The Challenge and the Opportunity of Smart Specialisation (RIS3) for Europe s regions: towards an innovation-led economy

Similar documents
Closing the innovation divide in Europe

Synergies between H2020 and ESI funds

Post : RIS 3 and evaluation

Europäischer Forschungsraum und Foresight

MILAN DECLARATION Joining Forces for Investment in the Future of Europe

Raising excellence in all regions: synergies between Horizon 2020 and future Cohesion policy

demonstrator approach real market conditions would be useful to provide a unified partner search instrument for the CIP programme

Developing Smart Specialisation through Targeted Support

Commission proposal for Horizon Europe. #HorizonEU THE NEXT EU RESEARCH & INNOVATION PROGRAMME ( )

Economic and Social Council

COST FP9 Position Paper

Please send your responses by to: This consultation closes on Friday, 8 April 2016.

EC proposal for the next MFF/smart specialisation

Smart Specialisation. Challenges to and Prospects for Implementation. Iryna Kristensen and Nelli Mikkola. RegLAB Årskonferens 2017 Gävle,

Smart Specialisation Strategies methodology and the role of SMEs

Research and Innovation Strategy for the Smart Specialisation of Catalonia. Brussels March 20th, 2014

Commission proposal for Horizon Europe. #HorizonEU THE NEXT EU RESEARCH & INNOVATION PROGRAMME ( )

8365/18 CF/nj 1 DG G 3 C

VSNU December Broadening EU s horizons. Position paper FP9

the EU framework programme for research and innovation

Research and innovation strategies for smart specialization

Horizon 2020 Towards a Common Strategic Framework for EU Research and Innovation Funding

First "Digitising European Industry" Stakeholder Forum, 01 February 2017, Essen

Challenges for the New Cohesion Policy nd joint EU Cohesion Policy Conference

Smart Specialisation for Regional Growth in all of the EU

HORIZON The New EU Framework Programme for Dr. Helge Wessel DG Research and Innovation. Research and Innovation

Horizon Work Programme Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies - Introduction

Europe as a Global Actor. International Dimension of Horizon 2020 and Research Opportunities with Third Countries

HORIZON Leadership in Enabling and Industrial Technologies (LEIT)

European R&D and innovation policy: state of the art and perspectives

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 9 December 2008 (16.12) (OR. fr) 16767/08 RECH 410 COMPET 550

RIS³ in the In the EU Policy Context

Brief presentation of the results Ioana ISPAS ERA NET COFUND Expert Group

Water, Energy and Environment in the scope of the Circular Economy

Burgundy : Towards a RIS3

Smart Specialisation and the Budapest Manifesto

Smart specialisation interactions between the regional and the national

HORIZON Presentation at Manufuture Perspectives on Industrial Technologies in Horizon 2020 and Beyond

Consultation on the Effectiveness of Innovation Support in Europe

Synergies between the ESIFs and H Research Infrastructures

Tools of strategic governance of industrial innovation: Smart specialisation. 24 October, ECRN Jan Larosse

TOWARD THE NEXT EUROPEAN RESEARCH PROGRAMME

Horizon Europe. #HorizonEU THE NEXT EU RESEARCH & INNOVATION PROGRAMME ( ) DG Research and Innovation September Research and Innovation

REGIONAL INTELLIGENCE FOR REGIONAL STRATEGY. Dr. James Wilson Orkestra and Deusto Business School

MEDLAB Mediterranean Living Lab for Territorial Innovation. Panagiotis Georgopoulos Region of Central Macedonia

Horizon Europe The next EU Research & Innovation Programme ( )

CRETE: Towards a RIS3 strategy. Heraklion, Crete, September 2013 ARTEMIS SAITAKIS DIRECTOR SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY PARK OF CRETE

Research Infrastructures in HORIZON 2020 and possible actions to increase the synergies

Position Paper on Horizon ESFRI Biological and Medical Research Infrastructures

Consultancy on Technological Foresight

RIS3 as a tool for change. Alessandro Rainoldi JRC.IPTS 24 June 2013

Smart Specialization Platform:

From FP7 towards Horizon 2020 Workshop on " Research performance measurement and the impact of innovation in Europe" IPERF, Luxembourg, 31/10/2013

