implementation of the four cross-cutting contractual ppps ... · • bio-based industries (bbi) ......
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Implementation of the four cross-cutting Contractual PPPs under Horizon 2020 PPPs Information day 16 October 2015
FoF, EeB, EGVI & SPIRE
José-Lorenzo Vallés
DG Research and Innovation
The Policy Context for these cPPPs
Five of the Priority areas from Juncker's Agenda:
• To boost jobs, growth and investment;
• To realise a connected digital single market;
• To implement a resilient Energy Union with a forward looking climate change policy;
• To develop a deeper and fairer internal market with a strengthened industrial base;
• To make Europe a stronger global actor
The Framework Programme Horizon 2020
• Excellent science, Competitiveness, Better society
Challenges:
• Getting research results to market -> Open Innovation
• Not fall behind on the very best science -> Open Science
• EU science more active in global debates -> Open to the world
New strategic priorities for R & I
Specific issues regarding Open innovation:
• What? Involving more actors in the innovation process
• Why? to capitalise on the results of European R & I
• How? creating right ecosystems, increasing investment, bringing more companies into the knowledge economy
Why Public-Private Partnerships in Horizon 2020?
• To solve problems together with industry
• To strengthen European industrial leadership
• To facilitate prioritisation of R&I in line with the Europe 2020 objectives and industry needs
• To leverage research and innovation elements
• To strongly commit industry to joint objectives
PPPs in Horizon 2020
Institutionalised PPPs Contractual PPPs
• Innovative Medicines (IMI)
• Clean Sky
• Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR)
• Fuel Cells and Hydrogen (FCH)
• Electronic Components and Systems (ECSEL - old ARTEMIS + ENIAC)
New:
• Bio-based Industries (BBI)
• Shift2Rail
• Factory of the Future (FoF)
• Energy-efficient Buildings (EeB)
• Green Vehicles (EGVI)
• Future internet (5G)
New:
• Sustainable Process Industry (SPIRE)
• Robotics
• Photonics
• High Performance Computing
• Big Data
Key elements in the implementation of these cPPPs in 2014-15
• Partnership Board meetings (6 for FoF, EeB, SPIRE and 2 for EGVI) and meetings for cPPP lead-services coordination
• Agreed common Rules for Procedure for the PB, including provisions on openness and potential conflict of interest
• Annual workshops on the Impact of the cPPP projects for FoF, EeB and SPIRE and other meetings for EGVI
• The first cPPP Progress Monitoring Reports (2014) finalised (with information on projects, KPIs, leverage factor)
• Meeting with Commissioner Oettinger on 18 September
• Meeting with Commissioner Moedas on 24 September
Factories of the Future PPP
• Manufacturing sector
• 23% of European jobs (over 30 million)
• The vast majority are in SMEs
• Manufacturing gives 80% of EU exports
• Complex R&D-intensive activity
• R&D costs and risks are high
• Technological capabilities and supply chains are dispersed across the EU
• Critical mass of stakeholders at EU level is needed to go beyond the capacity of individual Member States
Goals of the FoF PPP
• Strengthen EU industrial competitiveness and sustainability
• Reduce energy consumption up to 30%
• Reduce use of material up to 20%
• 20% less waste generation
• Increase the share of manufacturing in EU GDP to 20% by 2020
Based on replies by 53 FP7 projects:
• 7 systems & technologies per project
• 7 spin-offs/start-ups reported so far
• 30 patent applications
• 50 activities leading to standardisation
• 20% reduction in energy use and CO2
• 15% reduction in waste and use of material resources
• EFFRA Innovation Portal gives info on project results
• Private investments leading to leverage factor of 2.5
FoF Progress monitoring (report 2014)
• Construction sector
• Biggest industrial employer (14.6 million direct jobs)
