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FP7
Information and Communication Technologies in the EU’s 7th Framework Programme for Research
[Commission’s Proposal of 6 April 2005]
2
Outline
FP7 Proposal
ICT in FP7
FP7 Implementation
Next Steps
3
April 6: New package for FPP2006+
Research, innovation and competitiveness are top policy priorities
ICT: Essential component of two key proposals
FP7: The ICT theme and ICT-related infrastructures
The CIP: ICT Policy Support Programme
Two complementary financial instruments, one policy goal:
• « Enable Europe to master and make the best use of ICTs »
4
FPP2006+: Putting the knowledge triangle at work
“To be a genuinely competitive knowledge economy,
Europe must be better in producing knowledge through research
In diffusing it through education
In applying it through innovation ”
“Triangle of knowledge”
research:
education innovation
Europe needs to invest more and better
5
FP7: Four inter-linked objectives
Gain leadership in key fields by supporting cooperation Essential « core business», high European added value
Stimulate excellence through competition Attracting the best brains, frontier research
Develop and strengthen Human Capital of research
Improve research and innovation capacity
6
FP7 approach: Continuity & New Impetus
Continuity Thematic priorities Scaling up ERA coordination actions Scaling up Marie Curie actions Scaling up SME measures
Seven years duration
New Impetus Doubling of budget per year European Research Council Joint Technology Initiatives New research infrastructures Mainstreaming NEST/FET, SSP/Priority8, Int’l Cooperation New management schemes
Leverage effect onMember States + private
investments
7
FP7: structure
“Cooperation” Predefined themes, refined FP6 instruments
“Cooperation” Predefined themes, refined FP6 instruments
“Ideas” Frontier research, competition, individual grants
“Ideas” Frontier research, competition, individual grants
“People” Human potential, mobility
“People” Human potential, mobility
“Capacities” Infrastructure, SMEs, science and society,
“Capacities” Infrastructure, SMEs, science and society,
Joint Research Center – non-nuclearJoint Research Center – non-nuclear
+EURATOMEURATOM
8
FP7 Specific Programmes
Cooperation: 44735 m€ (61%)
Ideas: 11942 m€ (16%)
People: 7178 m€ (10%)
Capacities: 7536 m€ (10%)
JRC: 1824 m€ (3%)
9
1. Health1. Health
2. Food, Agri, Biotech2. Food, Agri, Biotech
3. Information and Communication Technologies3. Information and Communication Technologies
4. Nano, Materials, Production4. Nano, Materials, Production
5. Energy 5. Energy
6. Environment6. Environment
7. Transport (including Aeronautics)7. Transport (including Aeronautics)
8. Socio-econ8. Socio-econ
9. Security and space9. Security and space
“Cooperation” – Collaborative Research – Themes
10
“Cooperation” – Collaborative Research – Themes
Health: 8373 m€ (18%)
Food, agri, biotech: 2472 m€ (6%)
ICT: 12756 m€ (28.5%)
Nano, materials, production: 4865 m€ (11%)
Energy: 2951 m€ (7%)
Environment: 2552 m€ (6%)
Transport: 5981 m€ (13%)
Socio-econ research: 798 m€ (2%)
Space and security: 3987 m€ (9%)
11
Under each theme there will be sufficient flexibility to address Emerging needs Unforeseen policy needs
Support will be implemented across all themes through Collaborative projects; Networks of Excellence; Coordination/support actions
Joint Technology Initiatives Coordination (ERA-NET; ERA-NET+; Article 169)
“Cooperation” – Collaborative Research
12
In a limited number of cases
Covering one or a small number of selected aspects
Criteria include Inability of existing instruments to achieve objectives Degree and clarity of definition of objectives Financial and resource commitment from industry Capacity to attract additional national support and leverage current or future industry funding
Nanoelectronics, Embedded Systems, …
“Cooperation” – Joint Technology Initiatives
13
ERA-NET and ERA-NET-PLUS
Community participation in national research programmes (based on Art. 169), with criteria including Efficiency of Art. 169 as the most appropriate means for
achieving objectives Presence of pre-existing national research programmes Critical mass (size and number of programmes/activities)
Ambient Assisted Living, Embedded Systems, …
“Cooperation” – Coordination of programmes
14
FP7 “Capacities” – Research Capacity – 6 Parts
1. Research Infrastructures
2. Research for the benefit of SMEs
3. Regions of knowledge
4. Research potential
5. Science in society