DANUBE INNOVATION PARTNERSHIP

Technology Platforms: champions to leverage knowledge for growth

Support R&D and Innovation in Portugal 2020

10246/10 EV/ek 1 DG C II

Smart specialisation. Dominique Foray An Industrial Renaissance in Europe Federation of Austrian Industries Vienna, June 6th 2014

Developing Research Infrastructures for 2020 and beyond

EU initiatives supporting universities

Written response to the public consultation on the European Commission Green Paper: From

6. Introduce a Single Information Single Audit system for all types of ERA instruments.

Developing Research Infrastructures for 2020 and beyond

THESIS PRESENTATION. Gabriele Goebel-Heise 5617A011-4

"Social Innovation: A European Commission perspective and recent activities "

Οι Ευρωπαϊκές πολιτικές για την περιφερειακή διάσταση της έρευνας και καινοτομίας

Conclusions concerning various issues related to the development of the European Research Area

Research Infrastructures and Innovation

Scoping Paper for. Horizon 2020 work programme Societal Challenge 4: Smart, Green and Integrated Transport

Operationalisation of a value-chain approach through interregional cooperation in thematic smart specialisation platforms

Smart specialisation strategies what kind of strategy?

No. prev. doc.: 9108/10 RECH 148 SOC 296 Subject: Social Dimension of the European Research Area - Adoption of Council conclusions

Mainstreaming PE in Horizon 2020: perspectives and ambitions

Werner Wobbe. Employed at the European Commission, Directorate General Research and Innovation

Smart Specialisation as a policy process: rationale, procedures and implications Pr. Dominique Foray

Access to Research Infrastructures under Horizon 2020 and beyond

Production research at European level supports regions and SMEs

Enhancing and focusing EU international cooperation in research and innovation: A strategic approach

Space in the next MFF Commision proposals

Research DG. European Commission. Sharing Visions. Towards a European Area for Foresight

SEAS-ERA STRATEGIC FORUM

What is on the Horizon? 2020

Commission proposal for Horizon Europe. #HorizonEU THE NEXT EU RESEARCH & INNOVATION PROGRAMME ( )

7656/18 CF/MI/nj 1 DG G 3 C

Towards a new place-based approach & a smartly specialised, innovative Danube Region

Conclusions on the future of information and communication technologies research, innovation and infrastructures

Work Programme Fostering the innovation potential of RIs

Data users and data producers interaction: the Web-COSI project experience

INNOVATION POLICY LOCUS: THE EC RIS3 PUSH TOWARDS A PARTICIPATION APPROACH

NOTE Strategic Forum for International S&T Cooperation (SFIC) opinion on the ERA Framework (input to the ERAC opinion on the ERA Framework)

HORIZON Peter van der Hijden. ACA Seminar What s new in Brussels Policies and Programme 20 th January Research & Innovation.

The Biological and Medical Sciences Research Infrastructures on the ESFRI Roadmap

IESI ICT Enabled Social Innovation in support to the implementation of the EU Social Investment Package (SIP) Objectives & Research Design

An exploration of the future Latin America and Caribbean (ALC) and European Union (UE) bi-regional cooperation in science, technology and innovation

Horizon 2020 opportunities for research and innovation

Pacts for Europe 2020: Good Practices and Views from EU Cities and Regions

HORIZON 2020 The new Framework Programme for Research and Innovation

COMMISSION STAFF WORKING PAPER EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT. Accompanying the

RIS3 from Strategic Orientations towards Policy Implementation: The Challenges Claire NAUWELAERS Independent expert in STI policy

Lund Revisited. Next steps in tackling Societal Challenges

Transcription:

The Challenge and the Opportunity of Smart Specialisation (RIS3) for Europe s regions: towards an innovation-led economy Akademia Leona Koźmińskiego Centrum Badawcze Transformacji, Integracji i Globalizacji Dr Dimitri CORPAKIS Head of Unit, Spreading Excellence and Widening Participation Connecting Research and Innovation to Regional and Urban policies Directorate for the Innovation Union and the ERA DG Research and Innovation European Commission

Setting the scene The knowledge economy changes everything Globalisation has pushed the boundaries and changed traditional growth strategies Global value chains have redrawn the map for conceiving and producing products and services Countries and regions that are not able to adapt (will) see their economies being marginalised Global (re)positioning necessary - Need for a new growth proposition based on knowledge assets 2

