FP7 Conference – ‘Smart Systems Integration 2013′, Amsterdam, Netherlands

A conference entitled ‘Smart Systems Integration 2013′ (SSI 2013) will be held from 13 to 14 March 2013 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Smart systems are miniaturized devices that incorporate functions of sensing, actuation and control. They are capable of describing and analyzing a situation and taking decisions based on the available data in a predictive or adaptive manner, thereby performing smart actions. The whole system is subject to today’s trend of increasing demand for miniaturization, networking capability, energy-autonomy and reliability. Due to increasing complexity and multidisciplinary developing teams in fields of microsystems- and nanotechnology, the likes of optics, fluidics, biology, medical science, electronics and wireless communication technologies face highest demands.

A major challenge in smart systems technology is the integration of a multitude of components developed and produced from very different technologies and materials. Focus is on the design and manufacturing of completely new marketable products and services for specialized applications (e.g. in medical technologies), and for mass market applications (e.g. in the automotive industries).
The event aims to bring together various stakeholders to discuss and exchange on integration issues of miniaturized systems – MEMS, NEMS, ICs and electronic components. The event is part of the activities of EPoSS, the European Technology Platform on Smart Systems Integration.

For further information, please visit: http://www.smart-systems-integration.org/public/news-events/events/ssi-2013-international-conference-exhibition-on-integration-issues-of-miniaturized-systems-mems-nems-ics-and-electronic-components

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Low Carbon KEEP Small Business Funding

The Low Carbon KEEP (Knowledge-East of England-Partners) programme aims to support East of England businesses to innovate and grow through University partnerships and knowledge transfer. By improving internal capabilities and implementing a low carbon approach to business through academic guidance, companies can increase profitability and competitiveness. Typical Low Carbon KEEP projects run for 4-18 months however the benefits of such collaborations far outlast the length of the project.

Funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the Low Carbon KEEP grant will cover 40% of eligible project costs as well as fund up to 40% of the costs of purchasing capital items, such as essential equipment or software, which are fundamental to the success of a Low Carbon KEEP project. The average contribution expected from the participating business varies from project to project, but on average amounts to £20,000-£24,000 per year.

The project is managed and delivered by an experienced graduate, working either full or part-time within a business. The graduate acts as a conduit between an academic expert and a company, ensuring that the latest research and expertise is available to the business.

Key Benefits  

Some of the key benefits resulting from a Low Carbon KEEP project as reported by SMEs who have participated in the programme are:

•Substantial cost savings •Increased profitability

•Product and service improvements

•Development of new products and IP

•Staff up-skilling

Key Statistics  

As of December 2012 the Low Carbon KEEP programme has funded over 35 projects. Some key statistics include:

•Total value of investment so far – £1,696,644

•Total ERDF grant allocated so far – £678,658

•Total SME match attracted so far – £870,607

•Total amount of knowledge transfer financed so far – 37 years equivalent

Are we eligible?

The Low Carbon KEEP Programme is open to small and medium sized companies (SMEs) registered in the six East of England counties (Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Norfolk, Suffolk). Most business sectors are eligible including charities and not for profit organisations, although the coal, agricultural and fisheries sectors are excluded due to European funding regulations.

In order to be successful when applying, a business will need to cover the following eligibility criteria:

•is based in Essex, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire

•employs less than 249 people

•has an annual turnover of less than 50m euro

•has total assets equivalent to less than 43m euro

•is not more than 25% owned by a parent company

•has not received more than 200,000 euro state aid in the last three fiscal years

What is the capital grant scheme?

The Low Carbon KEEP capital grant scheme allows SMEs to recoup 40% of the cost of purchasing capital items, such as essential equipment or software, which are fundamental to the success of a Low Carbon KEEP project. The capital grant funding can be used to purchase more than one item on more than one occasion. All capital items purchased utilising Low Carbon KEEP capital grant funding will remain in the ownership of the SME partner. Should the Low Carbon KEEP project come to a premature conclusion, the amount of the capital grant awarded will be proportionally reduced. If you decide not to apply for capital funding at the beginning of your Low Carbon KEEP project, but change your mind afterwards, you can still apply at a later date, provided your project has not come to an end.

What are the project timings?

•Project length is at the discretion of the company, in consultation with the participating academic partner, and can be between 4 and 18 months

•Projects must be completed before December 2014

•The project graduate can work either full or part-time, they can be recruited specifically for the project or already employed by the university or business

How do we hire the graduate?

Graduates are hired by the university partners thus removing the burden of employment liability from the business. The university Human Resources department will have a standard procedure for hiring in staff, though you will be fully engaged in the selection process.

How do I apply?

For an informal chat and a copy of the application form please contact a member of our delivery team. Alternatively please visit the Ask Uni East page. This is not a formal part of the application process, but provides us with the information that we can help to match your project with an appropriate academic partner.

•Carole Randall, Programme Manager carole.randall@anglia.ac.uk 0845 196 4310

•Marla Fuchs, Programme Co-ordinator marla.fuchs@anglia.ac.uk 0845 196 5818

All Low Carbon KEEP project proposals are subject to approval; applications are jointly prepared by the company partner and the knowledge base partner. Approval decisions take typically 3-4 weeks after submission of a proposal.

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Technology Strategy Board’s (TSB) IC Tomorrow Programme

IC tomorrow is a Technology Strategy Board programme based in London’s Tech City. It aims to stimulate innovation and economic growth in the digital sector, by breaking down barriers and opening doors for a new generation of entrepreneurs.

The IC tomorrow network connects digital innovators with leading rights holders, content providers and investors across the UK, through funded contests, events, strategic matchmaking opportunities and its online network.

IC tomorrow promotes and supports innovation across a variety of sectors including music, publishing, games, film & TV and culture. IC tomorrow also provides a free to use trial management platform for UK-based digital innovators.

Benefits to Business Funding IC tomorrow runs a range of funded contests across the digital and creative sectors. These contests are run in partnership with leading contest/challenge partners who help to set relevant challenges that will encourage innovation in new digital applications or services. Contest applicants can benefit from the funding that is awarded to successful companies to develop their proposed solutions and grow their businesses; gain from exposure to a range of leading content providers and rights holders; test their proposed application or service with those partner companies and organisations; promote their prototype solution via the IC tomorrow programme; receive support in resolving content delivery, licensing and metadata issues related to their proposed application or service; register on the IC tomorrow digital test bed and retain their intellectual property. Strategic matchmaking IC tomorrow hosts a variety of events, pitching sessions and facilitated strategic matchmaking opportunities for their network. These offer leading companies and content owners the opportunity to meet innovative digital startups and entrepreneurs with new applications and services that will help to drive innovation in their sectors.

The startups gain from the access which IC tomorrow is able to provide to valuable business connections and leads with key industry stakeholders to help to spur their journey from concept to commercialisation. Digital testbed IC tomorrow includes a free-to-use trial management platform for UK-based digital innovators and rights holders to connect and test new business models.

Who is eligible? IC tomorrow is an innovation programme which is open to UK-based individuals, organisations and companies who are interested in joining their network of nearly 2500 digital innovators, content providers and investors – and counting – to seek funding opportunities, make valuable connections and stimulate innovation and growth for individuals and businesses through technology enabled innovation.

How do I find out more or apply? To find out more about IC tomorrow please visit their website at ictomorrow.co.uk or follow @ICtomorrow on Twitter. For more information about the digital testbed please visit ictomorrow.co.uk/testbed To contact the IC tomorrow team please email support@ictomorrow.co.uk or phone 0300 321 4358 Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm.

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Start-up Loan Scheme Expands – £30M for UK Start-Ups

An extra £30 million has been made available for the Government’s Start-up Loan Scheme, with the maximum age criteria increasing from 24 to 30 years old. The scheme provides applicants with support and mentoring, along with access to a £2,500 loan. The scheme began in September 2012, with over 3,000 people registering their interest or applying for the loan since then.

The additional money will boost the total pot for Start-Up loans to over £110 million over the next three years, potentially helping to start tens of thousands of new businesses. The Prime Minister also announced that due to demand from those who had just missed out on the scheme, and the challenges faced to secure loans to start a business, the age limit for application will now be extended from 24 to 30 years old.

For more information, click here.

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Horizon 2020 – FET Open Scheme Wins €2Bn Funding!

As the number one priority for ICT research, the 10-year  FET Flagship projects in graphene and computer modelling of the brain announced this week are guaranteed €1B each.

The two winners of the biggest basic research grants in EU history – with €54 million for starters in 2013 alone – have been guaranteed the funding will be maintained over ten years regardless of any cuts to the EU’s overall R&D programme.

The Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) Flagships on Graphene and the Human Brain will also be the most collaborative projects ever funded by the EU, with Graphene involving 126 academic and industrial groups in 17 countries, while the Human Brain Project is comprised of 87 organisations in 23 countries, of which 16 are in the EU.

The two Flagships will get €54 million from the European Commission’s ICT 2013 Work programme to get off the ground, with the majority of the remaining funding coming from Horizon 2020.

Driving up the level of science

The European Commission says that the 10-year duration and massive financial incentive it offered for the FET Flagships has delivered even before the projects have started in earnest, by driving the level of science in the proposals to a much higher level.

Looking beyond computer science

Although they are to be funded as part of the ICT programme, to achieve their objectives – and deliver on Kroes’ vision of becoming two of the most important research projects in the world – the FET flagships will have to look well beyond computer science. They will need to link up with researchers in materials science, neuroscience, bioinformatics, robotics, pharmacology and medicine, amongst others.

The Human Brain Project, led by Henry Markram at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, covers disciplines including neuroscience, genetics, applied mathematics computer science, robotics and social sciences. The aim is to create a comprehensive computer model of the brain, as a tool for studying how the organ works and using this for diagnosis and to develop treatments for neurological and related diseases.

This in itself would be an important contribution to medical research, but the researchers also promise huge spin-offs for computer science. New techniques of interactive supercomputing that will be required to simulate how the brain functions will impact a range of industries. Meanwhile devices and systems modelled on the brain will overcome fundamental limits in the energy efficiency, reliability and programmability of the current generation of computer systems, opening up a route to develop computers with brain-like intelligence.

The thinnest material

The Graphene Flagship headed by Jari Kinaret, at Chalmers University in Sweden will investigate the unique properties of this carbon-based material and exploit its extraordinary combination of physical and chemical properties. Graphene is the thinnest material, conducts electricity much better than copper, is 100-300 times stronger than steel and it has unique optical properties.  Given this, graphene is the number one candidate to replace silicon in semiconductors, but also has the qualities to reach a much wider field of applications, becoming as important as steel or plastics in the long-term.

The high level of collaboration in the FET Flagships represents a serious attempt to overcome the fragmentation that typically prevents Europe from pulling its weight in basic research. For example, the EU has previously funded more than 50 graphene projects and there are also national graphene programmes. All these activities are independent of each other and are subcritical.

The two Flagships were selected following a competition that has run for 2.5 years. Twenty one proposals received in response to a call on 20 July 2010 were whittled down to six pilots by January 2011. These Flagship pilots began work on 1 May 2011, with Kroes launching them officially at the FET11 Conference in Budapest on 4 May 2011. Each of the six received around €1.5 million in funding over a year to hone their plans. Then in October 2012 the six finalists submitted their complete research proposals, including a roadmap and implementation plan for evaluation by a panel of 25 experts.

The Commission says the four other finalists, FuturICT Knowledge Accelerator and Crisis-Relief System; Guardian Angels for a Smarter Life; IT Future of Medicine; and Robot Companions for Citizens are eligible to apply for Horizon 2020 money but there will be no funding specifically reserved for them.

Negotiations with the two winners are now getting underway. Pending approval from the ICT Committee of Member and Associated States, contracts for the initial ramp-up phase, funded from the EU’s 2013 budget, will be signed projects, allowing the projects to begin in September 2013.

The Commission has included FET Flagships as part of its proposal for Horizon 2020, but whether there will be any new Flagships will depend on the overall decision on the final H2020 budget.

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Horizon 2020 : An introduction to the European Union’s plans for research and innovation funding (2014 to 2020)

The EU plans its spending within seven-year multi-annual financial frameworks (MFFs) and as the 2007 to 2013 MFF is drawing to a close, it is currently devising and agreeing the MFF for the period 2014 to 2020. To be concluded between the European Parliament, Council and European Commission, this sets the maximum amount of commitment appropriations in the EU budget for broad policy areas and fixes an overall annual ceiling on spending. The main details are set out in two documents. The main details are set out in two documents: A Budget For Europe 2020 – Part I – Communication A Budget For Europe 2020 – Part II – Policy Fiches.

The former gives the main outline of the budget and explains that it is to focus on smart, sustainable and inclusive growth. The Commission is accordingly proposing to increase the amounts allocated to research and innovation, education and SME development and it stressed: “The EU budget we propose will not cost taxpayers more than at present. But it will give them more in return. We are modernising the European budget to make savings in some areas so we can spend more in the priority areas that really matter.” In broad terms, the EU Budget spends about 1% of the Union’s GDP.

In EU-speak the second document sets out the “fiches” (files) which explain the main policy areas where the Union will be committing resources during the 2014 to 2020 MFF.

You can read the document here: HORIZON_2020

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Understanding Horizon 2020

Horizon 2020 is the new EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation as proposed by the European Commission in November 2011. It is the successor of the Seventh Framework Programme, the current EU programme for Research (FP 7) and would thus operate from 2014 to 2020. With a total budget of €80 billion the Commission has proposed a substantial increase on the budget for the FP7.

Horizon 2020 brings together all existing Union research and innovation funding, including the FP7, the innovation related activities of the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme (CIP) and the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT). Moreover, the programme is a key pillar of Innovation Union, the Europe 2020 flagship initiative aimed at enhancing Europe’s global competitiveness.

A simplified programme architecture: Three strategic objectives

The Horizon 2020 proposal sets out plans for a simpler programme architecture for research and innovation, which would focus funds on three strategic objectives:

  • Excellent Science
  • Industrial Leadership
  • Societal Concerns

Excellent Science

This strategic objective will aim to support the EU’s position as a world leader in science with a dedicated budget of €24.6 billion, including further promotion of the European Research Council through a funding increase of 77% in order to support the talented and most creative individuals to carry out frontier research of the highest quality as well as funding of theMarie Curie actions.

Industrial Leadership

This will aim to strengthen Europe’s industrial leadership in innovation with an investment of €17 938 million, including major investment in key technologies, such as ICT, nanotechnologies, advanced materials, biotechnology, advanced manufacturing and processing, and space as well as Union-wide support for innovation in SMEs.

Societal Concerns

This will provide €31,748 million to help address major concerns shared by all Europeans, bringing together resources and knowledge across different fields, technologies and disciplines. In particular, funding under this objective will be focussed around a set of ‘Grand Challenges’, identified by the Commission as being of shared concern for EU citizens. These include:

■Health, demographic change and wellbeing;

■Food security, sustainable agriculture, marine and maritime research and the bio-economy;

■Secure, clean and efficient energy;

■Smart, green and integrated transport;

■Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials;

■Inclusive, innovative and secure societies.

Horizon 2020: proposed changes to the current EU system for funding research

Underpinning the three strategic objectives, Horizon 2020 proposes a range of further changes to the EU’s current system for allocating funding for research. Most notably, these include:

■A single set of participation rules, on issues such as eligibility, evaluation and intellectual property;

■Simpler funding rules, including reimbursement of 100% of direct costs and single flat rate for cost reimbursement of indirect costs at 20%; and

■a commitment to ensure strong participation in Horizon 2020 by SMEs, supported by SME-specific actions. SMEs will benefit from approximately€8.6 billion.

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Horizon 2020 – a Summary of Events in 2012

Academics, SMEs and large companies are doing much more research in partnership. I would like to look back at some of the highlights of the move to open innovation in 2012, and the policy initiatives that are supporting this.

Parliament takes tough stance on Horizon 2020

After many discussions, debates and a series of draft parliamentary reports in 2012; MEPs in the European Parliament’s Research, Industry and Energy (ITRE) Committee almost unanimously adopted a series of amendments on the six legislative proposals that make up Horizon 2020, the EU’s next research funding programme.

It is expected that next year’s Irish Presidency will push for a deal with MEPs ahead of a meeting of research ministers in May 2013 – but the likelihood is that a political logjam over the broader, Commission-wide budget will hold up resolution of the R&D slice of the budget, about 8% of total EU spending. The latest, private betting among budget negotiators is that this could push a decision into Autumn of 2013. With Horizon 2020 set to kick-off in Feb 2014, there is little time to lose.

Innovation in an age of austerity

With austerity programs weighing heavily on Europe’s national budgets in 2012, MEPs and the member states have been fighting over the EU’s R&D budget. In 2011, the European Commission had proposed to reserve €80 billion for Horizon 2020.

EU research ministers are said to be eager to cut the budget, leading to rumours of a budget as low as €40 billion. MEPs, however, have been demanding €100 billion. To be continued in 2013.

After four decades, 2012 finally saw the dawn of a single European patent

After more than four decades of negotiation, impasse, posturing and fresh political drama in 2012, most EU member states have now agreed to create a unitary patent. MEPs who voted for the move promised simplification, lower costs and time-saving for hard-pressed SMEs.

