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Incubator support extends to new Australians

Cameron Magusic

Cameron Magusic analyses changes to the federal government’s incubator support initiative.

The federal Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources has announced changes to its incubator support initiative, which includes new funding for incubators that work with refugees and migrants who are establishing start-ups. 

Eligible regional and urban incubators, including accelerators, that have a specific focus in this area are now able to apply for funding between $13,000 and $250,000 over a maximum 24-month period. 

Incubators and accelerators are also being encouraged to apply for the expert-in-residence funding stream, which enables access to high-quality international research and talent. 

The expansion of the initiative’s funding sits alongside other procedural updates – including the requirements to submit an expression of interest before being approved to submit an application and to complete one grant project before applying for another. 

An assessment of an expression of interest is expected to take up to four weeks, according to the initiative’s guidelines.

In theory, the initiative is now better able to support incubators such as ThincLab Waite – which, as Innovation Intelligence International featured last year, enabled two French innovation visa holders to create washable organic drinking straws.

Another incubator with a lot to gain from this announcement is Catalysr, which works with ‘Migrapreneurs’, or migrant entrepreneurs, in Sydney and Melbourne.

With recent external shocks to the economy and our society such as the bushfires and the novel Coronavirus, the guidelines’ proclamation that ‘the Australian Government has announced an additional $5m over four years from 2019-20 to 2022-23 to expand the [initiative]’ might be in shaky territory. 

After all, despite multiple calls from Aussie tech leaders to address the concern of shrinking research and development (R&D) funds ahead of last year’s Budget, R&D tax incentives ended up being cut by $1.35bn over four years. 

On the fourth anniversary of the launch of his headland National Innovation and Science Agenda, former PM Turnbull told the Australian Financial Review late last year that ‘promoting innovation should be the preoccupation of government and every department of government’. 

It would be interesting to see what he thinks of this latest measure, which expands what he started in December 2015.  

Please contact me on LinkedIn here if you’re part of an incubator thinking about applying for this expanded funding program. 

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