1 / 16

H2020 and CEF 2014 - 2020 Javier Hernandez-Ros Creativity DG CNECT, European Commission

H2020 and CEF 2014 - 2020 Javier Hernandez-Ros Creativity DG CNECT, European Commission. http:// cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/creativity/creativity_en.html. European programmes: where are we today ?. FP7: Research CIP: Innovation Culture and Media - all these programmes end 2013

eddy
Download Presentation

H2020 and CEF 2014 - 2020 Javier Hernandez-Ros Creativity DG CNECT, European Commission

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. H2020 and CEF2014 - 2020Javier Hernandez-RosCreativityDG CNECT, European Commission http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/creativity/creativity_en.html

  2. European programmes: whereare wetoday ? • FP7: Research • CIP: Innovation • Culture and Media - all these programmes end 2013 • Structural funds(e.g. digitisationprojects)

  3. Research and Innovation - H2020 • 3 priorities: • Excellence Science • Industrial Leadership • Societal Challenges • Total proposedfunding (million euro): 79 271

  4. Excellence Science European Research Council Frontier research by the best individual teams 13 268 Future and Emerging Technologies Collaborative research to open new fields of innovation 3 100 Marie Curie actions Opportunities for training and career development 5 572 Research infrastructures (including e-infrastructure) Ensuring access to world-class facilities2 478

  5. I. EXCELLENCE SCIENCEFunding Opportunities for Libraries Challenge 4 - Research infrastructures • 4.1.3. Development, deployment and operation of ICT-based e-infrastructures The aim is to achieve by 2020 a single and open European space for online research where researchers enjoy leading-edge, ubiquitous and reliable services for networking and computing, and seamless and open access to e-Science environments and global data resources. • To achieve this goal, support will be given to: global research and education networks providing advanced, standardised and scalable inter-domain services on-demand; grid and cloud infrastructures providing virtually unlimited computational and data processing capacity; an ecosystem of supercomputing facilities, advancing towards exa-scale; a software and service infrastructure, e.g. for simulation and visualisation; real-time collaborative tools; and an interoperable, open and trusted scientific data infrastructure.

  6. Industrial Leadership Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies (ICT, nanotechnologies, materials, biotechnology, manufacturing, space)13 781 Access to risk finance Leveraging private finance and venture capital for research and innovation 3 538 Innovation in SMEs Fostering all forms of innovation in all types of SMEs 619

  7. II. INDUSTRIAL LEADERSHIPFunding Opportunities for Libraries Challenge 1 - Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies (LEIT) • 1.1.4 Content technologies and information management: ICT for digital content and creativity • The objective is to strengthen Europe’s position as provider of products and services based on individual and business creativity. It will do so by providing professionals and citizens with new tools to create, access, exploit, preserve and re-use all forms of digital content in any language and to model, analyse, and visualise vast amounts of data, including linked data. This includes new technologies for language, learning, interaction, digital preservation, web design, content access, analytics and media; intelligent and adaptive information management systems based on advanced data mining, machine learning, statistical analysis and visual computing technologies.

  8. Societal Challenges Health, demographic change and wellbeing 8 033 Food security, sustainable agriculture, marine and maritime research & the bioeconomy 4 152 Secure, clean and efficient energy 5 782 Smart, green and integrated transport 6 802 Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials 3 160 Inclusive, innovative, reflective societies, security 3 819

  9. III. SOCIETAL CHALLENGESFunding Opportunities for Libraries Challenge 6 - Inclusive, innovative and reflective societies • 6.3 Reflective societies - Cultural heritage and European identity • Aims at contributing to an understanding of Europe's intellectual basis: its history, traditions, and regional and national identities. In this context, the important role of collections in libraries, museums and archives is highlighted, as well as the need to make this material accessible to researchers and citizens, also through new technologies, to enable a look to the future through the archive of the past. Accessibility and preservation of cultural heritage in these forms is needed for the vitality of the living engagements within and across European cultures now and contributes to sustainable economic growth. • Research should provide easy-to use tools and services that are demonstrated and validated in large-scale testbedsand can become transparently integrated into social media services. The knowledge and tools resulting from EU-funded research could be used to improve the long-term preservation of commercial online content which is an area with a high potential for economic growth.

