"USDA has a proven track record of performing research that has tangible benefits for the American public, and studies have found every dollar invested in agricultural research returns $20 to our economy," said Secretary Vilsack. "USDA is now accelerating the commercialization of federal research, and government researchers are working closely with the private sector to develop new technology and transfer it to the marketplace."
USDA received 83 patents in Fiscal Year 2014, up from 51 patents in 2013. USDA filed 119 patent applications and disclosed another 117 new inventions, which may lead to future patents and are detailed in the Department's 2014 Annual Report on Technology Transfer release. Helping drive these innovations, USDA has 267 active Cooperative Research and Development Agreements with outside partners, which includes Universities, and other organizations, and more than 100 small businesses. The USDA's technology transfer program is administered by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS), USDA's principal intramural scientific research agency.
Highlighted discoveries from USDA's 2014 Technology Transfer Report include:
- Procedures to remove up to
98-percent of the allergens from peanuts without affecting the flavor;
- A new process for
pasteurizing shelled eggs using radio frequency energy that is 1.5 times
faster than the current pasteurization process;
- A portable method for
identifying harmful bacteria in food that could improve the response to
foodborne illness outbreaks;
- A new method for mosquito
control that specifically silences genes in the mosquito so it does not
pose a danger to other insects, including pollinators;
- A new soil nitrogen test that
rapidly and inexpensively determines the total amount of nitrogen in the
soil that is available to a plant, reducing costs for farmers while
benefiting the environment;
- Improved information on
non-honey bee pollinators and methods for trapping bees to assure quality
apple production.
- A new kind of flour made from
chardonnay grape seeds that can prevent increases in cholesterol and
weight-gain;
- "Permanent press"
cotton clothing;
- Mass production of penicillin
in World War II;
- DEET, the active ingredient
in all the world’s most effective and widely-used mosquito repellents;
- Frozen orange juice
concentrate;
- Almost all breeds of
blueberries and cranberries currently in production, and 80% of all
varieties of citrus fruits grown in the U.S.;
- "Tifsport", a
turfgrass specifically designed to withstand the stress and demands of
major team sports and used on sports fields across the country.
More information about the USDA innovations contained in this year's report, as well as a look at previous USDA research discoveries is available on the web.
No comments:
Post a Comment