• 95% of the 3.1 million enterprises are SMEs
• Turnover has decreased significantly during the crisis
• Buildings are linked to 40 % of total energy use and 1/3 of GHG in EU
• Very low replacement rate of the existing stock
Energy-efficient Buildings PPP
• Technologies enabling to speed up a reduction in energy and GHG
• Higher renovation rate of exiting stock
• At lower cost
• Reduction of energy use by 50% compared to 2010
• Reduction of CO2 by 80% compared to 2010
• Improving competitiveness of EU building industry
• Cost-effective , user-friendly, healthy, safe building products for smart cities
Goals of the EeB PPP
Based on replies by 68 projects:
• On average 5 new technologies per project
• Increase of 10.8% of turnover and 9.2% in employees in 1/3 of the SMEs
• 300 demonstration sites
• 781,000 m2 retrofitted
• 50 new type of skills generated
• 35% reduction of energy use
• 39% reduction of CO2 emissions
• 10 training events and 390 people trained, per project
• Private investments leading to leverage factor of 2.5
EeB Progress monitoring (2014 report)
• Automotive industry
• 12 million direct jobs and € 500 billion/year in turnover
• The vehicle market is facing a lasting crisis in Europe
• New green vehicles
• higher energy efficiency
• alternative powertrains
• Technological complexity
• Initial low market acceptance
• Low return on investment
Green Vehicles PPP
• Improvement of energy transport efficiency by 50% by from 2010 to 2030 including:
• 80% in energy efficiency of urban vehicles
• 40% in energy efficiency long distance freight transport
• Deployment of alternative powertrains
• Less pollution and CO2 emissions
Goals of the Green Vehicles PPP
Based on estimations by the 17 new projects:
• 15% reduction of CO2 emissions
• 15 to 40% less energy use
• 96 technologies to be developed
• 6 patents per project
• 10 new high-skilled jobs per project
• 5-10 dissemination events per project
• Reduction in the use of cobalt, nickel, copper, aluminium, etc. and of permanent magnets.
• Expected private investments leading to leverage factor of 3.6
EGVI Progress Monitoring (2014 report)
Sustainable Process Industry PPP
• Process industries
• Eight EU industrial sectors: chemical, steel, cement, ceramics, minerals, non-ferrous metals, industrial water and process engineering
•6.8 million jobs in 450,000 enterprises
•Turnover of over €1,600 billion/year
•At the core of the value chains and highly dependent on resources
• Striving for competitiveness and sustainability
• High risks and long-term investments
• Need for co-operation along the value chains
Goals of the SPIRE PPP
• Integration and demonstration of innovative processes and systems for increased resource efficiency
• Reduction of fossil energy intensity up to 30% by 2030
• Reduction of up to 20% in non-renewable, primary raw material intensity by 2030
• Reduction in GHG of up to 40% by 2030 compared to 1999 levels
Based on estimations by the 18 new projects:
• 7 systems or technologies per project to be developed
• 25 % of projects results expected to be taken up for further investments
• 15 % of waste reduction
• 10 % reduction in CO2 emissions and energy use
• 10 % reduction in the use of material resources
• 30% budget-share going to demonstrators & prototyping
• Expected private investments leading to leverage factor of 4.5
SPIRE Progress monitoring (2014 report)
Projects selected in 2014-15
cPPPs FoF EeB EGVI SPIRE
Funding in M€ 263 138 148 201
Proposals 580 311 99 205
Projects 57 31 17 34
Success rate 10 % 10 % 17 % 14 %
Organisations 703 321 265 432
cPPP Calls 2014-15 Time to Grant
236 235 231 237
191 173 178
0
50
100
150
200
250
FoF EeB EGVI SPIRE
# D
ays
TTG 2014
TTG 2015
Industry-share and outreach in 2014-15
cPPPs FoF EeB EGVI SPIRE
% of Industry
in the participants 60 56 54 59
% of SMEs
in the participants 36 30 20 26
Total countries in the
selected projects 28 29 21 31
% of Non-members in
the participants (2014) 77 75 67 73