2012 – A tipping point for personalised healthcare

The European Medicines Agency, at the fourth time of asking, decided this year to recommend approval of the first gene therapy, opening up a new era in the treatment of rare diseases, and unlocking the wider potential of such therapies.

Meanwhile, in the US, the trigger for the widespread and systematic deployment of personalised healthcare was pulled in early 2012 with the announcement of a desktop machine that can sequence an individual’s genome at a price of $1,000.

MEPs voted to maintain the current EU rules on stem cell research, this means that projects using human embryonic stem cells can be funded with EU money, but only if they are approved under the law of the Member State where the research takes place – defeating a proposal to ban stem cell research by a small group of conservative MEPs.

Space, Europe’s final frontier?

Although EU budget negotiations may have stalled in 2012, at least one collaborative science project – the European Space Agency – has agreed its long-term funding, allocating €10 billion for ESA’s activities and programmes from 2013 until 2017.

ESA – an intergovernmental organisation which includes non-EU countries – also officially announced this year that talks about its relationship with the EU have commenced, possibly pointing to the future integration of ESA into the European Union. Only a few years ago, the Lisbon Treaty introduced space policy as an EU competency.

Meanwhile, MEPs organised a conference featuring representatives from the worlds of politics, research and science fiction – including ESA astronauts and a Star Trek actor – at the European Parliament to highlight the need to inspire a new generation of European researchers.

New push to complete the European Research Area

After twelve years horsetrading, 2012 saw the light of a voluntary agreement between the European Commission and Europe’s research bodies aiming to get 27 national research systems functioning as one, and complete the European Research Area (ERA).

EU Research Commissioner Máire Geoghegan-Quinn signed the agreement this year with a broad swathe of Europe’s research funding bodies, in an attempt to glue together the European Research Area and open up a single market for research jobs and scientific data in time for the start of Horizon 2020.

Europe attempts to open up R&D funds while maintaining excellence

MEPs have called for specific measures to widen the horizon of the EU’s flagship research programme and ensure there is more participation from member states with less-developed R&D systems. Many MEPs however, along with scientists, research organisations and wealthier countries, stress that excellence has to remain the basis for EU research grants.

Suggested measures for achieving more participation from newer member states include matching richer universities with less well-off counterparts to apply for funding together in a new ‘twinning’ scheme, creating  a grant programme for researchers who return to less-developed member states, and improving coordination between Horizon 2020 and Europe’s structural funds.

Europe celebrates entrepreneurship on campus

Seven start-up companies from across Europe were recognised at an awards ceremony as two programmes came together to hand out prizes to entrepreneurs. Start-ups from the UK and Germany lead the list of winners, which also included Spanish and Hungarian companies.

The European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT), an EU institution, launched its first entrepreneurship awards, for three start-ups. At the same time, the Science|Business Innovation Board, a not-for-profit association, awarded four prizes in its fourth annual Academic Enterprise Awards (ACES) competition.

Together, the cluster of awards made a powerful statement about the promise and importance of entrepreneurship in reviving the European economy.

Europe’s energy future

Europe has many of the technologies in hand to engineer a low-carbon economy by 2050 – a goal set by the EU. But getting there will require a radical shakeup to its energy market. Science|Business organised a number of meetings this year, to bring together experts from the worlds of academia, industry and policy to discuss the future of Europe’s energy supply.

Eco-innovation action plan targets radical shift in use of resources

Being green has been taking on a new urgency in Brussels – and a new meaning. The European Commission aims to pioneer a radical shift toward resource efficiency by 2020 and the overhaul could include get-tough measures, such as a Europe-wide ban on landfilling of waste materials.

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Horizon 2020 – in 45 questions and answers (Q&A)

  • Q: What about traditional SMEs with limited innovation capacity? Will they have their place in H2020?
    A: SMEs will be encouraged to participate across the Horizon 2020 programme. The SME instrument is open to highly innovative SMEs showing a strong ambition to develop, grow and internationalise regardless of whether they are high-tech or not. The SME instrument will be competitive, business-oriented and focused on creating impact, bringing high-potential innovations closer to the market. Closer to the market activities under the rules of participation has a reimbursement rate of 70%. SMEs may still take part in collaborative R&D projects where the rules of participation state the reimbursement rate is 100%. A good chunk of the Horizon 2020 budgetary target for SMEs will be delivered through the dedicated SME instrument. The exact budget allocation is still to be decided.
  • Q: EU International Strategy for Research and Innovation – what are the next steps?
    A: As part of the preparation for the launch of Horizon 2020, the Commission services will start their work on identifying opportunities for international cooperation and developing the multi-annual roadmaps. These will subsequently be integrated in and implemented through Horizon 2020 and its work programmes.

    There will be a strengthened steering, monitoring and evaluation of the strategy, and in particular of the international cooperation aspects of Horizon 2020, in order to ensure coherent implementation across the programme. The Commission will track progress through a set of indicators and will report every two years.

  • Q: EU International Strategy for Research and Innovation – what will change for the growth economies?
    A: As the Communication points out, countries such as China, Brazil, Russia, India and other economies that have grown strongly over the past years will continue to be important partners for the EU. This is reflected in the fact that all of these countries will still be able to participate in all parts of Horizon 2020, allowing their researchers to cooperate with their counterparts in the EU on topics of their choice.

    Some of these countries, and in particular those where GDP is exceptionally large, will, however, no longer enjoy automatic access to EU funding, even if the country in question is classified as middle-income by the World Bank. This reflects the fact that these countries have over the past years made considerable efforts to invest in their research and innovation system and strengthen its quality. These countries are therefore now capable to cooperate with the EU on the basis of a partnership among equals. The new strategy foresees to complement this change in the approach to automatic funding by increased efforts to facilitate the funding of participants from these countries through their national channels.

    It should also be noted that, as is the case with the high income countries, EU funding for these countries will be possible under exceptional circumstances, for example where there is a reciprocal agreement in place or where it is clear that the contribution of third country partner would be essential for the project to go ahead successfully.

  • Q: What instruments will be used to implement the EU International Strategy for Research and Innovation?
    A: The Scientific and Technological Cooperation Agreements will be important vehicles for defining and implementing the roadmaps, as will the policy dialogues which have been established at the regional level.

    Horizon 2020 will be the main vehicle for implementing the Union’s international cooperation actions, for instance through the following instruments:

    • Research and innovation projects, where the participation of third country entities is required or preferentially evaluated;
    • Networking between projects or project managers;
    • Joint initiatives involving the Union and the international partners, such as joint calls, coordinated calls, contributions from the Union to funding programmes of third countries or international organisations, specific initiatives requiring joint funding from the Union, the third country and the Member States

    The implementation of the strategy will be closely coordinated with the instruments of the Union’s external policies, such as the Instrument for Pre-Accession, the Development Cooperation Instrument, the European Development Fund or the Partnership Instrument.

  • Q: How will priority areas and partners be selected for targeted activities under the EU International Strategy for Research and Innovation?
    A: A cornerstone of the strategy is the development of multi-annual roadmaps for cooperation with key partner countries and regions. These roadmaps will provide information on the areas and partners identified for international cooperation and will therefore offer a clear programme for enhancing and focusing cooperation. They will be developed as part of the preparation for Horizon 2020.
    The identification of areas for international cooperation will use the societal challenges and enabling and industrial technologies of the Horizon 2020 proposals as its starting point. The identification will be guided by making an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of the Union versus the rest of the world using the following set of criteria:

    • Research and innovation capacity (investment, output, human resources, infrastructure);
    • Opportunities for and risks of getting access to new markets;
    • Contribution made to meeting the Union’s international commitments (e.g. Millennium Development Goals);
    • Framework in place to engage in cooperation, including lessons learnt from previous cooperation

    A differentiation of activities by country and/or region will help provide further focus to the activities. In this respect, the following groupings will be considered:

    • EFTA countries, enlargement countries and countries covered by the European Neighbourhood Policy: where the focus will be on fostering the integration of these countries – of their alignment with – the European Research Area; these countries will be eligible for association to Horizon 2020;
    • Industrialised countries and emerging economies: where the focus will be strongly on competitiveness and tackling global challenges;
    • Developing countries: where the focus will be to assist these countries in their socio-economic development
  • Q: Why is a new International Strategy for Research and Innovation needed?
    A: The global research and innovation scene is changing rapidly. Emerging economies, such as China, Brazil, Russia or China, account for an increasing share of expenditure on research and innovation and are therefore gaining influence. Research and innovation in themselves are also increasingly globalised activities. The number of internationally co-authored publications is increasing, as is the international mobility of researchers. Companies are investing beyond their national borders, in particular in the emerging economies. Today’s societal challenges, such as combatting climate change, securing a steady supply of energy or feeding a growing world population, can only be dealt with through global action.

