New York Post

Israel: high-tech superstar

Rivaling Silicon Valley

- By ED ZWIRN

Wondering where to find the next tech startup propelling humanity to the next best thing?

Israel’s answer to Silicon Valley is Silicon Wadi, an area around Tel Aviv on the country’s coastal plain with a heavy concentrat­ion of high-tech industries that rivals the San Francisco Bay-area’s cluster of innovative firms.

There are about 4,300 startups operating in Israel, with about 2,900 of these located within a 10mile radius, a rate of developmen­t second in intensity to only Silicon Valley itself.

Even as President Trump was meeting with the Israeli political elite on the Jerusalem leg of his first foreign trip, a huge slice of that country’s brain trust was gathered in Midtown Manhattan to explore the reasons behind this tech wave and showcase some of the developmen­ts that have enabled this small country to punch above its weight.

Or maybe jumping would be a more apt metaphor.

“The cat flea has the ability to jump almost 200 times its height,” Oded Shoseyov, a professor of protein engineerin­g and nano biotechnol­ogy at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told the crowd at Nexus: Israel, a gathering sponsored by the American Friends of Hebrew University.

Shoseyov, who has his name on more than 50 patents and has served as the scientific founder of 10 companies specializi­ng in everything from nanotechno­logy to production of medical cannabis, says that one of the most exciting scientific quests is understand­ing the jumping power of the flea. That and other marvels of nature are helping spark solutions to real-world challenges faced by humans.

CollPlant, one of the companies he helped found, is attempting to bioenginee­r solutions to these problems by cloning human DNA onto tobacco plants.

“I have no doubt that we’ll be able to produce a human heart in the laboratory,” he says. “This heart is not going to be the same as a human heart, it’s going to be better.”

One of the more establishe­d players in both Silicon Valley and its Middle Eastern rival is Intel Corp., which set up a research and production operation in Israel in 1972. Intel Israel has since grown to the point where it has become Israel’s largest private employer, with more than 10,200 workers on its payroll as of last year.

According to Maxine Fassberg, executive in residence and vice president of Intel Capital, the company exported $3.35 billion of chips and other products from Israel last year, accounting for 1 percent to 2 percent of the country’s GDP.

In addition to the tech developmen­ts fostered by Intel, Fassberg credits both Israel’s defense sector and its academia for propelling this developmen­t.

“The bottom line is the people and the quality of the education there,” she says.

For his part, Dr. Yaron Daniely, chief executive of Yissum, Hebrew University’s technology transfer arm, and himself the driving force behind many Israeli developmen­ts in medical technology, credits the amazing performanc­e of Israeli R&D to “chutzpah,” shown in the willingnes­s of the country’s scientists and entreprene­urs to take on risk.

“Exceptiona­l people exist everywhere who are more creative than others, but that doesn’t guarantee success,” he points out. “We were arrogant Israelis. We didn’t think that we were stupid.”

 ??  ?? THE EDGE: Highrise buildings in Tel Aviv’s high-tech business section. Reuters
THE EDGE: Highrise buildings in Tel Aviv’s high-tech business section. Reuters

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