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Bioeconomy and Bioregions . David Castle. The Panel. Alessandro Rosiello Innogen, U Edinburgh Michele Mastroeni Innogen , U Edinburgh Patricia Osseweijer Delft University of Technology. The Topic. Bioeconomy Bioregions Smart specialisation Evaluation Governance.
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Bioeconomy and Bioregions David Castle
The Panel • Alessandro RosielloInnogen, U Edinburgh • Michele MastroeniInnogen, U Edinburgh • Patricia OsseweijerDelft University of Technology
The Topic • Bioeconomy • Bioregions • Smart specialisation • Evaluation • Governance
European Commission (2012) “The bioeconomy encompasses the production of renewable biological resources and their conversion into food feed, bio-based products and bioenergy. It includes agriculture, forestry, fisheries, food and pulp and paper production, as well as parts of chemical, biotechnological and energy industries. Its sectors have a strong innovation potential due to their use of a wide range of sciences (life sciences, agronomy, ecology, food science and social sciences), enabling and industrial technologies (biotechnology, nanotechnology, information and communication technologies (ICT), and engineering), and local and tacit knowledge.”
Bioeconomy in Europe • €2 Trillion in the European Union (17% of EU economy) • Employs 22 million people (9% of the work force)
BECOTEPS 2011 BECOTEPS - Bio-Economy Technology Platforms 2011
European Annual Turnover/Employment European Commission 2012
Major challenges • Models of innovation • IP / Reg&Gov / Democratic Engagement • Integration of technological and social innovation • Industrialised and developing country comparisons • Skills agenda • Regional and national priorities • Renewed interest in industrial policy • Renewed interest in regional innovation • Evaluation of projects and programmes
The Panel • Alessandro RosielloInnogen, U Edinburgh • Michele MastroeniInnogen, U Edinburgh • Patricia OsseweijerDelft University of Technology