    The European Union is one of the world’s leading regions in research and innovation. With 7% of the world’s population, it accounts for 24% of the world expenditure on research, 32% of the high impact publications and 32% of the patent applications. However, as more and more knowledge is created in third countries, the Union must be in a position to access this knowledge, and the people creating it, in order to remain an attractive location for carrying out research and innovation and a partner of choice for engaging in international cooperation.

    The importance of the international dimension of research and innovation, as the external dimension of a vibrant European Research Area, was explicitly recognised in the Innovation Union flagship initiative and the proposals for Horizon 2020. This Communication therefore complements the Communication on A Reinforced European Research Area Partnership for Excellence and Growth.

  • Q: What are the core principles of the EU’s new International Strategy for Research and Innovation?
    A: International cooperation in research and innovation is not an end in itself. It is a means for the Union to achieve its higher level objectives, in particular by:

    • strengthening the Union’s excellence and attractiveness in research and innovation and its economic and industrial competitiveness;
    • tackling global societal challenges, such as food and energy security and climate change;
    • supporting the Union’s external policies.

    To achieve these objectives, the strategy will follow a dual approach:

    • Horizon 2020 will be open to participation from entities from across the world, although the approach to providing funding from the Union budget to these entities will be revised. Through this general opening, European researchers will be free to cooperate with their third country counterparts on topics of their own choice;
    • To complement the general opening, targeted activities will be developed where cooperation will be sought on particular topics and with well identified countries and/or regions

    A number of cross-cutting issues will also be an integral part of the strategy:

    • The partnership with the Member States will be strengthened, building on the work of the Strategy Forum for International S&T Cooperation;
    • Common principles for the conduct of international research and innovation activities will be developed and promoted together with key international partners, in order to create a global level playing field;
    • Research and innovation will make a stronger contribution to the Union’s external policies.
  • Q: How can the EU emblem be used by beneficiaries of EU programmes and other third parties?
    A: The European Union has a range of programmes which have been set up to support projects and initiatives in various domains across the EU and beyond. From 2012, most of these programmes will phase out their existing logos and no new logos will be created for upcoming programmes.

    FP7 is one of the exceptions and will continue to use its logo.

    The names of these programmes, such as Horizon 2020, will be used as verbal brands, i.e. references to them will be made without a logo.
    Commission services will apply the Commission’s visual identity guidelines when communicating about EU programmes. Beneficiaries of EU funding will use the European emblem in their communication to acknowledge the support received under EU programmes.
    The guidelines mentioned below are intended for beneficiaries of EU funding and other third parties who communicate about EU programmes to show how the European Union emblem can be used in conjunction with text which highlights the fact of EU funding.

  • Q: How will the rules for participation and dissemination change under Horizon 2020? And how will they be simplified?
    A: The Horizon 2020 Framework Programme represents a radically new and comprehensive approach to the EU’s research and innovation funding policies. The Rules for Participation and Dissemination are designed to implement this new approach in a way that means that researchers and businesses can benefit from it to the fullest extent.

    The new provisions ensure that three key objectives of the new Framework Programme – integration of support to innovation, coherence of the rules and simplification for the benefit of participants – will be realised.

  • Q: Where can I find out more about SME measures in Horizon 2020?
    A: Small- and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) will be encouraged to participate across Horizon 2020 programmes through a new dedicated SME instrument. It aims to fill gaps in funding for early-stage, high-risk research and innovation by SMEs as well as stimulating breakthrough innovations. It is expected that through this integrated strategy around 15%, or €6.8 billion, of the total combined budgets of the ‘Tackling societal challenges’ Specific Programme and the ‘Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies’ objective will be devoted to SMEs.
  • Q: What does the Commission propose for ICT funding in Horizon 2020?
    A: EU investments in ICTs are due to increase by 46% under Horizon 2020 compared to the current EU research programmes (FP7). This is in line with the Commission’s proposed increase in funding across all themes. This EU investment will support the riskier ICT research and innovation that can deliver new business breakthroughs, often on the basis of emerging technologies.
  • Q: How will international cooperation will be promoted under Horizon 2020?
    A: International cooperation in EU research and innovation programmes is important in order to strengthen the EU’s excellence in research, to tackle global challenges jointly and to support EU external policies. International cooperation will be promoted under Horizon 2020.

    Many of our international partner countries are investing more and more in research and innovation and cooperation will help European research to reach full potential. Active and more strategic international cooperation on research will also contribute to achieving EU policy objectives.

