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Centers of Economic Excellence program creates 3,200 jobs, boosts economy




South Carolina’s Centers of Economic Excellence program has brought in nonstate investments of more than $250 million and has received $180 million from the state’s lottery, according to the organization’s fiscal 2009 annual report.



Staff Report
Published Dec. 10, 2009

South Carolina’s Centers of Economic Excellence program has brought in nonstate investments of more than $250 million and has led to the creation of approximately 3,200 jobs, according to the organization’s fiscal 2009 annual report, released Wednesday morning.

The program was enacted by the General Assembly in 2002. The state has since invested $30 million a year between 2003 and 2008, for a total $180 million, into the program from state lottery money. In 2009 and 2010, the Legislature cut the funding as it grappled with budget woes as a result of the economic downturn.

The CoEE did use $3.6 million in interest to fund additional Centers of Economic Excellence. There now are 45 centers at the state’s three research universities — Clemson University, the Medical University of South Carolina and the University of South Carolina.

The centers established are in emerging fields such as automotive engineering, nanotechnology, biomedicine, cancer research, energy and environmental science.

The program has received nonstate matching pledges of $145 million and an additional $120 million in extramural research grants.

The report said that the centers have resulted in 1,224 direct jobs to date and a spin-off of an additional 2,000 jobs as a result of the extramural grants.

Other program accomplishments include:

The state’s research universities reported several developments in fiscal 2009 that came as a result of the CoEE program:

At MUSC:

At USC:

At Clemson:

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