World competition intensifies CHINA EU28

Regional Innovation Scoreboard 190 European regions, 11 indicators, 4 years, 4 performance groups: Innovation leaders: 20% or more above EU27 Innovation followers: less than 20% above but more than 10% below EU27 Moderate innovators: less than 10% below but more than 50% below EU27 Modest innovators: 50% or less below EU27 Innovation divide between North-West and South-East Regional performance groups match the IUS groups quite well Courtesy: Hugo Hollanders MERIT, Maastricht University

Innovation performance (2014) R&D expenditure in the business sector as % of GDP (2011) 5

Europe s innovation divide undermines competitiveness Large parts of the EU out of sync Modest and Moderate Innovators holding back the EU as a whole Grand policy designs at risk without a sound and functioning base Identification of priorities and strategies of crucial importance yet still, among the major bottlenecks 6

Turning the European Union into an Innovation Union The Innovation Union flagship initiative aims at creating the best conditions for Europe's researchers and entrepreneurs to innovate A broader approach to innovation: Improving framework conditions for innovation to flourish meshing research and technological development with - Product innovation, service innovation, innovation in design etc., including process and organisational innovation - Social innovation, public sector innovation, eco-innovation etc. - Exploration of new business models > Both technological & non-technological > Both incremental & disruptive innovation

The promise of Horizon 2020, the new Framework Programme for Research and Innovation A core part of Europe 2020, Innovation Union & European Research Area: Responding to the economic crisis to invest in future jobs and growth > Addressing people s concerns about their livelihoods, safety and environment > Strengthening the EU s global position in research, innovation and technology Novelties A single programme bringing together three separate programmes/initiatives Coupling research to innovation from research to retail, all forms of innovation Focus on societal challenges facing EU society, e.g. health, clean energy and transport Continuation of investment in frontier research Simplified access, for all companies, universities, institutes in all EU countries and beyond. 8

Key issues with catching-up economies o Catching up countries may succeed provided their social capabilities are sufficiently developed to permit successful exploitation of technologies already employed by the technological leaders. o Critical factors are those limiting the diffusion of knowledge, the rate of structural change, the accumulation of capital and the expansion of demand. Moris Abramovitz, Catching Up, Forging Ahead and Falling Behind, The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 46, No 2, The Tasks of Economic History (Jun.1986), pp. 385-406 Institutional instruments may be needed.. In particular what the developing country/ firm may need are institutional instruments that improve: o links with the technology frontier, o links with markets (and sophisticated users), o supply of needed skills, services and other inputs, o the local innovation system/network. Jan Fagerberg and Manuel Mira Godinho in Paper presented at the Workshop The Many Guises of Innovation: What we have learnt and where we are heading, Ottawa, October 23-24.2003, conference organized by Statistics Canada.

Spreading excellence and widening participation through Horizon 2020 New Part IV in Horizon 2020 (budget EUR 816M) Main actions on Teaming (Centres of Excellence), Twinning (institutional networking), ERA Chairs (bringing excellence to institutions); also Policy Support Facility (Commission led) and a special action from COST on Widening

The new Cohesion policy (ESIF European Structural and Investment Funds) ESIF will focus on Europe 2020 objectives for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth / list of 11 thematic objectives for ESIF developed around the Europe 2020 priorities New regulatory provisions for thematic concentration (R&I part of the minimum 60-80% concentration for ERDF funds in more developed regions - 50% in less developed regions) Support to applied research and innovation for the purpose of regional socioeconomic development Capacity building for innovation and growth through the promotion of innovation friendly business environments Smart Specialisation strategic approach to economic development through strategic support for R&I / Ex-ante Conditionality for the use of the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) for any kind of R&D&I investments 11