6. Activities of int’l cooperation
15
FP7 “Capacities” – Research Capacity – 6 Parts
Research infrastructures: 3987 m€ (54%)
Research for benefit of SMEs: 1914 m€ (25%)
Regions of knowledge: 160 m€ (2%)
Research potential: 558 m€ (7%)Science in society: 558 mé (7%)
Int’l cooperation: 359 m€ (5%)
16
FP7 “Capacities” – Research Infrastructures
Support to existing research infrastructures Research e-infrastructures
• GÉANT, Grids, Super-/high-end-computing
Transnational access
Integrating activities
Support to new research infrastructures Construction of new research infrastructures and major
updates of existing ones• Nanoelectronics cleanrooms
Design studies
17
Commission
ERC – European Research Council
* Created by Commission decision * * Under the responsibility of the Commission
Preparation of work programme Set up of peer review: pool of reviewers,
nomination of review panels, evaluation guidelines
Oversight of the evaluation procedure Annual scientific report
Information and support to applicants Reception / eligibility of proposals Organisation and execution of evaluation Selection decision Scientific and financial follow-up of
contracts Annual implementation report
Approval of work programme, as defined by the Scientific Council
Instruction to implement work programme
Approval of annual implementation report
Information to programme committee
Scientific Council*
Externalised tasks**
FP7 “Ideas” – Frontier Research
18
FP7 “People” – Human Potential
Initial training of researchers Marie Curie Networks
Life-long training and career development Individual Fellowships Co-financing of national/international programmes
Industry-academia pathways and partnerships Industry-Academia Scheme
International dimension Outgoing International Fellowships; Incoming International
Fellowships; International Cooperation Scheme; Reintegration grants
Specific actions Excellence awards
19
Outline
ICT in the Financial Perspectives
FP7 Proposal
ICT in FP7
FP7 Implementation
Next Steps
20
ICT in FP7 – Objectives
“To enable Europe to master and shape the future developments of ICT so that the demands of its society and economy are met”
Thereby: Strengthening the competitiveness of all industry in Europe
• Master ICT for innovation and growth
Re-inforcing the competitive position of European ICT sector• Build industrial and technology leadership
Supporting EU policies• Mobilise ICT to meet public and societal demands
Strengthening the European science & technology base• A pre-condition for success
21
ICT in FP7 – Priorities : “Striking the Right Balance”
Reinforce leadership and open new fields Reinforce areas where Europe has recognised strengths
Build capacity to seize new opportunities as they emerge
Mainstream ICT and Push the limits of technology Boost innovation from ICT use and new forms of content
Widen the performance and functionality of technology
Combination of market or applications-pull and technology and science-push
Balance between basic and applied research Flow of ideas from theory to practice and from academia to markets.
22
Building on Europe’s Strengths
Industrial & technological leadership in key ICT fields Telecom, embedded IT, nano-electronics, micro-systems, rich audio-
visual content etc
Capacity to draw on multiple disciplines
Handling complexity Transform progress in complex technologies into reliable products,
services and infrastructures
Strengths in “vertical” markets e.g. automotive, aerospace, pharmaceuticals
Partnering and collaboration consensus-building, pursuing common goals
23
Seizing new Opportunities
Expanding prospects of ICT developments and use New needs, new areas
Extended borders of ICT R&D ICT-bio-nano-cogno New forms of content
Wider range of actors Users from ICT-intensive sectors Industry and technology suppliers in ICT sectors Researchers in ICT, bio- and life-sciences, cognitive sciences, social
sciences etc. Large firms, SMEs, universities, public research labs etc.
24
Stimulate Innovation from ICT Use
Bring technology closer to people and organisational needs Hide technology complexity and reveal functionality on demand,
• Make ICT simpler to use, available and affordable
Support innovative content and services that adapt to users’ context
Make ICT more trusted and reliable
Involve the user early A European tradition: user participation early in the process Strong user industries in Europe
•automotive, aerospace, medical, pharmaceuticals, financial services, etc.