  • Q: How will Horizon 2020 address the variation across Member States and regions in terms of participation?
    A: The Framework Programmes for research and technology development (FP) have provided a vital contribution to the development of European competitiveness, growth and knowledge generation. There has however been considerable variation across Member States and regions in terms of FP participation. Horizon 2020 will continue to provide funding on the basis of excellence, regardless of geographical location. However, the European Commission will make a major effort under Horizon 2020 to recognise and promote excellence across Europe.
  • Q: How can I find out more about industrial participation in Horizon 2020?
    A: Horizon 2020 is designed to bring business into the research and innovation chain throughout its various components. Some of the key opportunities for participation and support are highlighted in the fact sheet mentioned below.
  • Q: How does Horizon 2020 implement the commitments made in the Innovation Union flagship initiative?
    A: Horizon 2020 implements the Innovation Union by bringing together all existing EU research and innovation funding, providing support in a seamless way from idea to market, through streamlined funding instruments and simpler programme architecture and rules for participation.
    Horizon 2020 will implement a number of the specific commitments made in the Innovation Union, notably in: focusing on societal challenges, simplifying access, involving SMEs, strengthening the ERC, strengthening financial instruments, supporting public procurement of innovation, facilitating collaboration, and supporting research on public and social innovation.
  • Q: How is innovation defined in Horizon 2020 and how does Horizon 2020 strengthen the approach to innovation?
    A: Horizon 2020 will support all forms of innovation. This includes innovation that results from research and development (R&D) activities. It also includes innovation that results from other activities, such as finding new uses or combinations of existing technologies or developing new business models or new ways of interacting with users. While innovation is generally understood as the commercial introduction of a new or significantly improved product or service, innovations can also be for non-commercial applications such as for better public services or for addressing social needs (‘social innovation’).
    Horizon 2020 will strengthen the approach to innovation in a number of ways. First, it will increase support for testing, piloting, and demonstrations of new technologies, such that their potential in real world environments can be better understood.
    Second, Horizon 2020 will support the market demand for innovation, including through the development of specifications for new standards and through supporting public bodies to procure R&D services or innovative products and services. New approaches are also foreseen, such as inducement prizes that reward the achievement of specific goals, encouraging a wider range of innovators to become involved. Furthermore, bottom-up activities will be strengthened, and call topic descriptions will be less prescriptive, allowing Europe’s brightest and most creative minds to propose their own solutions.
    Third, Horizon 2020 introduces a new SME instrument specifically designed to support SMEs to innovate.
    Fourth, Horizon 2020 will scale up financial instruments in which the public sector shares the risk with the private sector in make investments available for the development of innovative companies or projects.
  • Q: How will the seamless and integrated approach across the different specific objectives of Horizon 2020 be put in practice?
    A: There needs to be a strong interaction between the different specific objectives of Horizon 2020. For example, a European Research Council frontier research project could be result in new knowledge that can be applied commercially and/or is directly relevant to a societal challenge. Similarly, the development of enabling technologies may lead to new applications which are useful for tackling the societal challenges, or vice versa.
    Horizon 2020 will stimulate these interactions in a number of ways:
    – The same set of rules will apply to all parts, making it easier for participants who have experience in one part of the programme to apply to other parts;
    – In setting the priorities for calls for proposals, the Commission will seek advice widely from external and internal sources such that developments in one area can be captured in the priorities established in other areas;
    – Support will be provided to actions that have the explicit purpose of bringing together projects funded in different parts of Horizon 2020 in order to foster cross-fertilisation;
    – Flexible mechanisms have been included to allow joint actions that are co-funded between different specific objectives of Horizon 2020 where there is a need for a major action that serves different specific objectives.
  • Q: How does Horizon 2020 cover issues like non-technological innovation and social innovation?
    A: The activities cover both technological and non-technological innovation, corresponding to the broad approach to innovation taken in the Innovation Union. This approach recognises the need for Europe to develop a distinctive approach to innovation to be able to compete on the global scene. This includes building on EU strengths in design, creativity, services and social innovation. Funding for these activities is brought together with the support for research and technological development, allowing a full set of activities to be implemented in a strategic manner.
    Non-technological innovation can take place in all parts of the programme. In complement, regarding social innovation, the ‘Inclusive, innovative and secure societies’ challenge contains a specific objective on ‘social innovation and creativity’.
  • Q: What are the main novelties of Horizon 2020?
    A: Horizon 2020 will represent a clear break with the past in order have a stronger impact on Europe’s priority policy objectives.
    Important novelties include:
    – A single programme for all EU managed research and innovation funding, with a single set of participation rules.
    – Full integration of innovation in the programme, meaning more support that is closer to market application (e.g. demonstration, support for SMEs, innovation services, venture capital).
    – A focus on the major societal challenges Europe and the world face. This will mean bringing together different technologies, sectors, scientific disciplines, social sciences and humanities, and innovation actors to find new solutions to these challenges.
    – Radically simplified access for participants, including a single web portal for all information and projects, less paper work to make applications, and fewer controls and audits.
    – A more inclusive approach with specific actions to ensure excellent researchers and innovators from all European regions can participate, and reinforced support for partnerships with the private sector and with the public sector in order to pool resources and build more effective programmes.
    At the same time, successful elements in the current programmes are being scaled up, such as the European Research Council and trans-national collaborative projects.
  • Q: What are main elements of continuity with regards to FP7, CIP and EIT?
    A: While Horizon 2020 represents a clear break with the past in terms of its approach, the Commission has also taken great care in providing continuity, and in many cases even a strengthening, of those elements of the current programmes which have shown to be very successful.
    This includes in particular:
    – The European Research Council, which has in a few years time become the point of reference for excellent frontier research in Europe and which has therefore been significantly strengthened;
    – The Marie Curie actions for training, mobility and career development of researchers and the research infrastructure actions;
    – The collaborative research actions which have been at the heart of the successive Framework Programmes for Research and will now be extended to innovation aspects such as market-replication, demonstration, involvement of users, design, IP and standardisation issues;
    – The financial instruments of both FP7 and the CIP which have been met with great demand and which have been shown to be particular valuable in a time in which debt and equity financing have been severely constrained;
    – Demand side measures to stimulate innovation (in particular public procurement of innovative solutions), support through clusters, IPR management and exploitation, SME innovation capacity support, stemming from the CIP.
    While fully aligning with the strategy of Horizon 2020, the EIT will maintain its mission: integrating the knowledge triangle and experimenting with new approaches for innovation, notably involving the business community. It will also provide a stable base for its Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs). The EIT will consolidate existing KICs and will expand their number gradually. In order to fulfil its role as a test bed for new, simplified governance and funding innovation models, the EIT’s current flexibility is to be preserved.
  • Q: How will Horizon 2020 be able to adapt to developments and unforeseen circumstances during its lifetime?
    A: Horizon 2020 will enter into force on 1 January 2014. It will last until end 2020 and many of the projects it will fund in its final years will most likely go on until 2025. As some of its actions are aimed at the long term, the impact of Horizon 2020 will probably last until well beyond 2030.
    Given thise timescale, it is vital that Horizon 2020 retains an adequate amount of flexibility as to the priorities it sets and the areas of research and innovation it aims to fund. Prescribing in great detail technological priorities for Horizon 2020 would entail a grave risk of rendering the programme irrelevant or unable to cope with changes in the broader economic and policy context during its implementation.
    The proposals for Horizon 2020 have therefore been drafted to include a large element of flexibility by:
    – Including more bottom-up elements where researchers and innovators can propose breakthrough solutions of their choice, on the basis of their assessment of what is needed at a particular point in time. This will not be restricted to strengthening typical bottom-up instruments such as the ERC, Marie Curie or the SME actions, but also leaving more room for open calls in the societal challenges and enabling and industrial technologies;
    – Formulating priorities in terms of problems and challenges rather than on the basis of technologies and sectors, leaving the choice of solution up to the participants;
    – Including specific provisions for actions which cut across the different specific objectives of Horizon 2020, also through a pooling of the respective budgets, as solutions to today’s and future challenges will increasingly be interdisciplinary;
    – Including a specific flexibility clause on the budget distribution within Horizon 2020, which makes it possible to shift budget between the different specific objectives to respond to unforeseen situations or new developments and needs.
  • Q: What are the key features of Horizon 2020 and its Rules which will make it simpler to participate in?
    A: Simplification in Horizon 2020 will target three overarching goals: reducing the administrative costs of the participants; accelerating all processes of proposal and grant management and decreasing the financial error rate.
    These general objectives will be achieved along several dimensions:
    – Structural simplification, which is provided through a simpler programme architecture, bringing together all research and innovation funding in one programme. This includes a single set of participation rules covering all components of the programme.
    – Simpler funding rules, which will make the preparation of proposals and the management of projects easier. At the same time, they will reduce the number of financial errors.
    The following approach is proposed:
    • Simplified reimbursement of real direct costs, with a broader acceptance of beneficiaries’ usual accounting practices;
    • The possibility of using unit personnel costs (average personnel costs) for beneficiaries for which this is their usual accounting method, and for SME owners without a salary;
    • Simplification of time-recording by providing a clear and simple set of minimum conditions, in particular abolition of time-recording obligations for staff working full time on the EU project;
    • Only two reimbursement rates for all types of participants: 100% for research activities, 70% for piloting and demonstration;
    • One single flat rate of 20% to cover indirect costs, instead of the current four methods for calculation;
    • Continuation of the system of unit costs and flat rates for mobility and training actions (Marie Curie);
    • Output-based funding with lump sums for whole projects in specific areas.
    – Revised control strategy, which takes into account the policy objective of achieving a new balance between trust and control and reducing the administrative burden:
    • On the ex-ante side, the guarantee fund will cover all actions under Horizon 2020, leading to fewer ex-ante financial capacity checks and a reduced number of certificates on financial statements;
    • Ex-ante financial capacity checks in Horizon 2020 will be required only for coordinators (i.e. abolition of the threshold of EUR 500000 for other partners), reducing thus further the number of ex-ante checks;
    • Voluntary ex-ante certification of accounting methodologies of organisations using unit personnel costs will be offered, as means for preventing errors and for providing ex-ante assurance;
    • The focus of the ex-post audits will shift from a minimisation of the residual error rate towards risk-based audit and fraud detection. The overall number of ex-post audits will be limited with the Commission considering that as general guidance, a maximum of 7% of participants in Horizon 2020 would be subject to audit over the whole programming period.
    As a result, the Commission deems it possible to reduce the average time to grant in Horizon 2020 with 100 days as compared to the current situation.
    Further simplification of research and innovation funding will result from the revision of the Financial Regulation (e.g. no declaration of interest on pre-financing, eligibility of VAT, limitation of extrapolation of systematic errors).
    The whole set of practical arrangements for proposal and project implementation will also be revisited and streamlined. This includes the detailed provisions on the content and shape of proposals, the processes for turning proposals into projects, the requirements for reporting and monitoring, as well as the related guidance documents and support services. A major contribution to reduced administrative costs for participation will come from a single user-friendly IT platform for all interactions with participants, based on the FP7 Participant Portal.
  • Q: What will the role of the EIT be in Horizon 2020?
