Innovation boost to tackle Climate Change
17.12.2009, 11:13
Budapest (Hungary) December 17 (PROTEXT/ots) - While Heads of State are
negotiating to reach a substantial climate agreement in Copenhagen, the EU
is stepping forward to take the lead in developing innovations to tackle
climate change. The European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT)
has launched a groundbreaking new research, innovation and education
initiative that aims to answer the various challenges of climate change. A
pan-European consortium encompassing sixteen world class partners from
academia, and from the private and public sectors, will implement this new
and unique network.
The new “Climate Knowledge and Innovation Community (Climate-KIC)” is a
major initiative the EIT has announced today in Budapest (see box). The
Climate-KIC program brings together the expertise of world class partners
in a shared effort to make a step-change in Europe’s innovation capacity to
meet the climate change challenge in the years to come and to prepare for a
new low-carbon society. In responding to this challenge, we need to bring
about changes to how we produce, distribute, and consume goods, and to how
we meet our requirements for energy, food, and water in the context of
protecting the environment.
Major investments - high profile partners
With €120 million requested from the EIT, the partners themselves planned
to contribute roughly five times that amount so that eventually a total of
up to €750 million would be spent over the next four years on a range of
innovation and education programs. The detailed numbers that finally will
be approved by the EIT have however not been communicated yet and are
subject to negotiation. It is the first time that companies from various
sectors and scientific experts will work together in a large integrated
initiative in the area of climate change. «We are very pleased to have been
selected for this important initiative that will equip the next generation
of entrepreneurs and technologists with innovative tools and which will
pioneer new thinking and practice », says Prof. Bert Van der Zwaan, as
interim CEO on behalf of the partners of the Climate-KIC. The Climate-KIC
was selected at the end of a one year process.
Among the sixteen core partners are universities, companies and public
sector organizations. From academia, the core partners of the consortium
are: ETH Zurich (Switzerland), Imperial College London (UK), a French
consortium consisting of Paris area campus (IPSL, CEA, ParisTech, UVSQ,
INRA, MeteoFR, Advancity), a German consortium led by the Potsdam Institute
for Climate Impact Research (including TU Berlin, TU Munich and GFZ), as
well as a Dutch consortium consisting among others of Utrecht University,
Delft University of Technology and Wageningen University and Research
Center. The partner companies are: Bayer, Beluga Shipping GmbH, Cisco, DSM,
EDF, SAP, Schiphol, Shell, Solar Valley, and Thales. Climate KIC also
brings together an association of six major European regions which will
test, develop and facilitate the real-world application of new
eco-innovations.
Educate a new generation
The Climate-KIC will foster interactions between European research,
education and business innovation.The aim is to create a generation of
climate change entrepreneurs who will have the multidisciplinary skills to
develop economically, environmentally and socially sustainable approaches
to coping with the effects of global warming. Furthermore, roadmaps with
short- and long-term goals will be developed to elaborate investment
strategies and to support innovation in small and medium sized enterprises.
The research and educational projects are to be conducted at five
co-location centers in Berlin/Potsdam, London, Paris area, Utrecht and
Zurich, places where the partners will come together to work on the
projects.
Pioneering research and innovation projects
The Climate-KIC will focus on strategic research and innovation projects
that are expected to have the greatest impact in terms of enabling regions
to mitigate against climate change, and adapt to its effects. Four themes
are of particular interest: Assessing climate change and managing its
drivers, Transitioning to resilient low carbon cities, Adaptive water
management, and Zero carbon production systems.
For example, among the numerous challenges European societies are facing
with regard to the climate change, one is the question of how to monitor,
assess and certify the effective CO2 emissions on a local level, to
establish a fair market where CO2 certificates are to be traded. This
requires new collaborations between companies engaged in the development of
sensor/observation technologies, and those involved in modeling and
accounting. Using such cross-fertilization of the partners’ expertise, one
of the many projects aims to develop tools and mechanisms to account and
verify emissions of CO2 from the level of companies and cities to the globe.
Other projects will develop new tools for urban planning, for water
management, new adaptive agricultural processes or low-carbon emission
manufacturing in various sectors.
«A strength of the KIC initiative is that with sixteen partners from
various sectors we will be able to develop solutions that integrate well in
the whole value chain», says Prof. Bert Van der Zwaan.
Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs)
The Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs) are an initiative of the
European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT). Their main goals are
to create a vision for a sustainable future with strong impact on European
society and to transfer higher education, research and innovation
activities to the business context and their commercial application by
creating e.g. spin-offs and start-ups. The KICs are financially supported
by the European Union, which has pledged initial funding of over 300
million Euros, and by corporate partners joining particular KICs. The KICs
will be established for periods of up to fifteen years to guarantee mid- to
long-term perspectives to the chosen partnerships. In an initial round the
EIT has launched three KICs in the fields of climate change mitigation and
adaptation, sustainable energy and future information and communication
society.
For further information:
www.eit.eurpopa.eu
www.climate-kic-proposal.org/ (including information on the Climate-KIC
partners)
Please note that the EIT will hold a
press conference in Brussels on Thursday: 17 December, at 11.15 a.m.
For more details see: http://www.eit.europa.eu/<\/A>.
For the webcast see: http://scic.ec.europa.eu/str/basic/berlsal7/<\/A>
Further Information (Press offices)
ETH Zurich
Corporate Communications, Media Relations
Roman Klingler
Phone: +41 (0)44 632 41 41
media_relations@cc.ethz.ch<\/A>
Imperial College London
Press Office
Laura Gallagher: Communications Department
Phone: +44 (0)20 7594 6702
l.gallagher@imperial.ac.uk<\/A>
Dutch Consortium
Universiteit Utrecht
Communicatie Service Centrum, Press Office
Peter van der Wilt
Phone: +31 (0)30 253 3705
P.M.vanderWilt@uu.nl<\/A>
German Consortium
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Press Office
Uta Pohlmann & Patrick Eickemeier
Phone: +49 331 266 2507
presse@pik-potsdam.de<\/A>
Paris Consortium
Press Office
Stephane Laveissiere
Phone: +33 (0)1 64 50 27 53
stephane.laveissiere@cea.fr<\/A>