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Around the Old Dominion

Biotech CropTech fizzles

by Virginia Business Staff
June 2003

The concept seemed too good to be true. Virginia is the country’s fourth-biggest producer of tobacco, a profitable crop that also kills. Biotechnology would be a great addition because it is clean, pays well and has the sexy panache that gets the state noticed.

So, about 10 years ago, when a pair of Virginia Tech weed experts formed CropTech Corp., a nearly perfect fit seemed to be in the offing. Founded by the husband and wife team of David N. Radin and Carole Cramer, CropTech would tease enzymes from tobacco plants. The enzymes, in turn, would be used by the drug industry for a wide variety of pharmaceuticals.

Not only would this solution be cheaper than synthesizing enzymes chemically, it would put tobacco plants to a use no one could criticize. The idea attracted national attention and a favorable response in publications such as The New York Times.

So promising seemed CropTech that a group of Virginia tobacco growers considered a stock scheme that would raise up to $6 million to boost CropTech’s research. Included was to be a $2 million loan from the state. But when tobacco farmers started balking, CropTech started shopping for a new location. About the time Gov. Mark Warner made critical remarks about its management, CropTech announced it would move from Blacksburg to Charleston, S.C., last year, attracted by the promise of a slew of state economic development goodies.
Now, CropTech has filed for bankruptcy. Officers of the firm could not be contacted because its telephone line has been disconnected. Reports claim the move to South Carolina could still proceed.

Virginia Business - June 2003