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Horizon 2020 – Future Emerging Technologies Department of Physics

Horizon 2020 – Future Emerging Technologies Department of Physics. 8 th May 2014. Presenter : Renata Schaeffer Ext : 61648 Email : rs530@admin.cam.ac.uk. Research Operations. The Budget. Budget increase from €53bn in FP7 to € 77bn in Horizon 2020 (at current prices).

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Horizon 2020 – Future Emerging Technologies Department of Physics

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  1. Horizon 2020 – Future Emerging TechnologiesDepartment of Physics 8th May 2014 Presenter: Renata Schaeffer Ext: 61648 Email: rs530@admin.cam.ac.uk Research Operations

  2. The Budget • Budget increase from €53bn in FP7 to €77bn in Horizon 2020 (at current prices) OTHERS: 5,8B€ (Spreading excellence & widening participation, Science & Society, JRC, EIT)

  3. Pillar structure H2020 will focus resources on 3 key priorities: • Excellent Science (1) • ERC (13B€) • FET (Future and Emerging Technologies) (2.7B€) • Marie Curie Actions (6.1B€) • European Research Infrastructures (2.4B€) • Industrial Leadership (2) • Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies • Innovation in SMEs and Access to risk finance • Societal Challenges (3) • Health, demographic change and wellbeing • European Bioeconomy Challenges • Secure, clean and efficient energy • Smart, green and integrated transport • Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials • Europe in a changing world • Secure societies Widening Participation, Science with and for Society Joint Research Centre (JRC) EIT) EURATOM

  4. Overview of FET schemes Future and emerging technologies shall support collaborative research in order to extend Europe’s capacity for advanced and paradigm-changing innovation. It shall foster scientific collaboration across disciplines on radically new, high-risk ideas and accelerate development of the most promising emerging areas of science and technology as well as the Union wide structuring of the corresponding scientific communities." • FET-Open • FET Coordination and Support Actions • FET-Proactive initiatives • Global Systems Science (GSS) • Knowing, doing and being: cognition beyond problem solving • Quantum Simulation • Towards exascale high performance computing (HPC) • FET Flagships • The Graphene • Human Brain Project

  5. Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) • Expanded from ICT and Energy to be used as cross-cutting funding scheme • Supports frontier research: alternative ideas, concepts or paradigms of risky or non-conventional nature (similar to ERC) Open, light and agile Roadmap based research

  6. FET Open: • FET OPEN – Novel ideas for radically new technologies • Open is open – All technologies, no thematic restriction • Cut off dates: 30/09/2014, 31/03/2015 and 29/09/2015 • Total budget: 160M€ in 2014 – 2015 • Instrument: • Research and Innovation Action – 154M€ • Coordination and Support Actions (CSA) – 6M€

  7. FET Open: FET Gatekeepers • Long-term vision: a new, original or radical long-term vision of technology-enabled possibilities going far beyond the state of the art • •Breakthrough S&T target: scientifically ambitious and technologically concrete breakthroughs plausibly attainable within the life-time of the project. • •Foundational: the breakthroughs must be foundational in the sense that they can establish a basis for a new line of technology not currently anticipated. • •Novelty: new ideas and concepts, rather than the application or incremental refinement of existing ones. • •High-risk: the potential of a new technological direction depends on a whole range of factors that cannot be apprehended from a single disciplinary viewpoint. • •Interdisciplinary: the proposed collaborations must go beyond current mainstream collaboration configurations in joint S&T research, and must aim to advance different scientific and technological disciplines together and in synergy towards a breakthrough.

