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  • TOL: Scientific Sector Gets A Boost

    SCIENTIFIC SECTOR GETS A BOOST
    by Haroutiun Khachatrian

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    Jan 11 2007

    Yerevan has a new program to demonstrate that Armenian science and
    technology can still attract investors. From EurasiaNet.

    With an eye toward attracting foreign investment, the Armenian
    government is trying to update and overhaul Armenia's scientific
    sector for the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    During the Soviet era, Armenia was known for its scientific edge -
    aside from academic pursuits, the country excelled in applied uses
    of physics, chemistry, and materials sciences. As in other former
    Soviet republics, though, the end of Kremlin subsidies for research
    institutes involved in the development of technologies for the
    Soviet military left many scientific professionals without work,
    prompting a brain drain that still continues. Those scientists left
    behind continue to work under difficult conditions, with almost no
    funding for scientific projects and salaries barely over the minimum
    of $40-$50 per month. Scientific research and development accounts
    for less than 1 percent of Armenia's gross domestic product.

    The government is now trying to correct that situation. In May
    2006, the Armenian parliament adopted a law for the state support of
    so-called "innovative activities." Four months later, the government
    adopted a five-year program outlining specific measures to encourage
    scientific innovation.

    "This program is the first serious attempt by the Armenian government
    to show that Armenian scientific products are interesting to
    investors," commented Ashot Khandanian, head of the department of
    science, technology, and investment policy at the Ministry of Trade and
    Economic Development. Both the United Nations Industrial Development
    Organization and the United Nations Development Program have pledged
    their financial and technical support for the government's plans.

    Under the program, an analytical center, housed in an existing
    scientific institute, will evaluate promising scientific projects and
    developments and then promote the findings to outside investors. In
    a complementary move, the government intends in 2007 to adopt
    legislation to establish venture capital funds that would use both
    state and private monies to encourage development of privately run
    scientific projects.

    The lack of such financing has already tripped up some scientific
    institutes from securing foreign investment. In one such institute,
    according to Khandanian, a proposal from a leading European consulting
    firm for mass production of nano-batteries with better performance fell
    flat after the institute failed to secure the $15,000 needed to produce
    a trial run of the batteries for testing and certification. No legal
    basis existed for the government itself, in the absence of private
    funds, to back the project, Khandanian said.

    Meanwhile, a draft proposal on restructuring academic scientific
    research was released in October 2006 for public discussion; reforms
    are expected to start in 2007 once a final policy paper is adopted.

    As an initial step, the monthly salary of scientific workers in
    state-run institutes, which averages about 22,000 drams, or $50
    (the national average is 60,000 drams), will be doubled in 2007.

    The private sector is also getting involved in developing Armenia's
    research potential. The privately funded National Foundation of
    Science and Advanced Technologies (NFSAT), together with a team of
    business consultants, recently sent out promotional materials on 16
    peer-reviewed scientific proposals to potential investors worldwide.

    The Washington-based Civilian Research and Development Foundation -
    an NFSAT partner that tries to reverse the outflow of scientific
    specialists from former Soviet republics - provided $36,000 for
    the initiative.

    The program has already had one success. Plans are now under way for a
    joint venture between an Armenian researchers' group and an American
    firm interested in a vibration detector developed at Yerevan State
    University that can be used in seismic devices.

    "These successes are important not only by themselves, but also as
    evidence that Armenia is still a country with a scientific sector
    which is interesting for investors," commented NFSAT chairman
    Harutyun Karapetyan. "The problem is that many people, both in
    Armenia and abroad, do not believe this. Skepticism is still high
    about the potential of Armenian science and its ability to create
    viable products."

    The government's Khandanian shared NFSAT's optimism. Having one
    successful proposal out of the 48 received by NFSAT is not a bad
    result for a country like Armenia, he said. "With start-up businesses,
    three, four, or five successful results out of a hundred are considered
    normal," he said.

    Whether similar results can be obtained elsewhere remains to be seen,
    but the government maintains that Armenia has the wherewithal for
    other joint ventures as well. More than a dozen Armenian institutes
    of applied science continue to work successfully and regularly
    cooperate with colleagues in Europe, the United States, and China,
    Khandanian said.

    Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer specializing in
    economic and political affairs. This is a partner post from EurasiaNet.
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