Introduction Dr. Andreas Wild

Download Report

Transcript Introduction Dr. Andreas Wild

A Common Strategic Framework for
Research, Development and Innovation
in Europe
Willy Van Puymbroeck
European Commission
Head of Unit Nanoelectronics
Outline presentation
 EU2020




EU strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth
A Digital Agenda for Europe
Industrial policy for the Globalisation Era
Towards an Innovation Union
 HORIZON 2020
 Outlook and Budget
 Impact, simplification and architecture
 Challenges and funding schemes
 An eco-system for nano-electronics in Europe




Study findings
Creating a prosperous environment in Europe
Examples – Clusters and Pilot Lines in Key Enabling Technologies
Current funding opportunities with the Commission
EUROPE 2020:
A EU strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth
By 2020:
•
75 % (now 69) employment rate (% of population aged 20-64 years)
•
3% (now 1,8) Investment in R&D (% of EU’s GDP)
•
“20/20/20” climate/energy targets met (incl. 30% emissions
reduction if conditions are right)
•
< 10% (now 15) early school leavers & min. 40% (now 31) hold
tertiary degree
•
20 million less people (now 80) should be at risk of poverty
EUROPE 2020:
3 priorities, 7 flagship initiatives
Promoting a more
resource efficient,
greener and more
competitive economy
Developing an
economy based
on knowledge
and innovation
Fostering high employment
economy delivering
economic, social and
territorial cohesion
A strategy for SMART, SUSTAINABLE and INCLUSIVE growth
Innovation
Union
Digital
Agenda for
Europe
Youth on
the move
Resource
efficient
Europe
An Agenda
for new
skills and
jobs
An industrial
policy for the
globalisation
era
European
Platform
against
Poverty
http://ec.europa.eu/eu2020
EU2020
Flagship
A Digital Agenda for Europe
Every European Digital!
A vibrant digital
single market
Fast and ultra
fast internet
access
Trust and
security
Communication
COM(2010)245 of 19.05.2010
Interoperability
and standards
Enhancing
digital literacy,
skills and
inclusion
Research and
innovation
ICT-enabled
benefits for EU
society
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/digital-agenda
Industrial Policy for the Globalisation Era
EU2020
Flagship
Communication
COM(2010)614 of 28.10.2010
Putting Competitiveness and Sustainability at Centre Stage.
• Improving framework conditions for industry
• Strengthening the Single Market
• A new industrial innovation policy
• Capitalising on globalisation
• Promoting industrial modernisation
• The sector-specific dimension - a targeted approach
Towards an INNOVATION UNION
Targets - excerpts
Communication COM(2010)546
6.10.2010
 Completing the European Research Area (already by 2014)
– joint programming with Member States and regions …
 Improving framework conditions for business to innovate
– single EU Patent, access to capital, setting of interoperable
standards, making full use of public procurement, prototype
manufacturing, …
 Strengthen partnerships in knowledge triangle between education,
business, research and innovation and between knowledge clusters
– people, institutions, infrastructures, regions, …
 Launching EIP’s: 'European Innovation Partnerships' where all EU
instruments to support innovation should work together
– structural funds, rural development funds, R&D framework
programme, CIP … EIB … and streamline administrative
procedures …
Towards an INNOVATION UNION
Targets - excerpts
From idea to the market
Excellent Knowledge Base
Access to finance
Strengthening Europe's
knowledge base
Maximising regional
and social benefits
Research and education
nurture innovation. Europe
would require at least one
million more researchers in
the next decade to reach the
target of investing 3% of EU
GDP on R&D by 2020.
In education, the Commission
will support businessacademia collaborations to
develop new curricula
addressing innovation skills
gaps. It will also support an
independent ranking for
universities.
To avoid an "innovation
divide" between the
strongest innovating
regions and the others,
the Commission will
assist Member States to
use better the
remaining part of the
€86 billion of
structural funds
programmed for 20072013 for research and
innovation projects.
Innovation Market
Getting good ideas to
market
The Innovation Union
proposes to create a
genuine single
European market for
innovation which would
attract innovative
companies and
businesses. To achieve
this, several measures
are proposed in the fields
of patent protection,
standardization, public
procurement and smart
regulation.
Horizon 2020
Outlook and budget
• Proposal by the Commission in ‘A budget for Europe 2020’ on
Research and Innovation
– Budget for 2014 -2020 of EUR 80 billion in constant 2011
prices
– Bring together FP7, the innovation part of Competitiveness
and Innovation Programme (CIP) and European Institute of