  8. FETOPEN 1: FET – Open research projects • Specific challenge: Supporting a large set of early stage, high risk visionary science and technology collaborative research projects is necessary for the successful exploration of new foundations for radically new future technologies. Nurturing fragile ideas requires an agile, risk-friendly and highly interdisciplinary research approach, expanding well beyond the strictly technological disciplines. Recognising and stimulating the driving role of new high-potential actors in research and innovation, such as women, young researchers and high-tech SMEs, is also important for nurturing the scientific and industrial leaders of the future. • Project size: 2 to 4M€ • 1 step submission and evaluation of a 16 pages proposal • Proposals are not anonymous

  9. FETOPEN 2: FET – Coordination and Support Activities 2014 • Specific challenge: The challenge is to make Europe the best place in the world for collaborative research on future and emerging technologies that will renew the basis for future European competitiveness and growth, and that will make a difference for society in the decades to come. • Scope: Proposals shall address one of the following topics: • •FET Observatory: identifying new opportunities and directions for FET research • •FET Communication: communicating on FET projects and activities • •FET Exchange: structuring an emerging FET-relevant topic and communities • •FET Conference: supporting the organisation of the third FET Conference • •FET Prizes: identifying suitable areas for prizes and competitions in FET • •FET Impact: Assessing the impacts of the FET programme • Project size: 0.3 to 0.5M€ per topic, up to 1M€ for FET Conference

  10. FETOPEN 3: FET – Coordination and Support Activities 2015 • Specific challenge: The challenge is to make Europe the best place in the world for collaborative research on future and emerging technologies that will renew the basis for future European competitiveness and growth, and that will make a difference for society in the decades to come. • Scope: Proposals shall address one of the following topics: • FET Exchange: structuring an emerging FET-relevant topic and communities • FET Take-Up: actions for stimulating take-up of FET research results towards impact and innovation • Project size: 0.3 to 0.5M€ per topic

  11. FETPROACT 1-3: 2014 FETPROACT 1: Global Systems Science (GSS) – 2014 FETPROACT 2: Knowing, doing, being: cognition beyond problem solving (GSS) – 2014 FETPROACT 3: Quantum simulation – 2014 • Project sizes: 2 to 4M€ (GSS 2-3M€) • -> Deadline: 1/04/2014 • Total Budget: 35M€ in WP 2014 – 2015 • Results expected by 1 September! • 184 proposals submitted • Updated WP 2014-2015 to be published at the end of June

  12. FET - High Performance Computing • HPC is an important asset for the EU's innovation capacity of strategic importance to the EU's industrial and scientific capabilities as well as its citizens: • developing innovative industrial products and services, • increasing competitiveness, • addressing societal and scientific grand challenges more effectively. • Europe has the technology, knowledge and human skills to develop capabilities covering the whole technological spectrum of the next HPC generation (exascale computing) • Importance of developing state-of-the-art HPC technologies, systems, software, applications and services in Europe • All relevant actors, public and private, need to work in partnership • Invites the EC to elaborate its plans for HPC to support academic and industrial research and innovation under H2020

  13. FET – HPC: Critical Technologies, addressing Societal Challenges • Health, demographic change and well-being • (Personalised medicine, pharma/bio-medical simulations, Virtual Physiological Human, Human Brain Project) • Smart, green and integrated transport engineering • (performance, sustainability, energy efficiency) • Inclusive, innovative societies • (Smart Cities, multivariable decision/analytics support) • Climate action • (Simulators for Climate & Earth Sciences, Gas&Oil) • Secure, clean and efficient energy • (Fusion, nuclear plant simulations) • Food security, sustainable agriculture, marine research and the bio-economy • (simulation of sustainability factors (e.g. weather forecast, stock plagues and diseases control, etc))

  14. FETHPC 1: HPC core Technologies, Programming Environments and Algorithms for Extreme Parallelism and Extreme Data Applications - 2014 • Specific challenge: Addressing the exascale challenges to achieve, by 2020, the full range of technological capabilities for exascale-class HPC systems which are balanced at all levels and validated with significant application drivers • Scope: • a. Core technologies and architectures (e.g. processors, memory, interconnect and storage) and their optimal integration into HPC systems, platforms and prototypes • b. Programming methodologies, environments languages and tools: new programming models for extreme parallelism and extreme data applications • c. APIs and system software for future extreme scale systems • d. New mathematical and algorithmic approaches (e.g. ultra-scalable algorithms for extreme scale systems with quantifiable performance for existing or visionary applications) • Project size:2 to 4 M€, up to 8M€ per topic a) • Budget:93.4M€ -> Deadline 25/11/2014, with a minimum of 60% to be allocated to research under part a) of the scope

