taken the lead in the sector, while industry produced
few publications and patents during the period 19902007.
The findings strengthen concerns that
Indian industry is being slow to take off in nanotechnology
(see Lack of industry links 'keeping Indian nanotech small').
The results, part of a wider study by
the Delhi-based National Institute of Science, Technology
and Development Studies (NISTADS), were released this week
(4 February) at a workshop on capabilities and governance
issues relating to emerging technologies in developing countries.
Data presented by NISTADS scientist Vinod
Kumar Gupta shows Indian publications in nanotechnology rose
from none in 1990 to about 2,200 in 2007, totaling nearly
21,000 at the end of 2007 an "almost exponential"
growth.
The number of patents was negligible until
2001, after which it climbed steadily to 35 in 2007.
Gupta said almost half 48 per cent
of the publications came from universities, while government
research and development institutes contributed 28 per cent.
He said the emergence of Indian universities
as centres for the generation of nanotechnology knowledge
was "encouraging". Even some relatively poorly-funded
colleges were publishing in international journals, he added.
Government institutes also dominated patent
ownership, at 39 per cent. The patents tended to be in the
fields of pharmaceuticals and chemical sciences and technologies.
Participants at the workshop called for
India to address regulatory and ethical issues. Nanotechnology
is increasingly used in medicine, textiles, agriculture and
environmental clean-ups despite there being no international
or national guidelines on their use, the meeting heard.
Concern over the need for regulation has
recently received considerable attention in India (see India
'must regulate nanotechnology' urgently).
Last month (910 January), a conference
organised by Delhi-based The Energy and Resources Institute
(TERI) and Calcutta University in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta)
released recommendations on regulation.
They called for a comprehensive new nanotechnology
law; clear definition and classification of nanotechnology
products under Indian patent laws; use of the precautionary
principle, which assumes a risk exists until a product is
proven to be safe; and an expert committee to quickly draw
up short-term recommendations to deal with growing application
and commercialisation of the technology.
Source: SciDev net
Date: 5 February 2009

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