Europe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Europe

Description:

Europe s Strengths and Weaknesses in Key Science and Technology Domains Paraskevas Caracostas Advisor, Science and Society Directorate, DG Research, European ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:318
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: cara72
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Europe


1
Europes Strengths and Weaknesses in Key Science
and Technology Domains
Paraskevas Caracostas Advisor,  Science and
Society  Directorate, DG Research, European
Commission, Brussels
2
Europes Strengths and Weaknesses in Key Science
and Technology Domains
  • Key Challenges for Europe
  • Perspectives on Europes industrial
    specialization
  • The science base
  • SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Conclusions

3
Key Challenges for Europe
  •  Chindia 
  • The next technology wave
  • Global inequalities
  • Economic Scenarios
  • Environment/Energy
  • Demography
  • Future of Manufacturing
  • Institutional Scenarios

4
Perspectives on Europes industrial
specialization
  • A recent analysis of export market shares (see
    Eur. Comm., 2005c) shows that
  • in terms of skill intensity, it is very clear
    that the EU does particularly well in the
    medium-high technology grouping, with a world
    export market share in excess of 20 which is
    substantially higher than its overall market
    share of 15-16. It is also a big world player in
    the medium-low technology sector although its
    share in this category is tending to decline over
    time. Its relatively poor showing in the high
    technology category to a large extent reflects
    its low market share in ICT related industries.
  • In the overall world market for high technology
    goods, the US and south east Asia are dominant.
    While this dominance to a large extent reflects
    their particular focus on the ICT sector, their
    involvement in other high technology areas is
    also playing a role. Japan has the highest
    concentration in the medium and high technology
    sectors of any of the areas covered. Over 80 of
    Japans trade are in these groupings compared
    with less than 60 for the EU.

5
Perspectives on Europes industrial
specialization (2)
6
The Science base
  • Compared to the US and Japan, the scientific
    capabilities of the EU are distributed evenly
    across all fields of science. The EU shows no
    strong specialisation or under-specialisation in
    any particular field. Conversely, the US is
    specialized in basic life sciences and
    multidisciplinary sciences and under-specialised
    in chemistry and engineering sciences Japan
    specialises in physics and astronomy but is less
    active in biological sciences, computer sciences,
    earth and environmental sciences, and mathematics
    and statistics.

7
USA
US scientists dominate in each of the 21 subject
areas of science
(Source Basu, 2004)
8
Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats
analysis in key technology areas
  • Pervasive Technologies
  • Systemic Transition Technologies
  • Emerging/Converging Technologies

9
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Pervasive Technologies/ICTs The EU is strong in
    a few sectors of ICT (mobile, services, embedded
    systems, microsystems, application software)

Europes revealed technological advantage in
various information society technologies,
1996-1998 (FISTERA, 2005)
10
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Pervasive Technologies/Biotechnology

At the end of 2004 the biotechnology industry in
the eighteen European countries surveyed by
Critical I (2006) Had 2163 companies (compared
to 2200 in 2003) Employed approximately over
96,500 people, including 42,500 in RD (96,000 in
2003 with 41,000 in RD) Spent about 7.6
billion in RD (7.6 billion in 2003) Generated
over 21.5 billion revenue (20.5 billion in
2003) Raised 1.1 billion in venture capital in
2004 (787 million in 2003) Raised a total of
2.1 billion through equity in 2004 (1.45
billion in 2003)
In 2004, the US biotechnology industry
Comprised 1991 companies (2003 1975) Employed
approximately 190,500 people (2003 170,500)
Spent 21 billion on research and development
(2003 20 billion) Generated over 41.5
billion of revenue (2003 nearly 40.5 billion)
Raised 2.5 billion in venture capital in 2004
(2003 2.2 billion) Sold an additional 5.3
billion worth of equity largely through the
public markets (2004 3.5 billion)
11
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Pervasive Technologies/Production
    Technologies/Materials

Source CM International, FUTMAN, 2003
12
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Pervasive Technologies/Production
    Technologies/Services