EU Cohesion Policy EU R&D and Innovation Policy future Horizon 2020 Differences Based largely on individual R&D and innovation Projects of a pre-competitive nature aiming at advancing knowledge and fostering innovation for growth and jobs, including but not exclusively frontier research (also co-funding national and regional programmes) Based on multiannual Programmes aiming to reduce regional disparities, including through close to the market competitive R&D and innovation efforts Awarded directly to final beneficiaries (firms, public and private R&D centres and Universities, including national and regional governments in certain cases Art. 185, ERA-NET etc.) Awarded through shared management exclusively to national and regional public intermediaries Through transnational competitive calls addressed to international groupings through peer review based on excellence criteria Non competitive attribution addressed to regional players based on strategic planning negotiation (however competitive calls possible and rising at national or regional level) Synergies and Complementarities Horizon 2020 will focus on tackling major societal challenges, maximising the competitiveness impact of research and innovation (Industrial leadership) and raising and spreading levels of excellence in the research base Cohesion policy will focus on galvanising smart specialisation that will act as a capacity building instrument, based on learning mechanisms and the creation of critical skills in regions and Member States. 12

Research and Innovation investment priorities for the ERDF Strengthening research, technological development and innovation: Enhancing research and innovation infrastructure (R&I) and capacities to develop R&I excellence and promoting centres of competence, in particular those of European interest Promoting business R&I investment, product and service development, technology transfer, social innovation and public service application, demand simulation, networking, clusters and open innovation through smart specialisation Supporting technological and applied research, pilot lines, early product validation actions, advanced manufacturing capabilities and first production in Key Enabling Technologies and diffusion of general purpose technologies 13

Bottom-up or Top-down? Both approaches needed, mediated by a place-based approach (smart specialisation strategies) A European level identification of priorities is needed for pushing European capabilities towards a leading edge (Horizon 2020) A place-based approach is also needed to identify the unique opportunities of countries / regions in a bottom-up mode (Smart Specialisation) A genuine S3 is therefore key towards a true innovation ecosystem

Keys to Synergies Smart Specialisation ex-ante conditionality Thematic Concentration (both under Cohesion policy) Policy Research and Innovation 15

A backgrounder on Smart Specialisation (I) The concept of smart specialisation traces its origins back to the debate on the transatlantic productivity gap. Initially conceived by Dominique Foray and Bart van Ark, and later given additional impetus by other co -authors Paul David, Bronwyn Hall and by other members of the Knowledge for Growth expert group (2009). Transatlantic differences in R&D intensity used to explain differences in growth terms between USA and Europe reflected also on differences in the way new technologies diffuse in the broader economy, with a special emphasis on ICT. That was thought to explain largely the productivity differences observed. Policy Research and Innovation 16

A backgrounder on Smart Specialisation (II) Concept of smart specialisation central to economic development and growth policy A central pillar of the Europe 2020 Strategy (see also Flagship Initiative Innovation Union [COM(2010)546] and the EU Budget Review [COM(2010)700] A central element in the development of a reformed European Cohesion Policy, which is based on the principles of smart, green, and inclusive growth. Regions / MS are required to identify the sectors, technological domains, where they would seem to have competitive advantage, and then to focus their regional development policies so as to promote innovation, based in these fields. This development would then be rooted on knowledge assets. Policy Research and Innovation 17

D.Foray, P.A. David and B.Hall : Smart Specialisation: the Concept Knowledge for Growth expert group for the EC 18

A simple idea (KfG brief no 9, 2009) It should be understood at the outset that the idea of smart specialisation does not call for imposing specialisation through some form of top-down industrial policy that is directed in accord with a pre-conceived grand plan. Nor should the search for smart specialisation involve a foresight exercise, ordered from a consulting firm. We are suggesting an entrepreneurial process of discovery that can reveal what a country or region does best in terms of science and technology. That is, we are suggesting a learning process to discover the research and innovation domains in which a region can hope to excel. In this learning process, entrepreneurial actors are likely to play leading roles in discovering promising areas of future specialisation, not least because the needed adaptations to local skills, materials, environmental conditions, and market access conditions are unlikely to be able to draw on codified, publicly shared knowledge, and instead will entail gathering localized information and the formation of social capital assets. 19 Policy Research and Innovation

Smart Specialisation is not what you usually think it is It is not about pure specialisation since this involves huge risks about potential lock-ins It is not about selecting and favouring only a few sectors but this might be an intermediate stage It is rather about identifying the new opportunities that often emerge at the intersection of existing sectors and technologies the target of the "entrepreneurial discovery process" Policy Research and Innovation 20