    A: Within Horizon 2020, the EIT will contribute to all priorities (excellent science, industrial leadership and societal challenges) by stimulating results-driven research, incentivising the creation of high growth innovative SMEs and fostering mobility across boundaries of disciplines, sectors and countries. The EIT will act in a complementary way to other Horizon 2020 initiatives in these areas.
    Moreover, the EIT will bring a fully fledged education dimension to the EU’s research and innovation policy. Notably through new, trans- and inter-disciplinary EIT-labelled degrees the EIT is leading a collaborative effort towards education for innovation and entrepreneurship with clear spill over effects on the broader European agenda for the modernisation of higher education institutions thereby promoting the European Higher Education Area.
  • Q: What are the links between Horizon 2020 and the Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and SMEs?
    A: Both Horizon 2020 and the Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and SMEs aim at creating growth and jobs in a complementary manner. Horizon 2020 activities will generate the scientific and technological breakthroughs to develop the innovative products, services and processes needed to tackle the urgent challenges society faces. These innovations will at the same time lead to huge business opportunities for European companies.
    The Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and SMEs will further develop the actions in favour of competitiveness and entrepreneurship, with a special focus on SMEs, such as access to finance for their growth and the Enterprise Europe Network. It will aim at improving the sustainability of EU enterprises and at improving their access to markets, within the EU and internationally.
  • Q: What are the links between Horizon 2020 and the Cohesion policy funds?
    A: Horizon 2020 will promote excellence across the European Research Area, with projects selected in open competition and following an independent evaluation process. The purpose of the Cohesion Policy funds (also known as the Structural Funds) is to support capacity building and hereby reduce the significant economic, social and territorial disparities that still exist between Europe’s regions. Cohesion policy funds are distributed based on pre-allocated global envelopes to the Member States and regions. This funding is implemented through a series of Operational Programmes and individual projects, including those supporting research and innovation.
    There are already substantial interactions between the EU’s research and innovation policy and its Cohesion policy. In FP7, investments in building excellence and innovation capacity are made through the ‘Regions of Knowledge’, ‘Research Potential’ and ‘Research Infrastructures’ actions. At the same time, the Member States and regions have committed some EUR 86 billion from the EU’s cohesion budget in the current programming period for actions supporting research and innovation.
    For the next programming period, Horizon 2020 will also contribute to research and innovation in the regions mainly by improving policy support, in order to build efficient smart specialisation strategies in full cooperation with Cohesion policy. An increased effort will also be made in the new Cohesion policy funds where support for research and innovation will be one of the top investment priorities, in full accordance with the Europe 2020 Strategy and the Innovation Union flagship initiative in order to assist the less developed Member States and regions to climb the ‘staircase to excellence’.
  • Q: How will the Joint Research Centre contribute to achieving the objectives of Horizon 2020?
    A: The Joint Research Centre is the in-house science service of the European Commission. Its mission is to provide scientific and technical support to EU policy making, thus operating at the interface between research and EU policy. It provides input throughout the whole policy cycle from conception to implementation and evaluation.
    The direct actions of the JRC funded through Horizon 2020 will focus on the EU’s policy priorities and the societal challenges as spelled out in Europe 2020 and reflected in Horizon 2020. The JRC will provide independent and sound scientific input to evidence-based policy making and thus underpin Europe’s development towards smart, sustainable and inclusive growth.
    The JRC’s key competence areas are energy and transport, environment and climate change, agriculture and food security, health and consumer protection, information and communication technologies, reference materials, and all aspects of safety and security, including nuclear.
    JRC research will complement other Horizon 2020 funded research activities in finding answers to the challenges faced by Europe today.
    Examples of JRC activities include pre-normative research and contribution to standard-setting for e.g. electric cars or toxicological tests, thus strengthening Europe’s competitiveness and innovation and health and consumer protection. The JRC will contribute to maintain a high level of safety of operating nuclear power plants and relevant nuclear expertise in the EU. It will contribute to safety and security of EU citizens through e.g. nuclear forensics in the fight against illicit trafficking, and through early warning systems to enhance Europe’s capacity to manage crises and disasters. Its work on the measurement and risk analysis of nanomaterials will contribute to a responsible approach to their use and enabling the potential benefits of this technology to be reaped.
  • Q: Why has there been a shift towards a challenge based approach and what are the implications of this on the current FP7 Themes?
    A: A challenge based approach will be implemented in the priority “Societal challenges” of Horizon 2020. A challenge based approach makes sense at European level, because the challenges we are facing (e.g. climate change, energy, resource efficiency) requires a critical scale and scope of effort that is not possible for individual countries. This approach will also link directly to EU policy goals in areas such as agriculture, energy, environment, transport and security.
    Compared to FP7, this approach will emphasise funding for projects that solve specified challenges (or particular aspects of those), as opposed to prescribing the specific topics that must be addressed. In many cases, it will mean multi-disciplinary, multi-actor actions that bring together different competences across Europe and beyond. The challenges proposed for Horizon 2020 will take up the various FP7 themes broadly as follows:
    – FP7 Health: integrated in ‘Health, demographic change and wellbeing challenge';
    – FP7 Food, Agriculture and Fisheries, and Biotechnology: integrated in the ‘Food security, sustainable agriculture and the bio-economy’ challenge, although enabling biotechnologies will be supported under ‘Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies';
    – FP7 Information and communication technologies: support for enabling ICTs under ‘Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies’ and ICT applications within the relevant societal challenges;
    – FP7 Nanosciences, nanotechnologies, materials and new production technologies: support for enabling technologies under ‘Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies’ and applications within the relevant societal challenges;
    – FP7 Energy theme: in the ‘Secure, clean and efficient energy’ challenge (which also includes follow-up to CIP intelligent energy programme);
    – FP7 Environment (including Climate Change): integrated in ‘Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials’ challenge (which also includes the CIP eco-innovation actions);
    – FP7 Transport (including Aeronautics): integrated in ‘Smart, green and integrated transport’ challenge;
    – FP7 Socio-economic Sciences and the Humanities: underpinning socio-economic and humanities in the ‘Inclusive, innovative and secure societies’ challenge; application of socio-economic sciences and humanities within all the societal challenges;
    – FP7 Space: integrated under ‘Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies';
    – FP7 Security: integrated within the ‘Inclusive, innovative and secure societies’ challenge.
    In addition, some elements of the current Themes cut across several of the Horizon 2020 challenges and the enabling and industrial technologies and will also be supported through the Future and Emerging Technologies objective.
  • Q: What is the approach taken to stimulate SME participation and what is the role of the new dedicated SME instrument?
    A: SME participation will be promoted across Horizon 2020 based on an integrated strategy that aims to fill gaps in funding for early-stage, high-risk research and innovation by SMEs as well as stimulating breakthrough innovations. It is expected that through this integrated strategy around 15% of the total combined budgets of the priority ‘Societal challenges’ and the specific objective ‘Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies’ will be go to SMEs.
    A new dedicated SME instrument will provide an easily accessible SME window, with simple rules and procedures. It will be used across all societal challenges and the enabling and industrial technologies. The new instrument will encourage SMEs to put forward, in a bottom-up manner, their most innovative ideas with an EU dimension. It will address highly innovative SMEs showing a strong ambition to develop, grow and internationalise, regardless of whether they are high-tech and research-driven or non-research conducting, social or service companies. Only SMEs will be able to apply for funding, even single company support will be possible so as to ensure market relevance and to increase commercialisation of project results. SMEs can decide how best to organise the project and with whom to collaborate, including subcontracting tasks where they lack in-house capabilities.
    Support will be provided in three different phases covering the whole innovation cycle (similar to the SBIR model). A feasibility phase will allow an assessment of the technological and commercial potential of a project; a main grant will be provided to undertake research and development with the emphasis on demonstration and market replication; and the commercialisation phase will be supported indirectly through simplified access to debt and equity financial instruments as well as various other measures, for example regarding IPR protection. While successful completion of one stage will allow an SME to move on to the next, each stage will be open to all SMEs.
    A specific action will promote market-oriented innovation of R&D-performing SMEs, building on the Eurostars initiative. Furthermore, SMEs will be encouraged to participate in other parts of Horizon 2020, such as the Marie Curie actions or the activity on Future and Emerging Technologies. The ‘Access to risk finance’ specific objective will also have a strong SME focus. Measures assisting the implementation of the instrument and complementing support for SMEs across Horizon 2020 will also be undertaken, notably to build SME innovation capacity. Reinforcing the innovation support, information and advice activities of the Enterprise Europe Network will further facilitate SMEs’ access to Horizon 2020.
  • Q: How have the current SME specific activities been taken up in Horizon 2020?
    A: The new dedicated SME instrument will integrate the specific SME measures of FP7 and the SME market replication projects of the CIP in one comprehensive, simple and easily accessible scheme. It will fully cover the possibility to outsource research and development critical to the innovation projects of non-research intensive SMEs, as currently supported under the FP7 activity ‘Research for the Benefit of SMEs’, with demonstration and market replication projects also being eligible. The dedicated SME instrument will also facilitate the collaboration of different types of SMEs along the value-chain and will foster complex innovation processes and forms of cooperation by supporting all forms of innovation. Furthermore, it will not distinguish between the research intensity of companies. SME associations or other organisations providing services to their SME members may continue to assist and to support their member companies in a European project as part of an SME-led consortium formed under the dedicated SME instrument.
    It is the Commission’s intention to continue supporting the Eurostars initiative, provided it meets the criteria laid down in the Horizon 2020 Regulation and taking into account the recommendations made in its interim evaluation report.
    Strengthening SMEs innovation capacity will be achieved by providing national and regional innovation support agents with room to experiment and develop new approaches and instruments for SME innovation support. In specific, well justified cases European level support services might be maintained or established. The IPR helpdesk is the most well known example of this. Also in this context the role of the Enterprise Europe Network, financed through the Programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and SMEs, will be strengthened.
  • Q: What is meant by a societal challenge and how have they been selected?
    A: A societal challenge corresponds to a concern which is shared by citizens across Europe and where a solution can not be found within in an acceptable timeframe without major technological breakthroughs. Societal challenges share a number of elements, including the complexity involved in finding a solution, the need for an interdisciplinary approach or the fact that the solution itself not only addresses the challenge, but at the same time generates huge business opportunities.
    The challenges selected for Horizon 2020 were chosen on the basis of a variety of sources of evidence on the state of the economy and society in Europe and worldwide, Europe’s performance in the related scientific and technological domains and the need for an approach coordinated at the EU level. Further information can be found in the ex-ante impact assessment which accompanies the Horizon 2020 proposal.
  • Q: How will socio-economic sciences and humanities be funded?
    A: Within the three priorities of Horizon 2020 – excellent science; industrial leadership and societal challenges – the social sciences and humanities will be fully integrated.
    They will be included as an integral part of the activities to address all societal challenges, working beyond the ‘silos’ of distinct disciplines. This includes: understanding the determinants of health and optimising the effectiveness of healthcare systems, support to policies empowering rural areas and promoting informed consumer choices, robust decision making on energy policy and in ensuring a consumer friendly European electricity grid, supporting evidence based transport policy and foresight, support to climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies, resource efficiency initiatives and measures towards a green and sustainable economy.
    In addition, the ‘Inclusive, Innovative and Secure Societies’ challenge will allow the social sciences and humanities scientific community to study issues such as smart and sustainable growth, social transformations in European societies, social innovation and creativity, the position of Europe as a global actor as well as the social dimension of a secure society.