Today, in Europe there is a number of research
institutes which operate on high international
research standards in certain areas of service
research (for ex. service standardization,
service engineering and service work
design). Though, on the European level there is a
lack of centres of excellence which are able to
cover the broadness of service research
challenges in an interdisciplinary way as well as
to concentrate resources and know-how in order to
be able to shape the international discourse of
research. In Europe technology development, goods
production-oriented research and practice are
well connected. But to service research, such a
statement can be applied only on a limited scale.
It is necessary to raise the so far limited
readiness/tradition of service companies for
systematic research and development and for
participating in collaborative development
projects with science.
13
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Systemic transition technologies/Renewable
    Energy
  • Europe as a whole (European Commission and its
    Member states) puts more public resources in non
    nuclear energy research than its competitors,
    especially in the area of renewable energies.
    Europe is relative weak in comparison with the US
    and Japan in moving forward with the most
    promising technologies such as hydrogen and fuel
    cell based technologies, while at the same time
    the European continent is leading in solar, wind
    and geothermal energy technologies.
  • The US have been overtaking the EU in the gas
    turbine business, Japan is in the process of
    doing the same in the PV area and in the fuel
    cell domain where most of the industrial advances
    appear to be carried out in the US.
  • There is a strong European base in fundamental
    science and technology areas of relevance to key
    energy technologies and in some areas, ambitious
    experiments and demonstrations are set up.
  • Apart from wind where European industry has
    definitely taken the lead following its
    economical success, most of the minor
    technologies (solar thermal, geo thermal, ocean
    energy, etc) have still to materialise in terms
    of business success and significant contributors
    to the energy mix.

14
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Systemic transition technologies/Environmental
    Technologies
  • Europe has a well recognised scientific
    competence in environmental research, as well as
    in research on the impact of socio-economic
    behaviour on the environment.
  • In some important segments of general purpose
    technologies (e.g. miniaturised sensors, new
    materials, some segments of nanotechnology)
    European research and development is leading edge
    worldwide.
  • In many fields of sectoral environmental
    technologies European firms are at the global
    forefront of technological developments, building
    on now almost thirty years of experience.

15
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Systemic transition technologies/Sustainable
    Mobility Technologies
  • Europe possesses high scientific capacities in
    the majority of the disciplines concerned
    sciences engineering, mechanical engineering,
    civil engineering, mechanics of the fluids,
    electronics, acoustics, energetics, applied
    mathematics, signal processing
  • There are large world leaders in the majority of
    the sectors cars and commercial vehicles,
    aeronautics, high speed trains, "complex" ships.
  • A high technological level in the fields of
    motorisation, of electronics, of the tyres, of
    the particle filters
  • high European standards inciting to innovation
    and a clear European policy (see European
    Commission, 2001,White Paper on Transport
    Policy).
  • A beginning of a European mobilisation for
    hydrogen and the fuels of the future.

16
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Emerging Sciences Technologies/ Nanotech
  • Europe is performing well in this emerging field
    both in terms of scientific production as in
    accounting for patents. The major challenge is to
    make the jump from an, by large, academic based
    activity to commercial applications, e.g.
    nano-electronics and medical applications.
  • Europe is strong in the following sub-fields of
    nanotechnology
  • Biomimetics (a major source of nano-innovations)
  • Nanomaterials (nanoparticles, quantum dots, thin
    films)
  • Nanoelectronics and computing
  • Toxicology of nanoparticles, both in-vitro and
    in-vivo
  • Nanophotovoltaics
  • Nanosensor research and development
  • Nanomedicine including diagnostics, tissue
    regeneration and targeted drug delivery

17
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Emerging Sciences Technologies/ Cognitive
    systems technologies
  • Europe, which holds a large part of the
    responsibility and merit for launching cognitive
    science and fuelling it with some of its key
    insights, has of late been lagging behind the US
    and Japan, and must make a very resolute effort
    to catch up and remain in the lead, in the face
    of the increased level of competition brought
    about by China, which is giving cognitive
    neuroscience top priority.
  • In some areas, such as robotics, neuroscience,
    psychophysics, statistical and dynamical models,
    logic, developmental psychology, pharmacology,
    linguistics, Europeans are in the lead or among
    the world leaders.

18
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Emerging ST/Complexity Sciences
  • A new wave is originating in complex systems
    research that is shifting the IT technology
    needed to support the activities from algorithms
    to programming languages for interaction and
    concurrency. The main experts all over the world
    are in EU.
  • For example in the field of bioinformatics, in
    concurrency theory, Europe is the leading edge of
    basic research and knowledge if compared to the
    USA, China or Japan.

19
SWOT analysis in key technology areas
  • Emerging ST/Converging ST
  • Scientific activity in Europe as measured by the
    number of publications is overall higher than
    that in USA and Japan in all of the convergent
    clusters, except in the case of Biotech ICT
    where USA has a slightly lead. In terms if
    scientific impact as measured by the normalized
    citation score, the USA however leads in all
    clusters with the possible exception of
    Nanotechnology ICT.

