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DTI Technology Programme and e-Science. Anne Trefethen Deputy Director, e-Science Core Programme. e-Science Centres. Act as information resource Each Centre given £1m for industrially based projects Each provide resource for UK Grid. Edinburgh. Glasgow. Newcastle. Belfast. Manchester.
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DTI Technology Programme ande-Science Anne Trefethen Deputy Director, e-Science Core Programme
e-Science Centres • Act as information resource • Each Centre given £1m for industrially based projects • Each provide resource for UK Grid Edinburgh Glasgow Newcastle Belfast Manchester DL Cambridge Oxford RAL Cardiff London Southampton
DTI investment of £11m Resulted in 49 projects 83 collaborating groups 61 different companies involved Over £14m industrial investment 37 SMEs 3 Industry collaborators provided more than £1m Range of disciplines (IT, Engineering, Pharma, Environmental etc) New sectors engaged (broadcasting, defence, banking etc) Industry Projects
G-Civil Mission:“To build a prototype system responsible for the collection, distribution and visualisation of data collected from civil engineering sites or from infrastructure monitoring schemes” Mott MacDonald Arcadis Geraghty Miller International W H White Plc WJ Groundwater Ltd
G-Civil • Resulted in web tool for data collection and visualisation • Is being used by monitoring point.com • Offered as and additional extra to their products • Publicised in “Ground Engineering”
The GridCast ProjectGrid based Broadcast Infrastructures • To develop a baseline media grid to support a broadcaster • Manage distributed collections of stored media • Prototype security and access mechanisms • Integrate processing and technical resources • Integrate with media standards and hardware • To analyse Quality of Service issues • Analyse remote content distribution infrastructures • Analyse remote service provision • To analyse reactivity, reliability and resilience issues in a grid-based broadcast infrastructure
The GridCast Project • Now largely complete • Schedules can be compiled and material automatically transferred using in “trial” form. • Just missed funding in Technology Programme call 2, have proceeded to full bid in call 3 • BBC continue to work and develop services
Telemedicine for MDT Meetings in Cancer Cancer Centre Addenbrooke’s (Papworth) Cancer Units Bedford Peterborough West Suffolk Harlow Hinchingbrooke King’s Lynn
Telemedicine • Well supported by clinicians, has made a change in work practices • Extended beyond original remit into other clinical areas • NHS invested in project • A clear winner for take up….
A Market for Computational Services • Develop mechanisms • price quotation, • negotiation, • accounting, • payment • to support paid-for Grid services (now Web Services) • Deploy and test these mechanisms in several real-world computing markets GreenGrid
Negotiation Use and Payment • Register with Payment Service • Discover a negotiable service • Negotiate for use of the service and agreeon terms • Use the service. • The service records usage, collects payment and returns the results. Users can obtain a real-time account statement via the Payment Service web interface
Computational Markets • Another 9 months to go • Have integrated pay-as-you go into services • Exploitation through industrial partners (e.g NAG provided mathematical services running on utility hardware on pay-as-you go basis) • Exploitation through national facilities…
pre pre - - collaborative collaborative competitive competitive R&D R&D research research DDA and DDA and university university university govt research govt research alumni alumni alumni Faradays LINK labs labs networks networks networks UK and EU Design Council Design Council TT clubs & RTOs TCS and learned networks societies STEP Living Innovation Living Innovation Industry And Scoreboards And Scoreboards Forums geographical SMART ITS clusters EUREKA EUREKA Business Links Business Links Manuf’g Manuf’g web based networking CONNECT CONNECT IUKE visits IUKE visits Advisory Advisory Service Service Standards Standards Trade Staff moves Staff moves Patent Office Codes of practice Codes of practice Associations and secondments and secondments NMS, HSE NMS, HSE supply supply Technology Technology supply partnering partnering partnering chains chains DTI sectoral TT schemes DTI sectoral TT schemes The media The media chains brokers brokers DTI Programmes before the Review specificity to company or product high low far nearness to market near
IDENTIFICATION OF TECHNOLOGY PRIORITIES NETWORKSinform decision making TECHNOLOGY STRATEGY BOARD Technological strategic focus for each theme DELIVERY through working with a variety of channels Technology Programme after the Review Technology Strategy and Assessment Unit STRATEGIC THEMES • Funding Mechanisms • Knowledge Transfer Networks • Collaborative Research and Development CUSTOMERS
Technology Programme • £370m over six Competitions, • Two stage - open and very competitive, • Each call around 9 Technology Priority Areas, • Two instruments • Collaborative R & D, • KTNs
Strategic Key Themes Healthcare in an Ageing Society A more Secure Environment An Intelligent, Connected World Sustainable Production and Consumption Environmentally friendly Transport Systems Renewable and Sustainable Energy Supply The Modern Built Environment
Identifying Strategic Priorities: Criteria • Business Exploitation • Cross Sectoral Applications • Strength of UK SET Knowledge Base • Economic, Social, Quality of life, Environmental Benefits • Cross-government Collaboration (e.g. healthcare, energy) • Spill-over Benefits, Failure of Market • Scope of Effectiveness for Government Intervention
Technology Programme - Objectives Succeeding through Innovation Stimulate R&D- between UK-based firms, - between UK-based firms and the science base. So as to increase: • number of collaborations and business investment in R&D, • awareness of benefit of R&D, • dissemination of R&D outputs, • high value-added wealth creation from new and improved products and services.