    Finally, there will be ample bottom-up opportunities for social sciences and humanities researchers to receive funding via the European Research Council, Marie Curie actions and initiatives under the Research Infrastructures Programme.
  • Q: Why does Horizon 2020 put more emphasis on using financial instruments (equity and debt) to support SMEs and other participants?
    A: The two main EU financial instruments currently supporting research and innovation have been very successful. For debt, the Risk-Sharing Finance Facility (RSFF) combines EU budgetary resources and EIB funding to share the risks associated with investing in projects: EUR 1 billion comes from the FP7 budget, and another EUR 1 billion from the resources of the European Investment Bank. RSFF loans are available to public and private sector promoters of any size and ownership from the Member States and the countries associated to FP7. By mid-2011, funding for 91 projects worth over EUR 9 billion had been approved. A specific facility for SMEs will start up in early 2012. For equity, the High-Growth and Innovative SME Facility (GIF) under the CIP invests in specialised funds that provide venture capital for SME financing. Managed by the EIF, the GIF covers both early and growth-stage investments. By the end of 2010, some EUR 222 million had been committed to 19 funds supporting a target fund size of some EUR 1.5 billion.
    Greater use of financial instruments will help leverage yet further private research and innovation investments, including venture capital investments for innovative, high-tech companies, and in particular SMEs. In Horizon 2020, financial instruments will be expanded in both scope and scale. A debt facility will provide loans and guarantees, and an equity facility will provide finance for early and growth stage investments. Their aim will be to support the achievement of the R&I objectives of all sectors and policy areas crucial for tackling societal challenges, enhancing competitiveness and fostering sustainable growth. They will be implemented via a mandate to, or a partnership with, the European Investment Bank group and/or other international financial institutions and national intermediaries.
  • Q: What is the rationale for applying the same funding rate for all types of participants?
    A: The current situation under FP7 is defined by a complex matrix of funding rates, methods for determining indirect costs, activities and categories of legal entities (according to the legal status granted after validation by the services of the Unique Registration Facility). This complexity is difficult to explain, leads to long delays (in particular in the grant negotiation phase), hampers the expected flexibility in project implementation, and requires permanent maintenance of the legal status information, with a complex system for handling amendments.
    Having a single reimbursement rate for all types of participants (together with a single flat rate for indirect costs) will considerably reduce:
    – the length and complexity of guidance documents and the number of requests addressed to the help-desks;
    – the administrative costs, in particular for coordinators having to manage the previous complex system (as changes to consortium composition, distribution of work packages etc. will not entail difficult budget operations as it was now the case due to the variety of reimbursement rates and indirect cost methods applied by different organisations in the consortium);
    – the time-to-grant, as the validation of legal entities (particularly SMEs) and establishment of budgets of collaborative projects by the consortia will be simpler;
    – the number of financial errors (an analysis of errors identified during audits of FP7 suggests that around 25-35% of them would be avoided by the simplification measures proposed, and the error rate can then be expected to fall by 1.5%, i.e. from close to current 5% to around 3.5%)
  • Q: What approach does Horizon 2020 take towards international cooperation?
    A: International cooperation in research and innovation is an essential element for meeting the objectives of Europe 2020. Recognising the global nature of producing and using knowledge, Horizon 2020 builds on the success of international cooperation in previous framework programmes and is fully open to participation from third countries. While being open to participation to the world, funding will be more focused, allowing participants who bring exceptional cooperation skills and resources, and those from less wealthy countries, to benefit. There will be further emphasis on mutual access to research programmes. The association of countries to the programme, where participants have identical rights to those from Member States, will continue to include some of EU’s closest partner countries.
    A key part of international cooperation in Horizon 2020 will be developing partnerships with Member States through coordinated or joint ventures with third country partners and international organisations. As all the funding schemes allow the participation of international partners in consortia, and can be tailored to the specific requirements of the research and innovation being supported, no specific international cooperation funding schemes are foreseen in Horizon 2020. There will, however, be a mechanism for supporting joint calls and the possibility of programme co-funding with third countries or international organisations.
  • Q: How will the different parts of Horizon 2020 target international cooperation?
    A: While Horizon 2020 is open to participants from around the world, a new international cooperation strategy, currently being developed, will foresee targeting through three major country groupings: industrialised and emerging economies; the enlargement and neighbourhood countries; and developing countries. Horizon 2020 will continue to have bi-lateral agreements with major research players, but there will be increased emphasis on mutual access to programmes with these countries. There will be a priority towards bi-regional cooperation for other third countries.
    Each challenge within Horizon 2020 outlines the major areas seen as particularly relevant for international cooperation. Given the fully mainstreamed approach, and the recognition of the importance of international cooperation for delivering Horizon 2020, no specific budget for research activities is foreseen. There will, however, be a budget for specific coordination activities for international cooperation.
  • Q: Will the existing Joint Technology Initiatives, Recovery Package PPPs and Article 185 initiatives continue to receive funding under Horizon 2020?
    A: There is great value in combining EU funding with other public and private sources of funding in order to achieve critical mass in addressing EU level challenges. This was demonstrated clearly in the Commission’s Communication on partnering in research and innovation.
    This is why both public public and public private partnerhips have been explicitly included as implementation options in the Horizon 2020 proposal with a clear set of criteria guiding the selection of which initiatives to fund. As far as public private partnerships are concerned, the structure of the recovery package public private partnerships set up in the context of the European Economic Recovery Package has been formalised in the Horizon 2020 legislation, with the option of institutionalised public private partnerships (Joint Technology Initiatives) only being used in very limited cases.
    The Commission has the intention to continue supporting the existing partnering initiatives, where these meet the criteria laid down in the Horizon 2020 proposal and where these have been shown to make substantial progress during FP7.
  • Q: What role will the European Innovation Partnerships play in implementing Horizon 2020?
    A: As part of the Innovation Union Flagship initiative, European Innovation Partnerships were proposed as new fora for joining up resources to speed-up breakthrough innovations for societal challenges where there is also a new market potential for EU business.
    EIPs are not funding instruments of Horizon 2020, nor do they substitute the existing institutional decision mechanisms. However, the objectives developed in the EIPs’ Strategic Implementation Plans are key contributions to the definition of priorities in the annual work programmes of Horizon 2020, with obligations on both sides (the Commission and the EIP) to ensure dialogue and follow-up on proposed priorities.
  • Q: Will Joint Programming Initiatives receive funding through Horizon 2020?
    A: The Commission will support Joint Programming Initiatives (JPIs) during the development of their Strategic Research Agendas through co-ordination and support measures, where appropriate.
    Where the areas being addressed by a JPI fit with Horizon 2020 priorities, their instruments may be used to support JPIs where appropriate. In general, JPI joint actions will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis to assess whether the EU value-added justifies funding via the ERA-NET scheme or co-funding via thematic research calls.
    The Commission will only consider making a proposal for an Article 185 Initiative where a JPI has demonstrated in its Strategic Research Agenda that it has the capacity for significant collaboration and the necessary scale and scope to support full integration of national programmes.
  • Q: How will Horizon 2020 contribute to completing the European Research Area?
    A: The idea behind the European Research Area (ERA) is to reduce fragmentation of research in Europe and to create an environment in which researchers can work in laboratories and research settings in other Member States just as easily as they can move within their own countries, without facing difficulties, and get access to important scientific knowledge, and taking their acquired pension rights and social benefits with them. Horizon 2020 will also provide incentives to unify Europe’s research and innovation systems and support more collaboration between research programmes at all levels.
    Horizon 2020 will foster excellence in research by making grants available for the best young scientists of any nationality or researchers who have already established themselves as being independent research leaders in their own right and who would like to pursue frontier research of their choice (ERC grants), as well as long term research stays in Europe for young and experienced post-docs (Marie-Curie fellowships).
    Horizon 2020 will moreover fund the infrastructures to carry out advanced research, and to address the major challenges that we are facing in our time, give financial backing to joint programming of national research policies, and support activities that bring together European and government bodies of the Member States in public-public partnerships and between these bodies and private players in public-private partnerships.
    Finally, to inform us whether the projects that we fund reach the goals that we have set ourselves, Horizon 2020 will fund monitoring, evaluation and similar policy support actions under the specific objective ‘Inclusive, innovative and secure societies’.
  • Q: What will the role of programme committees be under Horizon 2020?
    A: Programme committees will continue to be asked to provide a formal opinion on the adoption of work programmes. The Horizon 2020 proposal does, however, not foresee a committee opinion on individual projects. Apart from having a positive effect on time to grant, this will allow the committee to free up time to engage in strategic discussions on priorities and budget allocations, within a clear multi-annual perspective. The programme committees will also assume a new role in ensuring vital links between EU funding and national funding, where there is a new provision to include explicit information on this aspect in the work programmes.
  • Q: How does Horizon 2020 promote gender equality and the gender dimension in research and innovation content?
    A: As requested in all EU activities, Horizon 2020 encompasses the aim to eliminate inequalities and to promote equality between men and women. In research and innovation, this implies the following dual approach:
    – To correct the imbalances in the participation of female scientists at all stages of research careers and in the various fields of research;
    – To consider gender as a dimension of research by taking into account the biological, social and economic differences between women and men all through the research process.
    Gender is, therefore, set in Horizon 2020 as a cross-cutting issue for all its research programmes. Work programmes will contain information on how imbalances between women and men will be addressed, and how a gender dimension will integrated. This will also be reflected at project level within the provisions of grant agreements.
  • Q: How will the construction of ITER be financed?
    A: When the Council capped the budget for ITER construction at EUR 6.6 billion in July 2010 it did not prescribe the modalities by which this funding would be provided. The Commission’s proposals for these modalities have now been presented in its Communication ‘A Budget for Europe 2020′ (COM(2011)500).
    The Commission’s view is that experience of large projects in the EU shows that they tend to be expensive in relation to the EU budget, and cost overruns trigger a need to redeploy funds that had already been earmarked for other priority needs. Recent examples of such redeployments (Galileo, the Food Facility and the European Economic Recovery Plan) show that reaching an agreement requires complex and time-consuming negotiations and can drastically compress the margins available for other headings. This needs to be addressed in the coming MFF, which does not have provisions for a mid-term review.
    To ensure flexibility when it comes to adjusting to unexpected events and new priorities a sustainable solution is required. The Commission is therefore proposing to fund ITER outside the MFF. This approach should ensure the success of the project at acceptable cost and with reasonable financial and technical risks, enabling the EU to fully meet its international commitments.
    The practical implementation for funding ITER construction is currently under discussion at the Commission level. In any case, all solutions under consideration imply the adoption of a separate legal basis, which means that ITER could not be included in the Horizon 2020 package adopted on 30 November 2011.
  • Q: How will Horizon 2020 contribute to achieving the objectives of the Europe 2020 strategy?
    A: Europe 2020, with its triple objectives of smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, is the Union’s strategy for succesfully exiting the financial and economic crisis and re-taking the path towards sustainable growth. In this respect, fiscal consolidation and structural reform measures are needed for short term stabilisation of the economy, but they are not sufficient to ensure long-term growth. This requires strong investment in research and innovation, which is also needed to address pressing societal challenges such as climate change, an ageing population, or the move towards a resource efficient society. Such investment offers direct stimulus to the economy, as well as being vital to securing an excellent knowledge base and a competitive industry. It is the only way for Europe to remain competitive in a globalised world and sustain high standards of wellbeing.