  15. FETHPC 2: HPC Ecosystem Development – 2014 • HPC Ecosystem Development – 2014 • Specific challenge: To develop a sustainable European HPC Ecosystem • Scope: • •Coordination of the HPC strategy : coordination of the activities of stakeholders such as ETP4HPC, PRACE, application owners and users (including emerging HPC applications), the European exascale computing research community, the open source HPC community, etc. • •Excellence in High Performance Computing Systems : boost European research excellence on the key challenges towards the next generations of high-performance computing systems; cutting across all levels – hardware, architectures, programming, applications; ensure a durable integration of the relevant European research teams; self-sustainability of the research integration on the longer-term • Project size:2 to 4 M€ • Budget:4M€ -> Deadline 25/11/2014

  16. Conditions for participation • Minimum conditions: FET, LEIT and Societal Challenges(apart from JTIs) • For standard collaborative actions (RIA and IA) • 3 legal entities, each established in different MS/AC • For CSA : 1 legal entity • For SME Instrument and programme co-fund • 1 legal entity established in a MS/AC • Industry participation is highly advisable even if not a requirement!

  17. Funding Model (as per Horizon 2020) • Simplified funding: • Direct Costs: • 100% for Research and Innovation actions (+CSA) • 70% for Innovation (non-profit entities up to 100%) • WP to specify the reimbursement rate (RIA or IA) • Indirect Costs: • Flat rate of 25% of total direct costs, excluding subcontracting, costs of third parties and financial support to third parties • *Funding of the action not exceed total eligible costs minus receipts

  18. Submission Process • FET- Open • Continuously open • Cut-off date every 6 months March & Sept, starting as of Sept 2014 • FET- Proactive • Fixed deadline call: 1st April 2014 • Submission & Evaluation • 'Short' proposals , 1 step submission using FET specific template • 1 stage evaluation based on FET specific evaluation criteria • 4 experts per proposals to best address multi-disciplinary nature of FET research • Grant • Grant based on proposal 'as-is' -> No negotiation • All information needed has to be in the proposal! (remember IPR, management structure, access right, business plan) • Time to contract of max. 8 months from call deadline/cut-off date

  19. Eligibility • Standard criteria / FET specific criteria • The part B (cover page and sections 1, 2 and 3) is strictly limited to 16 A4 pages and shall consist of: • A single A4 title page with acronym, title and abstract of the proposal. • Maximum 15 A4 pages consisting of an S&T section (section 1), an • Impact section (section 2) and an Implementation section (section 3). • A proposal that do not comply with these page limits will be declared ineligible.

  20. Eligibility – cont… • Part A: Administrative part of the proposal • Part B: Scientific part of the proposal • 16 pages – core proposal • Cover page • Section 1: S&T Excellence • Section 2: Impact • Section 3: Implementation • Additional information • Section 4: Members of the consortium • I.E: . legal entity, CV, subcontract, third party • Section 5: Ethics and Security • Ethics self-assessment & supporting documents • Security checklist Cover page limited to 1 page Section 1,2 &3 are limited to 15 pages Section 4 & 5 are not included in the page limit FET annotated proposal template available

  21. Evaluation Criteria: Research project

  22. Evaluation Criteria: CSA

  23. Evaluation Summary Report

  24. Evaluation Process Balanced selection of experts (scientific expertise, geography, gender) YES? Evaluators invited on a call-by-call basis Process monitored by independent experts

  25. Events and Consultations • Which network & Internet of Things technologies in Horizon 2020 EU Programme? Deadline 27/06/2014 • http://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/en/news/which-network-internet-things-technologies-horizon-2020-eu-programme • Have your say on Future and Emerging Technologies! Deadline 15/06/2014 • Ideas collected are to contribute to the FET WP 2016-2017, especially FET Proactive Initiatives • http://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/en/news/have-your-say-future-and-emerging-technologies • Future and Emerging Technologies homepage • http://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/en/h2020-section/future-and-emerging-technologies

  26. Research Office EU Team • Renata Schaeffer • Questions on: General queries, funding opportunities and EU policy • Catherine Hill • Questions on: Coordinator grants • Sarah Saemian • Questions on: General queries, Participant Portal and EPSS • Bethan Jones • ERC Officer

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