Financial support for new biotech companies will be increased by North Carolina Biotechnology Center, enabling organisations in the area to deliver their research ideas to the Pharmaceutical market.
Start-up biotech companies may qualify for up to 1 million dollars in loans under a program unveiled this week by the North Carolina Biotechnology Center.
The loans are part of an expanded program funded by the BiotechnologyCenter for companies in North Carolina. The funds give early-stage companies a boost before they become competitive for angel or venture-capital investment. Separate loans support company inception, certain types of research and corporate growth.
The overall dollar amounts are more than two times larger than in years past.
Biotechnology Funding
“Building a viable biotechnology company requires years of struggle and millions of dollars,” said John Richert, vice president of the Business and Technology Development Program, “and the costs keep rising.
“So we’ve not only increased the caps on these offerings, but we’ve also made some revisions to fill funding gaps and stay ahead of the changing dynamics of the marketplace.”
The revisions became effective July 1 and were a product of conversations with members of the venture-capital community, university technology-transfer offices and with entrepreneurs to learn how the BiotechnologyCenter could improve its support of companies at different stages of development.
Getting Started
The first change was to eliminate two programs that awarded either 25,000 dollars or 50,000 dollars to fund corporate spin-outs or university start-ups. Those two programs are now replaced with the Company Inception Loan of 50,000 dollars .
The business-inception package also includes a 50,000 dollars Technology Enhancement Grant for technology-transfer offices at North Carolina universities.
“That’s to help them make technologies they may have on their shelves more licensable,” said Richert.
Supporting Research
In the research-loan offerings, the Biotechnology Center’s Small Business Innovation Research Bridge Loans fill the gap between phases of federal SBIR funding. The loans are now capped at 150,000 dollars, twice as large as before. The maximum for Small Business Research Loans, which support applied research, has increased from 150,000 dollars to 350,000 dollars.
Funding Early Growth
Company access to the Strategic Growth Loans has also been effectively doubled. A company meeting clear milestones defined in a 250,000 dollars Strategic Growth Loan is now eligible for a second 250,000 dollars infusion through the same program. Companies were formerly limited to one such award. The loans still require matching investment from a qualifying investment fund.
The Business and Technology Development Program has provided more than 16 million dollars in loans and other support to more than 100 startup companies statewide since the Biotechnology Center was established in 1984.
That investment has resulted in more than 1.6 billion dollars in additional dollars from venture capital, federal grants, cooperative business agreements and other sources. That’s a return of 100 dollars for every dollar invested – a major reason North Carolina is the third-largest biotechnology state in the United States.
The Biotechnology Center is a private, non-profit corporation supported by the N.C. General Assembly. Its mission is to provide long-term economic and societal benefits to North Carolina by supporting biotechnology research, business and education statewide.