IANS | 15 Nov, 2023
The Union Ministry of Mines announced on Wednesday that it has
decided to fund research and innovation in startups and MSMEs in the
mining, mineral processing, metallurgy and recycling sector
(S&T-PRISM) and has brought out guidelines for the scheme.
Proposals
will be invited from Startups, MSMEs and Individual Innovators which
have a direct bearing on the minerals sector, applied and sustainable
aspects of mining and industrial applications, for funding up to two
years, the ministry said.
The decision can enable them to graduate
to a level where they will be able to raise investments or they will
reach a position to seek loans from commercial banks/financial
institutions. The funding is positioned to act as a bridge between
development and commercialization of innovative
technologies/products/services in a relatively hassle-free manner, the
ministry's statement explained.
The main idea of the
S&T-PRISM is translation of research into technology
(product/process/services) but not to carry out open- ended fundamental
research. Investigations must lead to innovation or new product/process
ready for demonstration or pilot scale deployment not merely be at the
patent stage.
Jawaharlal Nehru Aluminium Research Development and
Design Center, Nagpur, an autonomous body under the administrative
control of Ministry of Mines will be the implementing agency for S&T
-- PRISM.
Selected Startups and MSMEs will be provided mentorship
or incubation support and technical advisory support during entire
project development period and additionally for two years from the date
of technical completion, by a Facilitation & Mentorship team under
the implementing agency. Scope of mentoring support will include
advisory, networking, tapping resources, piloting, business planning and
fund-raising. Further, piloting opportunities for Startups and MSMEs,
shall be provided in the mining, mineral processing, metallurgy and
recycling sector. Preference will be given to Startups/MSMEs of North
East region and women led enterprises, according to the ministry’s
statement.
Recognising the paramount importance of safety,
economy, speed and the efficiency in extraction of mineral resources and
in its convergence into viable economic alloys and metals, National
Mineral Policy has accorded higher priority to Research and Development
(R&D) programmes.