Oxford University Innovation Revenue Reaches Record
Oxford University Innovation, the University of Oxford’s technology transfer company, achieved increased revenues of £5.6 million in the last financial year, up 18 per cent from the previous year.
We publish news of technology innovations, investment opportunities, together with updates from spin-out & start-up companies and licensees
Oxford University Innovation, the University of Oxford’s technology transfer company, achieved increased revenues of £5.6 million in the last financial year, up 18 per cent from the previous year.
OUC has facilitated consultancy contracts for a number of Oxford academics for the latest UN Human Development Report 2009.
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Oxford University Innovation, the technology transfer arm of the University of Oxford has released details of a new method for increasing protein production, with the potential to improve the efficiency of drug manufacturing by multi-fold increases in yields of therapeutic proteins. The method, developed at Oxford’s Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, was profiled in the journal Cell.
A lightweight electric motor designed by the Electronic Power Group at the University of Oxford is to power a new four-seat coupé, with track tests scheduled for the end of 2009.
Researchers in Oxford University's Department of Clinical Medicine have developed a new vaccine technology, based on the application of a modified adenovirus, which could help recognise and fight cancer cells and infection.
Oxford University Innovation, which has grown from 45 staff at the beginning of the 2007-2008 financial year to 57 today, is currently recruiting for four staff to develop business and commercialise Oxford technologies.
Professor Hagan Bayley, founder of Oxford Nanopore Technologies, was named Entrepreneur of the Year by the Royal Society of Chemistry last week at the Industry and Technology Forum Awards. Professor Bayley is Professor of Chemical Biology at the University of Oxford.
A new University spin-out company should save the motor industry millions of pounds and months in production time, with an innovative method of making car parts.
Oxford University and Sir Martin and Lady Wood provided seed funding for Oxford Medical Image Analysis - OMIA - in December 1999. With this investment the business developed rapidly in 2000.