Collaborative Research & Development Objective; “to improve the UK’s innovation performance by increasing the breadth and depth of collaborative research and development between the UK science, engineering and technology base and UK based businesses.”
Collaborative Research & Development Grant-based products - from three categories each with two types: • BasicResearch - Far from market projects, • AppliedResearch - Middle market projects, • ExploitationDevelopment- Nearer to market projects. All involving 2+ collaborators:- • Science to Business – S2B • Business to Business – B2B
Funding for Collaborative R & D • 75% for Basic Research projects, • 50% for Applied Research projects, • 25% for near market or Exploitation projects. • Business to Business projects(50%, 40%, 25%), And:- • Typical projects £2m - £5m but no minimums, • Attractive to have by-in from other Stakeholders, • Duration - 6 months to 5 years, • Can be used to fund EUREKA projects, • All with consideration to state aid rules.
Technology Priorities for the April 2004 Call • Bio-processing, • Advanced (Composite) Materials and Structures, • Inter-Enterprise Computing, • Sensors and Control Systems, • Renewable Energy Technologies, • Electronics and Displays Technologies, • Technologies for Environmentally Friendly Transport.
10 weeks Outline Open 4 weeks Assess 8 weeks Full Open 8 weeks Full Assess 1 Dec 1 Jan 1 Feb 1 Mar 1 Apr 1 May 1 June 1 July Timetable - November 2004 Competition 29 Nov Call Opens 31 Jan Pre Reg 7 Feb Call closes 7 March End-assess 3 May Close Full 27 June End-assess
Initial outcome of the April 04 Call (C R&D) Technology Number Number Number Project Grant Priority @Outline @Full recomd Costs Sought props £m £m EFT 65 26 12 34.9 16.7 IE Computing 63 15 7 19.8 10.1 Elect&Displays 27 14 8 8.4 4.0 Bio-Processes 13 8 2 5.1 4.0 Materials 50 20 12 12.1 5.5 Sensors 113 21 12 13.0 6.4 Energy 69 26 17 24.7 9.3 Total 400 130 70 118 56 Provisional
Initial outcome of the April 04 Competition April 2004 Competition Full Stage technical Assessment – outcome:- • 400 Applications/Proposals, • 130 taken to full stage, • 70 are recommended for negotiation towards support. Comprises:- • 425 bids from 304 separate organisations, • 36 separate HEIs, • 6 Government Departments or Agencies and • 262 separate private sector organisations. Provisional
Successes in Technology Programme • e-Science applications fell into IEC part of the programme. • Following universities that host e-Science centres are involved in the IEC successful projects • Southampton • Cambridge • Oxford • Newcastle • UCL • Reading • Cardiff • Belfast • White Rose (York, Leeds, Sheffield) • Edinburgh
IEC Projects Integrated Products and Services (IPAS) Project lead: Rolls-Royce plc Total project size: £2.5m (subject to contract) A Generic Infrastructure for Medical Informatics (GIMI) Project lead: Oxford University Total project size: £3.5M (subject to contract) Large scale computer simulation of physical properties of materials Project lead: Accelrys Total project size: £1.5M (subject to contract) Applying Web Services to environmental forecast information in priority case studies Project lead: Met Office Total project size: £2.2M (subject to contract) Healthcare@Home: Patient-Centred Grid based e-Healthcare Project lead: IBM Total project size: £1.3M (subject to contract) CRISP ( Commercial R3 IEC Service Provision) Project lead: BT Total project size: £3.0M (subject to contract) BROADEN Project lead: Rolls-Royce plc Total project size: £3.98M (subject to contract) + 2 Knowledge Transfer Networks (KTN) – IECNet, and GridUK