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Societal Challenge 2
Strategic Outlook
Work Programme 2018-2020
HORIZON 2020
Societal Challenge 2
overview
• Societal Challenge 2 Work Programme (SC-2)
– 4 Calls so far 2014-2017
– 203 projects selected – 1.3 Billion € committed
– New calls 2018-2020 – 1.3 Billion € available
– EIP AGRI
• SC-2 also includes the Biobased Industries
Public Private Partnership (BBI)
– 4 calls to date - 65 projects have been funded
Societal Challenge 2 overview
Ireland Eligible Proposals with
Irish participants
Irish applicants in eligible proposals
Retained Proposals
Success Rate
All actions 280 403 overall 176 For Profit (incl. 147 SME) 110 HES 15 Public bodies 83 Research orgs 19 Other
79
28.21% €50 million (incl €1.2
million Other e.g. EJP)
Horizon 2020 Societal
Challenge -2
IA - 36 RIA - 89 CSA -23
ERA-NET - 7
IA – 50 RIA - 156 CSA - 64
ERA-NET - 11
IA - 5 RIA - 22 CSA - 23
ERA-NET - 7
IA – 13.89% RIA – 24.7% CSA – 64%
ERA-NET – 100% €22.5 million
Biobased Industries JTI
29 50 7 24.14% €15.97 million
SME instrument
67 70 14 20.9% €10.5 million
What are the challenges we all face?
What is the Political Opportunity?
Junckers Priorities
The Societal 2 Work Programme will help to implement EU
policies & initiatives
EU Single Digital Economy
And what does the circular economy mean in terms of the Bioeconomy?
(Circular) Bioeconomy Strategy Update
SC-2 & BBI Work Programmes, CAP
In the circular economy (CE), biological resources require attention to their lifecycle, environmental impacts and sustainable sourcing. To address the CE & biobased materials the EU Commission will promote an efficient use of bio-based resources through • guidance and dissemination of best practices of the cascading use of biomass and • support to innovation in the bio-economy for new materials, chemicals and processes.
8
And what does the bioeconomy mean in terms of Food?
Public – Private Investment
International Stakeholders
FOOD 2030 R&I for tomorrow's nutrition & food systems
Priorities
• Perfect Storm: climate change, population growth, resource scarcity, malnutrition, obesity & NCDs
• Political opportunity: response to SDGs, COP21+, Junker priorities
• Investment opportunity: EU underinvesting in food & agri R&I despite high returns on investment
• Need for a systemic approach to future-proofing food systems via more impactful R&I
FOOD 2030 - New level of ambition,
impact and focus
– Food system approach
– New partnerships with Member States, business, society and other stakeholders
– Map & close R&I investment gap
– Connect R&I, from 'farm-to-fork-to-gut-and back' including primary production
– Game changing technologies, approaches, business models
– New global platform
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11
Next Events
a) Horizon 2020s Societal Challenge 2 Info Week - "Bioeconomy Week" -
14-17 Nov 2017
b) BBI JU Stakeholder Forum, Brussels – 7th Dec 2017
c) Bioeconomy Investment Summit 2017 – 14th-15th Dec 2017
d) 2nd FOOD 2030 High Level Event under Bulgarian Presidency (2018)
Website bioeconomy:
• http://ec.europa.eu/research/bioeconomy
• https://www.bbi-europe.eu/
Twitter: #FOOD2030EU
Stakeholder Engagement
The context: Primary production, food and bio-based industries challenged to
operate in a rapidly changing world
Strategic orientations
Priorities
Climate change and resilience on land and sea
Meeting needs of food /feed/biobased/energy products. Address sources of C02 emissions and agri-forest are sequestration reservoirs
Circular bioeconomy
Resource efficient production, distribution value chains based on efficient use of wastes, residues, by-products and business models to maintain natural capital
Healthy eco, food systems and lifestyles
Food & nutrition security & sustainability of food systems – sustainable management of land, soil, water, biodiversity, ecosystem services – nutrition, lifestyle & health – resilient, responsible, diverse, competitive & inclusive
Innovations on land and sea
New products, new value chains, new markets – testing, demonstrating, scaling up new technologies & business models - e.g. PPPs
Smart, connected territories and value chains
Rural & coastal areas – sustainability and capitalisation of natural, social and economic assets in a territorial area, long-term drivers for business, services and value chains and in particular new partnerships between producers, processors, retailers & society
Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 2
13
Bio-based Industries Joint
Undertaking (BBI – JU)
www.bbi-europe.eu 14
Objectives:
Resource efficiency
Sustainable low carbon economy
Increase economic growth in rural areas
Implementation
Establishing a sustainable biobased
industry
Advanced biorefineries
Technologies / Chemicals /
biomaterials
Business models / whole value
chains / supply / biorefineries /
consumers / clusters / connections
Flagship biorefinery plants /
technologies / business models /
cost performance
Reduction in the use of fossil fuels
vs. biobased materials for material,
chemical, energy & fuel production
15
Specific approaches and cross-cutting issues Inputs from the Social Sciences and Humanities - relevant to tackle the complex challenges addressed in the 2018-2020 Work Programme for Societal Challenge 2. The work programme includes topics where it is relevant to look at the gender dimension in a research content. Research and innovation activities should explore, analyse, and address possible sex and gender differences . The concept of Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) underpins this work programme, aiming to align research and innovation to the values, needs and expectations of society. Several topics include a suggestion for coordination between projects financed under the same or related topics. This allows organising clusters of projects working on similar issues, to avoid duplication of efforts and to enable cross-fertilisation and synergies.
Horizon 2020 – EIP - RDP
1
6
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Make use of existing European research infrastructures (including e-infrastructures). Proposers are encouraged to use FIWARE for some or all of their platform developments, when relevant. FIWARE enablers are available at www.fiware.org under open source licence for business use.
Proposers are advised to consult information on the Copernicus
programme in general as well as the availability of Copernicus
Sentinel Data.
To promote pan-European coherence and interoperability, integrate the
results of the different activities and facilitate international co-
operation, the activities related to earth observation data and other
spatial data should at best comply with and build upon the existing
Infrastructure for Spatial Information in the European Community
(INSPIRE)
Thank you