CSIR-IICT Boosts MSMEs with Tech Transfer, Indigenous Chemical Processes

CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (IICT) Hyderabad is focusing on translational research and technology transfer to support MSMEs and emerging industries. The institute organized an MSME Industry Interaction Meeting to connect entrepreneurs with scientists for technology adoption. CSIR-IICT has developed several indigenous technologies, including a key process for Hydrazine Hydrate to reduce import dependence. The institute also works on APIs, catalysis, and biomethanation processes to support domestic manufacturing and clean energy.

Key Points: CSIR-IICT Hyderabad Supports MSMEs with Tech & Research

  • Tech transfer to MSMEs
  • Indigenous Hydrazine Hydrate process
  • Support for domestic manufacturing
  • Focus on clean energy solutions
2 min read

Hyderabad: CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Technology aims to strengthen MSMEs with tech, research support

CSIR-IICT Hyderabad strengthens MSMEs through tech transfer, indigenous processes like Hydrazine Hydrate, and partnerships for Atmanirbhar Bharat.

"We believe that strong partnerships... are essential for accelerating innovation, strengthening domestic manufacturing, and building an Atmanirbhar Bharat - Srinivas Reddy"

Hyderabad, March 13

A key focus of CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Technology, Hyderabad, is translational research and technology transfer, particularly to support MSMEs and emerging industries. Many MSMEs require access to reliable technologies, pilot-scale validation, and scientific expertise to scale up their manufacturing processes, according to a press release.

Srinivas Reddy, Director CSIR-IICT MSME, stated in the release that the MSME Industry Interaction Meeting today with Laghu Udyog Bharati has been organised to create a platform where MSME entrepreneurs can directly interact with SIR-ICT scientists and learn about technologies that can be adopted for industrial applications.

Through collaboration with CSIR-IICT, MSMEs can benefit from technology licensing, process optimisation and consultancy, pilot-scale validation and scale-up support, and collaborative research and product development.

As per the release, around 75 MSME entrepreneurs from sectors such as chemicals, APLs, polymers, food technologies, energy, and environmental technologies are participating in this interaction.

We believe that strong partnerships between research institutions and MME industries are essential for accelerating innovation, strengthening domestic manufacturing, and building an Atmanirbhar Bharat, Reddy said.

CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Technology has developed an indigenous process technology for Hydrazine Hydrate, an important industrial chemical used in pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, polymer industries, water treatment, and rocket propellants. This technology helps reduce dependence on imports and strengthens domestic chemical manufacturing capability, the press release stated.

Over the years, SIR-ICT has developed several indigenous process technologies and products that have strong potential for industrial adoption. Many of these technologies contribute to import substitution, cost-effective manufacturing, and sustainable chemical processes.

The institute has developed process technologies for Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) that help reduce dependence on imported intermediates and support domestic pharmaceutical manufacturing.

CSIR-IICT scientists have developed advanced catalysis technologies that enable efficient production of fine chemicals and speciality chemicals with improved yields and reduced environmental impact, the release highlighted.

In the area of energy and environment technologies, SIR-IICT has developed biomethanation processes that convert agricultural and organic waste into biogas, providing decentralised clean energy solutions for institutions, markets, and communities.

SIR-IICT remains committed to translating research into technologies that generate industrial growth, economic value, and societal impact.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The focus on APIs is crucial. We saw during the pandemic how vulnerable we were to imported intermediates. Strengthening domestic pharma manufacturing is key to Atmanirbhar Bharat. Hope more MSMEs in Hyderabad and Telangana benefit from this.
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Vikram M
While the intent is good, the real test is in execution. Often, these government-research institute partnerships get bogged down in bureaucracy. I hope the process for MSMEs to access this tech is simplified and not just another "meeting". Action is needed.
S
Sarah B
The biomethanation part is very interesting. Converting farm waste to energy can solve two problems at once - waste management and clean energy. Would love to see this implemented in rural areas across states.
R
Rohit P
Hydrazine Hydrate tech developed indigenously? That's big! This is exactly the kind of R&D we need to stop sending our forex abroad. Proud of our scientists. More power to CSIR-IICT!
K
Kavya N
Hope they make the technology licensing affordable for actual small-scale industries. Sometimes the fees are too high for a typical MSME unit. The support should be real, not just on paper.

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