- Biotechnology is a $30 billion a year industry that has produced some 160 drugs and vaccines.
- There are more than 370 biotech drug products and vaccines currently in clinical trials targeting more than 200 diseases, including various cancers, Alzheimer’s disease, heart disease, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, AIDS and arthritis.
- Biotechnology is responsible for hundreds of medical diagnostic tests that keep the blood supply safe from the AIDS virus and detect other conditions early enough to be successfully treated. Home pregnancy tests are also biotechnology diagnostic products.
- Genetic engineering is sweeping the world’s farms. Seven million farmers in 18 countries grew genetically engineered crops on 16.72 million acres last year.
- Consumers already are enjoying biotechnology foods such as papaya, soybeans and corn. Hundreds of biopesticides and other agricultural products also are being used to improve our food supply and to reduce our dependence on conventional chemical pesticides.
- Environmental biotechnology products make it possible to clean up hazardous waste more efficiently by harnessing pollution-eating microbes without the use of caustic chemicals.
- Industrial biotechnology applications have led to cleaner processes that produce less waste and use less energy and water in such industrial sectors as chemicals, pulp and paper, textiles, food, energy, and metals and minerals. For example, most laundry detergents produced in the United States contain biotechnology-based enzymes.
- DNA fingerprinting, a biotech process, has dramatically improved criminal investigation and forensic medicine, as well as afforded significant advances in anthropology and wildlife management.
- There are 1,473 biotechnology companies in the United States, of which 314 are publicly held.
- Market capitalization, the total value of publicly traded biotech companies (U.S.) at market prices, was $311 billion as of mid-March 2004.
- The biotechnology industry has mushroomed since 1992, with U.S. revenues increasing from $8 billion in 1992 to $39.2 billion in 2003.
- The U.S. biotechnology industry employed 198,300 people as of Dec. 31, 2003.
- Biotechnology is one of the most research-intensive industries in the world. The U.S. biotech industry spent $17.9 billion on research and development in 2003.
- The top eight biotech companies spent an average of $104,000 per employee on R&D in 2003.
- The biotech industry is regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of Agriculture (USDA).
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Sunday, June 6, 2010
Industry Facts
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- How Do We Inherit Our Biological Characteristics
- How are GM foods labeled?
- How are GM foods regulated and what is the govern...
- What are some of the criticisms against GM foods?
- How prevalent are GM crops? What plants are invol...
- What are some of the advantages of GM foods?
- What are genetically-modified foods?
- Reading Chapters In The Genome
- DNA Is Like A Library Of Instructions
- Reading the Sequences
- Unzipping DNA
- The DNA Sequence
- Inheritance
- Tracing Similarities And Differences In Our DNA
- Where Is DNA Found?
- Understanding Gene Testing
- Ethical, Legal, and Social Concerns about DNA Data...
- What are some of the DNA technologies used in fore...
- How is DNA typing done?
- Is DNA effective in identifying persons?
- How does forensic identification work?
- Exceptions to Mendel's Laws
- How Does Inheritance Work?
- Mutations and the Next Generation
- Mechanisms of Genetic Variation and Heredity
- The Influence of DNA Structure and Binding Domains
- Controlling Transcription
- Gene Switching: Turning Genes On and Off
- How Many Genes Do Humans Have?
- Structural Genes, Junk DNA, and Regulatory Sequences
- From Genes to Proteins: Start to Finish
- Gene Prediction Using Computers
- The Core Gene Sequence: Introns and Exons
- Proteins
- Ribonucleic Acids
- Why Study Mitochondria?
- Why Is There a Separate Mitochondrial Genome?
- The Physical Structure of the Human Genome
- WHAT IS A GENOME?
- What is DNA?
- Research and Applications
- Replication
- Protein Synthesis
- Structure
- DNA
- Food Security
- Agriculture and Allied Areas
- Basic Research
- Historical Events in Biotechnology
- Industry Facts
- What is Biotechnology?
- Introduction to "Biotechnology"
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