    This is why research and innovation are at the centre of the Europe 2020 strategy, which includes the headline objective of increasing spending on R&D to 3% GDP by 2020. It is also why its Innovation Union flagship initiative provides a comprehensive set of actions to step up research and innovation performance. Within this policy context, the Commission’s proposals for the post-2013 EU Budget, including the proposals for Horizon 2020, reflect its ambition to invest in Europe’s future while ensuring that EU funding benefits citizens even more than today, through a shift in resources to areas such as research and innovation.

  • Q: What will improving the way the EU funds research and innovation do for ordinary Europeans?
    A: In line with the Innovation Union, the Green Paper proposes an approach focused more directly on tackling today’s most pressing societal challenges and therefore the concerns of Europe’s citizens.

    Successful research and innovation are prerequisites for improving quality of life, enhancing social welfare and boosting economic competitiveness. Indeed, using research and innovation to tackle key challenges such as climate change and health not only has intrinsic value, it can also give Europe a technological lead in the world markets of the future and create growth and jobs in Europe.

    EU funding for research and innovation will have more impact if procedures are simplified and access widened. This will make things easier for participants, attract new applicants and drive up the already high quality of projects and of results. That in turn will help create new products and services – including better public services – that people want and will help Europe to create sustainable growth and jobs and be more resilient against crises.

    These positive effects will be all the stronger if another aspect of the Green Paper – better cooperation between Member States themselves – is also realised.

  • Q: What is Horizon 2020?
    A: Horizon 2020 is the future Framework Programme for Research and Innovation.

    The proposed Framework Programme for Research and Innovation, which will be introduced post-2013, will build upon the successes of the current Framework Programme for Research (FP7), the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme (CIP) and the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT).

    The ultimate aim is to maximise the contribution of EU-funded research and innovation to sustainable growth and jobs and to tackling the grand challenges facing Europe – for example climate change, energy and food security, health and our ageing population. This will be achieved by creating a coherent set of instruments, along the whole “innovation chain” starting from basic research, culminating in bringing innovative products and services to market; and also to support non-technological innovation, for example in design and marketing.

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CHIST-ERA 2012 Call is now open

In the Call 2012, published in October, two new and hot topics are addressed, namely Intelligent User Interfaces andUser-driven, Context- and Content-aware, Communication Networks.

The following topics keywords and examples are given as illustration only. The CHIST-ERA Conference 2012 in Edinburgh (UK), July 5-6, brings together scientists and CHIST-ERA’s representatives in order to identify and formulate promising scientific and technological challenges at the frontier of research with a view to refine the scientific content of the Call. The Conference is based on a number of high-level keynote talks by invited internationally renowned specialists. In addition, the attendees are encouraged to participate in the definition of the call’s text, as far as is possible, with a short talk (10′ + 5′ discussion) or a poster presentation (A0, in portrait format).

Conference website: http://conference2012.chistera.eu

 

1. Intelligent User Interfaces

Innovative human-machine interfaces embedding advanced processing of information about users and their environment in order to provide new interaction functionalities.

Keywords:

  • Smart, adaptive, human-centered interfaces
  • Sensor-based interfaces
  • Tangible user interfaces
  • Multimodal interfaces, pen-based, spoken and natural language interfaces
  • Affective and social interfaces
  • User modeling, learning from the users
  • Conversational interfaces, dialogue error recovery
  • Empirical studies and evaluation of intelligent user interfaces

Examples:

  • Non-intrusive brain sensors for playing games
  • Non-intrusive body sensors for health monitoring
  • Recognition of handwritten text and shapes on large surfaces
  • Emotion and body language recognition for empathic robot companions
  • Video scene analysis for context-aware robotic assistants
  • Gesture recognition and eye tracking for pointing
  • Tangible tabletop devices for modeling and creativity tasks
  • Spoken dialogue for system control and knowledge elicitation
  • Combinations of the above

 

2. User-driven, Context- and Content-aware, Communication Networks

Innovative concepts, architectures and algorithms to improve the quality of service and the quality of experience to globally connected users equipped with multi-sensor smart devices such that the communication network will adapt to the content being communicated and context it is communicated within.

Keywords:

  • User-driven network self-configuration and control
  • Context-aware networks
  • Content-aware networks
  • In-network content adaptation
  • Content-centric transmission/routing/networking
  • Adaptive content replication, migration and distribution
  • Privacy/security in networks

Example:

  • People in a crowd take pictures of the same scene and want to send them to their friends, some of whom are nearby. Smart devices might make use of any suitable combination of content- and context-aware device to device communication, cooperative communication, joint source and channel coding or network coding to satisfy their communication requirements
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