EPA Awards $2.38 Million to 34 Small Businesses to Develop Innovative Environmental Technologies

April 6, 2010
Awards Arizona-based company $70,000 to develop drinking water treatment system

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has awarded $2.38 million to 34 small businesses to develop innovative, sustainable technologies to protect human health and the environment. These efforts will aim to protect water, and also to improve air quality, work to decrease the effects of climate change and support green jobs.

“Innovation is the lifeline of progress--and scientific and technological innovation are essential to the progress we seek to make in protecting people and the planet,” said Dr. Paul T. Anastas, assistant administrator for EPA's Office of Research and Development. “These small businesses are key to helping us reach that goal.”

The awards to businesses in 16 states focus on 10 key environmental research areas: increasing the efficiency of green building materials and systems; manufacturing innovation; prevention, monitoring and control using nanotechnology; reducing greenhouse gases; new treatment technologies for drinking water; improving water infrastructure; reducing emissions from small air pollution sources and vehicles and biofuels production facilities; new approaches for cleaning up and monitoring hazardous waste sites; and new tools for homeland security systems.

Coating Systems Laboratory, Inc., of Chandler, Ariz., was awarded $70,000 to demonstrate the technical feasibility of a drinking water treatment system it has developed. The system consists of a quaternary ammonium chloride coating with antimicrobial properties that may be attached to common granular filter media such as sand and zeolite. The potential for coating filter media to improve drinking water treatment with respect to both disinfection efficiency and the production of disinfection byproducts could impact the majority of surface water treatment plants in the United States. Antimicrobial-coated media can inactivate pathogens without the addition of energy or chemicals. This technology could be a sustainable component of both large and small treatment systems.

EPA’s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program was established to ensure that new technologies are developed to solve priority environmental problems. EPA is one of 11 federal agencies that participate in the SBIR program, enacted in 1982 to strengthen the role of small businesses in federal research and development, create jobs, and promote technical innovation in the United States.

There are approximately 25 million small businesses in the U.S. today. As the leading source of employment growth, these firms have generated 60 to 80% of net new jobs over the past decade and are responsible for developing most of the country’s new technologies. To be eligible to participate in SBIR, a small business must have fewer than 500 employees, and at least 51% of the business must be owned by U.S. citizens.

EPA is also requesting applications for the development of new environmental technologies. The application deadline is May 11.

Source: U.S. EPA

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