50 likes | 172 Vues
CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013. ChambER OF COMMERCE. OF THE GRAND DUCHY OF LUXEMBOURG. 3 EXAMPLES OF DIGITAL / SMART PROJECTS Pierre Gramegna , Director General. CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013.
E N D
CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013 ChambER OF COMMERCE OF THE GRAND DUCHY OF LUXEMBOURG 3 EXAMPLES OF DIGITAL / SMART PROJECTS Pierre Gramegna, Director General
CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013 1. THE IMPORTANCE OF THE ICT SECTOR IN LUXEMBOURG • 2,000 companies active in the SECTOR IN LUXEMBOURG • 15,000 employeesrepresenting 6% of the employment and 7% of GDP • HIGH quality infrastructures with 19 ultra-secureddatacenters, 6 of thembeingtier IV certified • A powerfulcompetence pool of ICT specialiststhanks to Luxembourg’sdynamicfinancialsector • HIGH SPEED FIBRE OPTIC network giving 100 % access to internet at 100 Mbit/s) by 2015-2018 & AT 1 Gbit/sby 2020 (-> FTTH - Fibre to the home)
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE ICT SECTOR IN LUXEMBOURG: STATE OF THE ART CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013 • Luxembourg - A Center of Excellence : • ●Positive evolution of the ICT sector taking over a continously growing position in the Luxembourg economy • ● PPP regrouping public sector and major ICT players to develop Luxembourg as an attractive business environment for ICT activities • ● A diversified international connectivity towards the major Internet exchange points in Europe • ● Many world-renowned companies as well as gaming firms taking advantage of this privileged • environment and choosing Luxembourg (headquarter function) as their gateway to the • European market (e.g. Amazon, EBay, Itunes, PayPal, Rakuten, Skype, RTLGroup, SES, Miillicom, Luxe.TV,… ) • ● National cyber-security strategy to guarantee a secure hub for the cloud computing • A favorable regulatory framework: • ● 1st European country to implement the European directives relating to electronic signatures • and e-commerce • ● Creation of LuxTrust S.A. in order to offer a national digital certification platform using a • public key infrastructure • ● 1st country with a regulatory framework for bankruptcy of a cloud provider or data hoster • (-> acknowledgement of the value of data (‘SaaS’ / PaaS’)) • ●Attractive intellectual property regime • ● Business effective data protection law
2. ESCH/BELVAL: Working, living & enjoying – From Luxembourg’slargesteelworks to a modern & SMART city quarter CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013 • An excellent overall concept with clear shapes, flexible layouts, ecologically oriented leisure facilities, user-appropriate traffic planning & modern energy supplies: • ● Once a 100% industrial site – now a 100% city quarter – tomorrow an exemplary conversion project offering housing up to 7,000 people / 25,000 people working, researching and studying • ● One of the largest and most ambitious current urban renewal projects in Europe ●Its size: 120 football fields in 2 districts (Esch/Alzette & Sanem) • Belval City of Sciences - A new cradle for public-private collaborations: • ●New science park situated on the site’s blast furnace plateau representing the restructuring of • brownfield sites & including the construction of around 20 thematic buildings • ● Knowledge triangle concept aiming at strengthening the links between higher education, • research and innovation • ●Concentration of the main research actors: University of Luxembourg & its 2 research centres ‘SnT’ and ‘LCBS’ (with 7,000 students and 3,000 teaching staff & researchers), public research centres, National Research Fond, National Agency for Innovation & Research, national incubator center ‘Technoport’, House of BioHealth with 500-700 searchers, Learning Factory ...
3. METROBORDER PROJECT: FOCUS ON CROSS BORDER metropolitan PolycentricregionS CLUB OF EUROPEAN METROPOLITAN CCI London, october 30 & 31, 2013 • The Greater Region - An excellence model of European integration: • ● Exploiting the economic and metropolitan potential of European cross border regions • ● Developing cross-border integration to reinforce the Greater Region’s competitiveness mainly • via innovation and the development of scientific / university cooperation • ● A strong political ambition: to put into place a ‘Cross-Border Polycentric Metropolitan Region’ • considering national borders as resources for increasing local interaction and positioning • the metropolitan centre withinworldwide networks(RMPT: RégionPolycentriqueMétropolitaineTransfrontalière) • Major common future challenges: • ● demographic structure and labour market • ● cross border accessibility and urban mobility, including mobility of students and researchers • ● cross border interconnexions in the ICT sector • ● valorisation of excellence domains in innovation and research • ● coordinated training offer • ● excellence and complementarity of sanitary establishments • ● coordinated regional and economic marketing • METROBORDER Project: a pluridisciplinary team at the service of the Greater Region in order • to valorise underestimated cross-border areas in their development opportunities within RMPT