1 / 13

EU Funding: The Good, the Bad & the Ugly Dr Andrew Robertson – Senior Vice President

EU Funding: The Good, the Bad & the Ugly Dr Andrew Robertson – Senior Vice President October 7 2013. EU Funding Overview. Advantages (Good) Disadvantages (Bad) Process (Ugly) Examples. Advantages. Money for R&D Labour & materials Management & dissemination

lara
Download Presentation

EU Funding: The Good, the Bad & the Ugly Dr Andrew Robertson – Senior Vice President

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. EU Funding: The Good, the Bad & the Ugly Dr Andrew Robertson – Senior Vice President October 7 2013

  2. EU Funding Overview • Advantages (Good) • Disadvantages (Bad) • Process (Ugly) • Examples

  3. Advantages • Money for R&D • Labour & materials • Management & dissemination • % funding differs for large company, SME & University • But basically it pays for itself • Projects large & long-term (2, 3, or 4 years) • Excellent visibility • Security of funding (large fraction given up front) • EU project management very “light touch” • Good training ground for junior engineers • Project management • Alignment Strategy Roadmap with customer requirements • Take on more risky development programs

  4. Disadvantages • Extremely competitive • No money for proposal writing • Good proposals take time • Particularly if you are project co-ordinator • May involve travel • From initial call for proposal to project start can be 1-2 years • 8-12 months probably best • 2 years plus if project idea recycled • Once you have project you are committed to do project • Your objectives may have changed • You may be another company! • Changing direction of project difficult • Sometimes difficult for universities to grasp • Proposal writing and reporting process very daunting • If you have several, they tend to have the same annual pattern • Meetings, reports all at same time

  5. The process – part I • Setting up consortium needs time & effort • Proposal writing process takes some getting used to • EU Participant Portal • Writing the proposal has two parts • Technical proposal (~100 pages) • Management (Work-package breakdown, financial) • Needs multiple people involved (from each partner) • Legal representative (contract manager) • Technical lead • Management lead • EU gets nervous if same person has multiple roles! • Need to provide audited accounts • Need to demonstrate resource capability • If project co-ordinator – you have to herd the cats (partners)

  6. The process – part II • Projects reviewed by independent EU technical experts • Given mark out of 15 (if less than 14 – success unlikely) • If you fail • bid can be recycled on a later call • If borderline • co-ordinator will be asked to go to Brussels • Dance-off between borderline projects • If you pass • You enter “negotiation” phase • Trip to Brussels to meet Project Officer (PO) • Grant Preparation Forms (GPFs) to be prepared • Consortium Agreement (CA) to be agreed (IP) • Negotiation phase • EU PO provides review document with ~30-40 changes • As simpleconsortium member – relatively painless • As project co-ordinator – you do all the work • EU sign-off • Typically Sept for October start

  7. The process – part III • Establish payment schedule (e.g. 65% up front) • Organize meetings – best done up front • Kick-off, EU reviews (9 month, 21 month, 36 month) • Maintain regular contact/meetings over 1st 6 months • Conference call every week or every 2 weeks • You get to know the partners • You quickly identify the weaknesses/problems • Leave it too late and problems difficult to recover! • Establish time-sheet procedure for claiming • Organize material spend timeline (load at project front-end) • EU Review meetings • These are serious go/no-go decisions • Boxes ticked related to milestones/timelines • Claim the money! • Claim periods can be 6, 12, 18, 21 months • Spend the money then claim • 15% held back at the end of project • Only receive last payment once all partners have claimed

  8. Tips • If you are newcomer • Do not take on co-ordinator role! • Tag on to decent consortium • Include companies specialising in project management • They know latest EU process/paperwork/portal • They will manage project best – it is their job • Get commitment from all stakeholders within your company • Financial – are there resources that can be committed? • Technical – can you really do the project? • Leadership – is this aligned with long-term strategy? • Ensure project is written the way you can benefit • Keep milestones vague enough for some flexibility • Keep timelines sensible (large gaps between milestones) • Ensure riskiest work is not at beginning of project • Schedule 2 full days for EU review meetings • Day 1 dry-run without EU • Get story straight prior to EU review!

  9. G&H today - a vertically integrated photonics business • Revenues: $100m • Headcount: 600 • 8 manufacturing sites: 6 in the US • 2 in the UK • European CM partner Crystal Growth

  10. Funded Programs • UK and Europe • 10 programs totaling ~ £600k/year. These span all 4 Main Markets • Seed Funding for New Technology • STG program management, Torquay and Ilminster engineering

  11. Example : ISLA 2mm Wavelength Fibre Lasers • Program Description • Develop a common set of “building blocks” for 2um fibre lasers • High power CW lasers, ns pulses and ultrafast • Target designs for ROFIN-Sinar Laser Industrial material processing • G&H Activity • 3 year funding of £597k, Sep 2011- Sep 2014 • Complete alignment with internal R&D programmes • Future Prospects • Marking of plastics, free space communications, Directed Energy Weapons G&H’s 2um Faraday Isolator G&H 2 um Fibre-Q Module

  12. Example : TESLA Optel-m Project • Program Description • Satellite to ground optical communications • Miniature fibre optic amplifier • High efficiency, high reliability, low weight • G&H Activity • 6 month funding of £80K, May 2013 – October 2013 • Designing optical fibre amplifier, and electrical drive circuit • Future Prospects • All future satellites likely to have optical comms • G&H have technology to provide end to end comms system (fibre optics, free space optics) • Commercial airframe manufacturers considering fibre optics for IFE and other avionic systems G&H’s Program Partners G&H EDFA Module design

  13. Good Luck! www.ghphotonics.com

More Related