  10. H2020 - WP preparations 2014 - 2015 • October to December 2012: Strategic Programming and Orientations • January 2013: start of WP drafting • June/July: MFF Decision • July/August: H2020 Decision • September: Appointment of Programme Committees • September: Selection of NCPs • October: WP Decision • November 6-8: ICT 2013 in Vilnius – Publication of first calls • Spring 2014: closing of first call

  11. Open access to publications and data in Horizon 2020 • Broader and more rapid access to scientific papers and data will make it easier for researchers and businesses to build on the findings of public-funded research. • This will boost Europe's innovation capacity and give citizens quicker access to the benefits of scientific discoveries. • As of 2014, all articles produced with funding from Horizon 2020 will have to be accessible: • articles will either immediately be made accessible online by the publisher ('Gold' open access) - up-front publication costs can be eligible for reimbursement by the European Commission; or • researchers will make their articles available through an open access repository no later than six months (12 months for articles in the fields of social sciences and humanities) after publication ('Green' open access). • The Commission has also recommended that Member States take a similar approach to the results of research funded under their own domestic programmes. The goal is for 60% of European publicly-funded research articles to be available under open access by 2016.

  12. Access to digital resources of European heritageCEF: Connecting Europe Facility In October 2011 the Commission adopted a plan which will fund €50 billion worth of investment to improve Europe's transport, energy and digital networks. The Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) is one of the key initiatives proposed by the Commission in the context of its package for delivering sustainable growth and jobs. The CEF shall concentrate on high EU added-value projects and shall finance projects which fill the missing links in Europe's energy, transportand digital backbone and remove bottlenecks.

  13. Access to digital resources of European heritageCEF: Connecting Europe Facility • Digital services - the money would be used for grants to build infrastructure needed to roll out e-ID, eProcurement, electronic health care records, Europeana, eJustice and customs-related services. The money would serve to ensure interoperability and meet the costs of running the infrastructure at European level, linking up Member States' infrastructures. • For the generic services, CEF will fund: • aggregation of content held by cultural institutions and private content holders in the Member States and contribution of the aggregated content to Europeana • crowd-sourcing facilities encouraging interactivity and enabling users to make an active contribution to the site • user-friendly services for the portal as well as cross-language access • exchange of rights information and licensing mechanism; • competence centres on digitisation and preservation of digital cultural heritage; • content repositories for cultural institutions and user-generated

  14. Access to digital resources of European heritageCEF: Connecting Europe Facility • The objective related to Europeanais building on the current 'Europeana' portal and has a two-fold approach: • improve access to culture for all, including for education, work and leisure • serve as a hub for the creative industries and for the innovative re-use of cultural material, thus turning Europe's cultural heritage into a lasting asset for the economy. • For the core service platform, the CEF will fund the continuous coordination, operation, maintenance, enhancement and promotion of the central services of the Europeana portal (www.europeana.eu) and infrastructure and related networks including: • single access point providing search/access to cultural heritage content at item level • a set of application programming interfaces to interact with the infrastructure (search for data, download data) • support for metadata adaptation and ingestion of new content • information on conditions for reuse of the content accessible through the infrastructure • the means for establishing a lively online dialogue with content providers, users (citizens accessing the portal) and re-users (creative industries) of the infrastructure.

  15. CREATIVE EUROPE - DG EAC • "CREATIVE EUROPE " - support programme for Europe's cultural and creative sectors • Help the cultural and creative sectors to seize the opportunities of the ‘digital age’ and globalisation. • Enable the sectors to reach their potential so that they can contribute to the Europe 2020 goals for sustainable growth, jobs and social cohesion. • Open up new international opportunities, markets and audiences Builds on the success of the MEDIA and Culture programmes. • More funding for transnational cultural activities within and outside of the EU • Support schemes tailored to the specific needs of the audiovisual and the cultural sectors in the EU.

  16. CREATIVE EUROPE - DG EAC • Opportunities: • 300 000 artists and cultural professionals and their work receive funding to reach new audiences beyond their home countries. • More than 1 000 European films would receive distribution support, enabling them to be seen by audiences throughout Europe and beyond, on traditional and digital platforms. • Thousands of cultural organisations and professionals from Europe would benefit from training to gain new skills and to strengthen their capacity to operate internationally. • 2 500 European cinemas would receive support enabling them to ensure that at least 50% of the films they show are European. • More than 5 500 books and other literary works will receive support for translation, which will allow readers to enjoy them in their mother tongue.

More Related