Embed and integrate ICT in innovative high-value products and services in all sectors
25
Push the Technology Limits Further
Miniaturisation
Convergence Computing, communications and media technologies
ICT drawing on other sciences and technologies ICT-nano-bio-cogno
Systems able to learn and evolve
26
Main Themes and Activities
ICT Technology Pillars pushing the limits of performance, usability, dependability, cost-
efficiency
Integration of Technologies integrating multi-technology sets that underlie new functionalities,
services and applications
Applications Research providing the knowledge and the means to develop a wide range of
ICT-based services and applications
Future and Emerging Technologies supporting research at the frontiers of knowledge
27
ICT Technology Pillars
Nano-electronics, photonics and integrated micro/nano-systems
Ubiquitous and unlimited capacity communication networks
Embedded systems, computing and control
Software, Grids, security and dependability
Knowledge, cognitive and learning systems
Simulation, visualisation, interaction and mixed realities
New perspectives emerging in ICT drawing on other science and technology disciplines
28
Integration of Technologies
Personal environments personal communication and computing devices, wearables,
implants..
Home environments communication, monitoring, control, assistance;
Robotic systems advanced autonomous systems; cognition, control, miniaturisation
Intelligent infrastructures tools making infrastructures that are critical to everyday life more
efficient, easier to adapt and maintain,
29
Applications Research
ICT meeting societal challenges for health; to improve inclusion; for mobility; in support of the
environment; for governments
ICT for content, creativity and personal development new media and content; technology-enhanced learning; digital
cultural assets
ICT supporting businesses and industry business processes; collaborative work; manufacturing
ICT for trust and confidence identity, authentication, authorization, privacy, rights
30
Outline
ICT in the Financial Perspectives
FP7 Proposal
ICT in FP7
FP7 Implementation
Next Steps
31
Implementation principles
Orientations in the FP, SP and rules for participation
Details and precisions/decisions in the work programmes More detailed content
• Scientific and technological goals•Scope of activities•Results expected
More details on types of funding schemes•Financial contributions•Participants (industry, universities, …)•Activities (R&D, demo, training, …)
More details on available budget
32
FP7 – “Cutting Red Tape”
Reducing the burden of administrative and financial rules and procedures
Lowering the number of requests to participants
Simplifying the Commission’s controls
Improving the financial schemes and modalities of funding
33
FP7 – Management
More outsourcing Collaborative research: proposals admin and logistics management,
evaluators invitations and payments, financial viability checking, statistics, IT tools
European Research Council: executive agency, maybe 171 later to increase autonomy
Human resources and mobility actions
SME measures
Joint management Ad-hoc management structures (Art. 169, 171, …
34
Outline
ICT in the Financial Perspectives
FP7 Proposal
ICT in FP7
FP7 Implementation
Next Steps
35
Timetable
FP6
FP7
New Financial Perspectives
2003 2004 2005
2007 - 2013
2006
Call 4 Call 5
Adoption
FP7, SPs, RfPproposals
Communication on FP7 orientations FP7 Work Programmes + Calls
Communication on new financial perspectives
2007 - 2013
Legislative proposals
Agreement
Call 1 Call 2 Call 3 Call 6
36
2005
6 April……..Commission - Adoption of FP7 proposals
18 April……Council - Exchange of views
7 June……..Council - Orientation debate
21 Sep…….Commission - Proposals on SPs + Rules for Participation and Dissemination
11 Oct……...Council - Exchange of views on SPs + RfP
23 Nov……..Commission - Proposals under Art. 169/171
28-29 Nov…Council - Orientation debate on SPs + RfP
12-15 Dec…EP – 1st reading on FP
Tentative Roadmap for FP7
37
2006
Feb/Mar…...Council - Common position on FP; EP - 1st reading on RfP
April……….Common position on RfP
May/June…EP - 2nd reading on FP; Opinion on SPs; 2nd reading on RfP (earliest)
June……….Council - Adoption of FP + RfP (earliest)
July………..Council and EP - Adoption of FP + RfP
July………..Council - Adoption of the SPs
Oct………...Commission - Adoption of Workprogrammes
Nov………..Commission - Publication of 1st calls
Tentative Roadmap for FP7