1 / 18

Key Technologies for Europe Towards A RESEARCH STRATEGY BEYOND LISBON

Key Technologies for Europe Towards A RESEARCH STRATEGY BEYOND LISBON. Teresa de Lemos. “Ways to the European Future” Prague, Czech Republic 11-12 May 2006.

kamran
Télécharger la présentation

Key Technologies for Europe Towards A RESEARCH STRATEGY BEYOND LISBON

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Key Technologies for EuropeTowards A RESEARCH STRATEGY BEYOND LISBON Teresa de Lemos “Ways to the European Future” Prague, Czech Republic 11-12 May 2006

  2. The High Level Group on Key Technologies was set up by the Unit K2 “Science and Technology Foresight” of DG Research from the European Commission in December 2004

  3. KT Mission • To assess the potential and the emerging scientific and technological research topics in fifteen specific areas, their impact on EU competitiveness and societal fabric, and the potential response of EU and its Members States • To examine what possibilities exist for a uniquely European approach to exploiting the potential synergies across these technologies, and develop guidance for new research agendas • The findings of the Group are to assist with the identification of possible priorities for the European Research Policy

  4. High Level Group on Key Technologies ChairTeresa de Lemos RapporteurJennifer Cassingena Harper AgricultureLiam Downey BiotechnologyPaolo Saviotti Cognitive SciencesDaniel Andler CommunicationsPetrosKavassalis Complexity Corrado Priami Energy Birte Holst-Joergensen EnvironmentMatthias Weber Health CareAnette Braun ITWolfgang Bibel ManufacturingJosé Sá-da-Costa NanotechnologyOttilia Saxl Security Alois Sieber Services Walter Ganz SS&H George Gaskell Transport Jacques Theys Vision BuildingEmilio Fontela

  5. Work Done • For each KT an expert produced a report which was subsequently validated by other experts in the field • The Synthesis report builds upon the lessons and recommendations of all reports, and went a step further including the insight drawn from the overall analysis of all KT • The Group met twice from December to September 2005 on 17 January and 23-24 May 2005 • The work of the Group ends with the conference held in Brussels on 19-20 September 2005

  6. KT Report Contents • Objectiveto provide an overview of where the EU stands and a forward look (key trends) over next 10-15 years of research development in major sectors/areas of science and technology • Introduction • The socio-economic challenge for Europe (comparing with US and others) and developments of EU policy (last 5-10 years) • Global perspective of the activities in the sector\area, focusing in the socio-economic context and regulatory factors • EU activities in the sector\area • SWOT analysis • Forward Look over next 10-15 yearsThe reports would need to consider the intermingling of S&T developments and socio-economic challenges including organizational, institutional or regulatory factors which support/prevent the full development of the S&T base’s potential

  7. Strengths of EU R&D • Diversity of cultures, tolerance, intellectually challenging environment • Long-term vision for excellence in scientific research • Fundamental knowledge creation is strong • Internationally recognised, high level research tradition at research institutes, university and academic level • Good track record in natural sciences, engineering – chemical and manufacturing are basic traditional and mature industries that emerged as key to support many other areas - and medical sciences • High awareness of the importance of services even in the manufacturing sector • International companies with R&D activities • Research integrates national R&D networks (FP6, European Research Area - ERA)

  8. Weaknesses of EU R&D • Lack of a vision to rationalise and articulate long-term basic research with short-term applied research • Tendency to abandon long-term / high impact research • Fragmentation, discontinuity, un-coordination • Lack of interdisciplinary communication • The amount of R&D expenditures is decreasing • Excessive bureaucracy • Some areas of research are under-funded • The working and living conditions of R&D staff are poor in comparison to the US (and also between some EU countries) • The research staff is an ageing population • The management skills of R&D staff are poor • The investment of the corporate sector in R&D and innovation is low • The knowledge transfer to the applied sector is weak – no systematic systems in place, no cultural drive, the spin-off activity is low

  9. Opportunities of EU R&D • Willingness to promote coordination, cooperation and development of synergies between the Member States’ initiatives • The societal awareness of global risks such as climate change, energy depletion and the environment deterioration is leading to the recognition of the need of more research to address these threats • Definition of the societal role of research • Increasing demand on the faster spread of results in the field of R&D • Increasing weight of knowledge intensive sectors • An expanding service sector • The majority of EU companies are SMEs which have the needed flexibility, skills and intellectual capacity to foster innovations. This induces a more dynamic environment than in the US where large companies dominate

  10. Threats to EU R&D • Unfavourable external macroeconomic conditions • The financial sector is risk averse – It is needed access to public funding for expensive, high-risk, long-term projects but also to additional private-sector risk capital • Increasing regional disparities - Rural regions falling behind • An increasing gap of knowledge between sections of society - the haves and the have-nots; the technology and digital divide, the separation between science and technology (knowledge and production), and the scientists-citizens divide • The EU society has so far shown an apparently limited “absorptive capacity” in regard of innovation, and/or of disruptive transformations, e.g. Internet • The US is leader in the theoretical developments of Management theory • Service research is dominated by US, and can become permanent and Europe will lose its innovative leadership in many areas

  11. Key Conclusions • Europe is a “Knowledge Society” but not a “Competitive Society” • Basic research or fundamental research is a very long-term business with uncertain outcomes but is essential to the future developments of science

  12. EU R&D Advantages • The EU R&D key strength is its potential for Knowledge creation – the cultural diversity and an intellectual challenging environment provide the ingredients • The service sector in the EU is rapidly increasing its importance • A threat that EU can transform in an opportunity is the knowledge that is acquiring on how to deal with an ageing population

  13. EU R&D Disadvantages • The EU R&D System lacks the ability to transfer and apply the knowledge that it creates effectively and efficiently. • Risk aversion is a socio-cultural characteristic • The lack of strategy, the fragmentation, the duplication of resources, and the ‘brain drain’ are putting the Knowledge Creation potential at risk • This has been aggravated by the tendency to only fund R&D whose results are ‘market and end-user oriented’, as such fundamental research has been somewhat neglected

  14. Next Steps • Define the framework for the EU R&D system • Define the long-term and short-term strategies • Implement procedures to assist the strategic decision process

  15. Socio and Systemic Approaches Cognitive Sciences, Complexity SS&H Agriculture Energy Targeting Societal Challenges Biotechnology Transports Communications Transversal Technologies Environment IT Health Care Manufacturing Security Nanotechnology Services Cluster Approach - Systemic and Holistic Framework for the EU R&D System - :

  16. The Beyond Lisbon Strategy Europe needs to define and implement The Beyond Lisbon Strategy, supported by a long-term Vision (30-50 years) and to work towards this strategy through a transition agenda

  17. The Beyond Lisbon Strategy • The EU R&D system needs to: • address the new paradigms of a society undergoing fundamental change as well as defining its societal role • acknowledge the systemic and holistic framework provided by the Cluster Approach to target the new societal paradigms • use a systemic approach integrating long-term and short-term strategies and the member states R&D systems to obtain synergies and rationalise efforts • implement the adequate mechanisms to bridge the gap between the R&D system, the public sector and the business system

  18. WHY FORESIGHT? • To provide insight and support to the policy makers in their decision making process • To overcome the two most pervasive weaknesses: the reluctance to approach the problems within a systemic and holistic framework and a resistance to adopt rupture strategies • To reflect on the EU vision and its research strategies – long term and short term - in the light of global pressures, and adjust them if necessary • To evaluate the strategic fit between the Lisbon Strategy, the long term and short term research agendas with the ever changing external parameters

More Related