Innovation and Technology (EIT)
– Structured around three distinct reinforcing blocks
• Excellence in the science base
• Tackling societal challenges
• Creating industrial leadership and competitive
frameworks
– Includes both agenda-driven activities and more open areas
for applications
– Implementation will be simplified and standardised
Horizon 2020
Increasing impact
•
FROM different priorities in each programme and initiative
 TO common strategic priorities, focusing on
societal challenges, competitiveness and research
excellence
•
FROM gaps between the stages (R&D, demonstration, piloting, market
uptake …)
 TO coherent support for projects and organisations
across the innovation cycle
Horizon 2020
Achieving simplification
•
FROM a large variety of funding schemes within and between programmes
 TO a rationalised toolkit of funding schemes across
the CSF
•
FROM different rules in each programme and initiative
 TO more standardised rules across all initiatives –
which meet the different needs and with flexibility
where needed
•
FROM multiple websites, guidance documents, applications
 TO common entry point, one stop shop, common IT
platform
Horizon 2020
Architecture
Shared objectives and principles
Tackling Societal Challenges
Health, demographics and wellbeing
Food security and bio-based economy
Secure, clean and efficient energy
Smart, green and integrated transport
Resource efficiency & climate impact
Inclusive, innovative & secure society
(EIT)
Creating Industrial Leadership
& Competitive Frameworks
− Leadership in enabling technologies
ICT
Nanotech, Production, Materials
Biotech
Space
− Access to risk finance & venture capital
− High potential SMEs
Excellence in the Research Base
Frontier research (ERC & FET Flagships)
Skills and career development (Marie Curie)
Research infrastructures incl. e-Infrastructures
Common rules, toolkit of funding schemes
Horizon 2020
Challenges and funding schemes – a comprehensive picture
Societal challenges
Industrial leadership
Infrastructures
and skills
Strategic,
Roadmap based
Open, Agile
e.g. Living
labs
e.g.
support to
EIPs
Light WP
e.g. HPC
access
eInfrastructures
Excellence in science
Anytime
User-driven
testing, piloting
Pilots
Small size
e.g. PPPs
SMEs
specific
e.g. FET
Flagships
ERC
Pilots
AN ECO-SYSTEM FOR NANOELECTRONICS
Findings of a Study on Nanoelectronics in Europe-2011
“More Moore”
Europe could lose out in the competitive race:
•
•
•
•
Building fabs subsidies are higher in US and China
Losing manufacturing/process know-how may lead to a loss in R&D
No new advanced labs and fabs planned in Europe for next technological steps (<=22nm)
EUV lithography and 450mm fabs delays may be a chance or a threat
“More than Moore”
Europe has a chance to maintain a leading position:
•
•
•
•
Market is rapidly growing in several domains (MEMS, automotive, photovoltaics, …)
Mastering manufacturing is required to perform large volume productions
R&D is less expensive than “More Moore” but still essential
Pilot lines or lab-fabs are crucial to bring innovations to a manufacturing step
AN ECO-SYSTEM FOR NANOELECTRONICS
Creating a prosperous environment in Europe
Increasing synergies between policy instruments:
•
Making most of existing funding mechanisms
•
Smart specialisation strategies – linking innovation clusters
•
Lifelong learning – excellence in education skills developments
•
Supporting pilot lines, early product validation actions, …
•
Promoting entrepreneurship
•
…
AN ECO-SYSTEM FOR NANOELECTRONICS
Making most of existing funding mechanisms
FP7
Vision, Mission, Strategy
Specific Programme
FP7
AN ECO-SYSTEM FOR NANOELECTRONICS
Clusters
AN ECO-SYSTEM FOR NANOELECTRONICS
Pilot Lines in Key Enabling Technologies
Source: HLG KETs Wshop, BXL,
March 2010
AN ECO-SYSTEM FOR NANOELECTRONICS
Current funding opportunities with the Commission
Call for Proposals – Call 8
•
Close 17/01/2012 at 17.00 Brussels local time
Including Coordination and Support Actions:
•
Broaden services to offer … access to training, to CAD tools and to advanced technologies,
design kits and IP blocks for education, prototyping and small volume production
•
Road maps, bench marks, strategy papers, studies of limits …
•
Stimulating of young people towards electronic careers; training an education for high school
students; access for students and PhDs to production lines and research labs
•
International co-operation
•
Support, coordination and standardisation actions including preparatory work for 450mm
wafer processing targeting material and equipment companies
THANK YOU
[email protected]
Information Society and Media:
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society
http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/nanoelectronics/mission_en.html
European research on the web:
http://cordis.europa.eu
http://www.eniac.eu