20
The Future of ManufacturingFUTMAN scenarios
(2003)
  • Under the Local Standard scenario, allegiances
    unite behind collective public values and
    consumer attitudes, but congruence in policy is
    achieved, not at central European level, but at
    regional level. Influential local citizen action
    groups go hand-in-hand with a decrease in EU
    influence on global affairs. A hollowing-out
    occurs in those sectors of European industry
    which are prone to commoditisation.
  • Under the Global Economy scenario, individual
    choice by consumers is preferred and the
    invisible hand of the market will best
    co-ordinate the policies necessary for economic
    development and technological innovation.
    Research and technology is regarded as a key
    ingredient into sustaining leading-edge progress
    in globalised markets, Europe lagging behind the
    USA in mission-funded RTD areas.
  • The Focus Europe scenario combines a high degree
    of congruence in development and innovation
    policies with a highly individualised set of
    consumer preferences. At the macro level, this is
    a risky strategy, since Europes views and
    policies on sustainability are not shared by the
    United States and by the big economies of East
    Asia. European manufacturing rises to the
    challenge and carves out a world leading position
    in environmental technology.
  • The Sustainable Times scenario contains a
    generalised acceptance at both citizen level and
    at the level of governance that sustainable
    development issues should be taken from the
    clouds of medium-term concerns and grounded in
    policies with immediate effect. Technological and
    organisational innovation bring about system
    changes and industry becomes an active mediator
    of sustainable development.

21
The economic scenarios of the Central Planning
Bureau (NL, 2003)
  • The recent scenarios1 of CPB tend to show that
    a more integrated Europe as well as a globalised
    Europe score both higher in terms of
    efficiency/equity trade offs than a Europe of
    regions or a Transatlantic Europe but the
    first is more socially cohesive and
    environmentally sustainable but less economically
    effective than the second.
  • 1 See Ruud de Mooij, Paul Tang, (2003), Four
    Futures of Europe, Central Planning Bureau, The
    Hague

22
Conclusions
  • Strengthening Europes research identity
  • To be more attractive, Europe needs a
    differentiation strategy, based on the strengths
    of its science, technology and industrial base.
    It must specialize and become the place for high
    quality, high innovative and value added
    services-products systems as the US is the place
    for computer software and microprocessors. And
    once the Union has decided around which
    objectives to mobilize its resources, the
    research, innovation and education efforts of
    member States, regions and business must be
    articulated and synergies enhanced internally and
    with other partner countries.
  • The underlying concept for such a specialisation
    strategy could be  sustainable and qualitative
    growth . Its at the heart of the
    Lisbon-Göteborg strategy and it opens new
    spaces for technological organisational,
    institutional and social innovations.

23
Conclusions (2)
24
Conclusions (3)
  • Recent policy messages
  • EU FP7 European Technology Platforms and Joint
    Technology Initiatives - The First 6 Joint
    Technology Initiatives proposed by the EC
    Innovative Medicines Initiative, Nanoelectronics
    Technologies 2020, Embedded Computing Systems,
    Hydrogen and Fuel Cells Initiative, Aeronautics
    and Air Transport, Global Monitoring for
    Environment and Security (GMES)
  • the Key Technologies expert group (European
    Commission 2005a) underlined the necessity for a
    strategy beyond Lisbon
  • A strategy for transforming EU RD system needs
    to be based on a systemic approach integrating
    long-term and short-term strategies and the
    member states RD systems to obtain synergies and
    rationalise efforts
  • The EU needs to introduce system innovations,
    i.e. combinations of radical technological and
    organisational/social innovations in many areas
    of economic activity, that allow reconciling
    economic, social and environmental objectives,
    values and beliefs.
  • New EU Industrial Policy (2005) mixing
    horizontal/sectoral aspects
  •  Aho Report  (2006)  A combination of supply
    and these measures (on regulation, standards,
    public procurement, intellectual property and
    fostering a culture which celebrates innovation)
    to create demand should be focused in large scale
    strategic actions. We identify several examples
    e-Health, Pharmaceuticals, Energy, Environment,
    Transport and Logistics, Security, and Digital
    Content. 

25
For more information
  • http//cordis.europa.eu/foresight/kte_expert_group
    _2005.htm
  • Thank You!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com