Key points on Smart Specialisation: Stimulate innovation through entrepreneurship, modernisation, adaptation Dare to introduce innovative governance solutions Think about strategic technological diversification on areas of relative strength and potential Increase diversification promote new linkages, synergies and spillovers Adapted from Philip McCann (2012) 21 Policy Research and Innovation

Regional Policy 160 EU regions (from 19MS) + 13 countries at national level 41 regions + 4 MS peerreviewed Over 110 other regions attended workshops Trainings, thematic seminars RIS3 guide Web-site Newsletter Register here: http://s3platform.jrc.ec.europa.eu/registration 22

Smart Specialisation Strategies (RIS3): What we have seen in the submitted Operational Programmes (Oct.2014; Rough Typology, RTD) 'Specific' RIS3: New document prepared in light of ex-ante conditionality, at least taking account of RIS3 guide and support of REGIO/RTD experts (NL, ES, FR, IT, PT). Existing 'Research'/'Innovation' or equivalent strategy Single document (AT, DE, BE) or group of existing documents (DK, EE, SE, Wales) Existing strategy + RIS3 summary/update: (FI, IE) Action plans annexed to Partnership Agreement or relevant Operational Programme(s). Varying level of detail and deadlines (regulation allows until 2016 but most in 2015). 23

RIS3: The Catalunia case 24

Smart connectivity: the need for interregional cooperation on Smart Specialisation (a new role for European Territorial Cooperation / ETC) Policy Research and Innovation

Strategic/systemic importance of ETC in the context of Europe 2020 delivery Exchanging thematic knowledge, tools and methods to build delivery capacity as well as coordinating delivery of Europe 2020 is a key issue for future ETC New strategic importance of ETC: Reinforcing territorial cooperation is vital on thematic as well as process level: Need for a) capacity to deal with challenges (e.g. societal needs/flagships: Innovation/smart specialisation/industrial policy, resource efficiency, employability/adaptability, digital agenda), b)coordinated delivery, aligning policies and roadmaps, Policy Research and Innovation

ETC as 'change agent' All 3 dimensions of Europe 2020 need strong cross-border, trans-national and inter-regional cooperation for goal achievement. ETC platforms and projects can act as change agents for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth. In smart growth the coordination/cooperation/alignment requirement is strongly enshrined and motivated by the concept of smart specialisation/ris3 conditionality. Smart specialisation makes cooperation an economic imperative. Art. 87 and ETC are key tools. ETC activities as platforms for validating smart specialisation, for critical mass, synergies and complementary capabilities with neighbours and likeminded regions across EU Policy Research and Innovation

ETC: Need for change " territorial cooperation programmes do not always focus on a limited number of priority topics, but adopt rather broad intervention strategies, making it difficult to achieve clearly-identifiable impacts." " need to establish more pro-active and ongoing interaction with the Convergence and Competitiveness programmes and other territorial cooperation programmes operating in the programme area, to ensure complementarity, coordination and synergies ".. need for more coordination and strategic focus, both at general policy and individual programme level" Policy Research and Innovation

Overarching policy orientations The overarching policy orientations for future cohesion policy are also applicable in the context of European Territorial Cooperation: Alignment of CP with Europe 2020 Reinforced strategic programming Thematic concentration Reinforcing performance Stronger focus on results Simplified delivery system Policy Research and Innovation

What needs to be strengthened Relevance to national/regional OPs Focus on themes/issues where ETC can add value Thematic coordination/knowledge management at programme level + methodological guidance Relevance beyond narrow project partnerships Project quality, in particular, result-orientation Performance monitoring at programme and project level (not input/output oriented but results and outcome) Also: Tackle oversubscription and resulting frustration among beneficiaries Policy Research and Innovation

Major issues on planning ahead Structural deficiencies in the planning authorities at national and regional level Absorptive capacity Difficulties of small players in integrating global innovation value chains Difficult or non-existent cooperation between universities and the business communities Spiral of marginalisation and lack of ambition Huge gaps in research and innovation investments correlate with gaps in innovation performance Commission response: emphasis on better planning tools and on institutional networking with no compromise on excellence 31 Policy Research and Innovation

Thank you! dimitri.corpakis@ec.europa.eu Policy Research and Innovation 32