% of Non-members in
the EC funding (2014) 77 70 53 71
cPPP Calls 2014-15 Type of Organisations (% EC funding)
21%
22%
52%
4% EeB
Public Bodies
Researchorganisations
Higher orsecondaryeducation
Private for profit(excl. education)
Others
27%
19%
51%
3% FoF
24%
10%
57%
9%
EGVI
26%
20%
52%
2% SPIRE
Public Bodies
Researchorganisations
Higher or secondaryeducation
Private for profit(excl. education)
Others
cPPP Calls 2014-15 Type of Organisations (% EC funding)
Indicative EC funding for 2016
H2020
funding
NMBP
RTD
ICT
CNECT
Transport
RTD
Energy
RTD + ENER
Environment
RTD
TOTAL
M€
FoF 77 83 - - - 160
EeB 49 - - 8 - 57
EGVI 16 - 80 - - 96
SPIRE 74 - - 13 40 127
TOTAL 216 83 80 21 40 440
Horizon 2020 Rules
• Types of action • RIA: Research and innovation actions –> Core activities in research
• IA: Innovation actions –> Core activities in innovation
• CSA: Coordination and support actions
• Simplified funding rates • Up to 100 % of the eligible costs; but up to 70% in IA if profit-seeking organisations
• Single indirect cost model: 25% flat rate for all
Evaluation criteria • Excellence – Impact – Quality and efficiency of the action (similar with FP7)
• Thresholds are depending on the call conditions
Time to Grant shortened • Maximum 8 months to Grant Agreement (and evaluation results before 5)
• Grant preparation rather than negotiation
(proposals are evaluated "as is" and not "what could be")
FoF - Call topics for 2016
• Total EC funding: €160 million
• NMBP (77 M€)
2 topics RIA
2 topics IA
1 topic CSA
• ICT (83 M€)
1 topic RIA & CSA (53 M€)
1 topic IA & CSA (30 M€)
• Common deadline: 21 January 2016
• Areas covered include: Additive manufacturing; Machinery
and robot systems, Zero-defect strategies, Evolving production systems, Digital automation, Photonics laser-based production
EeB - Call topics for 2016
• Total EC funding: €57 million
• NMBP (49 M€)
1 topic RIA
2 topics IA
1 topics CSA
• Energy (8 M€)
1 topic IA
• Common deadline: 21 January 2016
• Areas covered include: Highly efficient insulation materials;
thermal energy storage; energy performance assessment; reuse and recycling of construction materials; cost-effective deep renovation
EGVI - Call topics for 2016
• Total EC funding: €96 million
• Transport (80 M€)
1 topic RIA
1 topic IA
1 topic CSA
1 topic ERA-NET Co-fund
• NMBP (16 M€)
1 topic RIA
• Deadlines: Transport, 26 January 2016 NMBP, 21 January 2016
• Areas covered include: low emission powertrains;
hybridisation of road vehicles; road transport technologies; electromobility; weight reduction of high-volume vehicles and components
SPIRE - Call topics for 2016
• Total EC funding: €127 million
• NMBP (74 M€) – deadline 21 January 2016
2 topic RIA
2 topics IA
2 topics CSA
• Energy (13 M€)
1 topic IA (8 M€) – deadline 21 January 2016
1 topic ERA-NET Co-Fund (5 M€) – deadline 15 September 2016
• Environment (40 M€)
1 topic IA (30 M€) – two stages: 8 March and 6 September 2016
1 topic RIA (10 M€) – deadline 16 February 2016
Areas covered include: water management systems; Plant-wide
monitoring and control; high added value process streams; furnace design; use of CO2/CO as feedstock; Business models; waste heat; eco-innovative approaches for circular economy;
HORIZON 2020
Thank you for your attention More information:
HORIZON 2020: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/desktop/en/home.html
Contractual Public-Private Partnerships in research and innovation: http://ec.europa.eu/research/industrial_technologies/ppp-in-research_en.html
Afternoon parallel sessions
Detailed information on the Call topics (with Q & A)
Brokerage event (with presentations of ideas)
Rooms SPIRE FoF EGVI EeB
13.30-18.00
Sicco Mansholt
–
Lord Jenkins
Alcide De Gasperi
Centre Albert Borchette
0D
Centre Albert Borchette
1A-1B-1C
Lunch
• Participants registered for EGVI & EEB
Lunch served in Centre Albert Borchette
• Participants registered for FoF & SPIRE
Lunch served in floor of Alcide de Gasperi