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Russian Centre for Science and Culture in Athens October 09, 201 4

Research infrastructures in Russia: current status, problems and prospects for development. Marine Melkonyan Coordinator of NCP for Research Infrastructures The National University of Science and Technology “MISIS”. Russian Centre for Science and Culture in Athens October 09, 201 4.

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Russian Centre for Science and Culture in Athens October 09, 201 4

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  1. The International exhibition -workshop Research infrastructures in Russia: current status, problems and prospects for development Marine Melkonyan Coordinator of NCP for Research Infrastructures The National University of Science and Technology “MISIS” Russian Centre for Science and Culture in Athens October 09, 2014

  2. Contents Definition and Significance of Research Infrastructures Current status of Research Infrastructures in Russia Mega science and FP7 projects in the field of Research Infrastructures with Russian partners Research Infrastructures in Russia. Skolkovo, Rosnano Promoting Russian-European Research Infrastructure Partnership. Some proposals

  3. Definition of Research Infrastructures (RIs) Research infrastructures are facilities, resources and services that are used by the research communities to conduct research and foster innovation Include: • Major scientific equipments(or sets of instruments) • Knowledge-based resources such as collections, archives or scientific data • e-infrastructures, such as data and computing systems and communication networks • Any other infrastructure of a unique nature essential to achieve excellence in R&I

  4. Research Infrastructures in Russia Interactive map 253 Joint Use Centers (JUCs) in 7 Federal districts • 110 Unique Scientific Equipment & Complexes (USE&C) Interactive map and database of JUCs are available: http://www.ckp-rf.ru

  5. Current status of Research Infrastructures in Russia - I • 1990s-2002: Establishing the National Network of JUCs: themain supporter the Russian Foundationof Basic Research (RFBR) • 2002-2006: A new impetus was given in the frame of the Federal Targeted Programme R&D in priority areas of S&T • 2007- 2012: Development of JUCs in the frame of the “Assistance in the Development of Joint Use Centers of Scientific Equipment” activity 5 of the FTP R&D in priority fields of the S&T Complex of Russia: Development of Infrastructure for Nano-Industryin the RF New innovative instruments ROSNANO (2007) and SKOLKOVO(2010) • 2014 – 2020: Support of JUCs within a new FTP R&D in priority fields of the S&T complex of Russia with focusing on the international cooperation

  6. FTP «R&D for priority areas of the development of S&T complex of Russia» for the 2014—2020 Program goal: to form a competitive and effective R&D sector and ensure its leading role in the process of technological modernization of the Russian economy Program objectives 1. to form the advancing S&T basis for research in priority areas; 2. to provide the R&D system planning and coordination; 3 . to integrate the Russian R&D sector into global international innovative system; 4 . to increase the efficiency of R&D sector. Program budget (mln. Rubles) Total from 2014 to 2020 – 239 023,77   incl.: Federal budget – 202 228,77 Other sources of funding – 36 795,00  

  7. FTP «R&D for priority areas of the development of S&T complex of Russia» for the 2014—2020   Activities of the FTPon R&D

  8. FTPson Research and Development and Scientific and Pedagogical Personnel for the 2014—2020   International S&T cooperation in FTP FTP «R&D for priority areas of the development of S&T complex of Russia» for the 2014—2020   Activity 2.1 Research in the framework of international multilateral and bilateral cooperation Activity 2.2 R&D support in the framework of cooperation with EU countries

  9. FTP «R&D for priority areas of the development of S&T complex of Russia» for the 2014—2020   Activity 2.1 Project funding: up to 1,14 mil. Euro per project/per year Required co-funding: not less than 50% (provided by the foreign partner) Duration of the projects: 1-3 years (long-term projects – up to 4 years) It’s planning to support up to 300 projects totally Research in the framework of international multilateral and bilateral cooperation

  10. FTP «R&D for priority areas of the development of S&T complex of Russia» for the 2014—2020   Activity 2.2 coordinated calls Project funding: up to 1,14 mil. Euro per project/per year Required co-funding: not less than 50% (provided by the foreign partner) Duration of the projects: 1-3 years (long-term projects – up to 4 years) It’s planning to support up to 200 projects totally Supporting cooperation in R&D with EU countries

  11. Skolkovo Innovation Centre http://www.sk.ru/ • The strategic goal is to concentrate international intellectual capital, thereby stimulating the development of break-through projects and technologies • The Skolkovo Foundation and its partners transform the infrastructure, resources and other possibilities into effective services for companies that are project participants • 5 clusters within the Skolkovo project are created, each one developing innovative projects Energy Efficient Technologies IT Cluster Over 172 companies Biomedical Cluster Space Technology and Telecommunications Nuclear Technologies

  12. Rosnano. Support of infrastructure • ROSNANO encourages development • of an innovation infrastructure: • nanotechnology centers of excellence, • business incubators, • the early investment funds • The combination of these elements assists to overcome barriers present in the innovation process such as: market, technology, interdisciplinary, geographical barriers. 4 years work 130 projects BUDGET ~ € 15 billion www.themegallery.com

  13. ROSNANO Foundation for Infrastructure and Educational Programs Innovative Infrastructure: Bridge between science and business Average financing of Nanotechnology Center project: • Investments in equipment ― € 29 millions • Investments in operational budget (3-5 years) ― € 6 millions • Number of start-up created (5 years) ― 50 • By 2015, RUSNANO launch the start-up of 15 Nanotechnology Centers, creating 400 new technology start-ups

  14. Need of Research Infrastructures of global interest (reasons) • High cost and complexity of the needed infrastructure • The global scope of the scientific challenge (e.g. the better understanding of health or environment problems, which requires harmonization of methods of methods and standards) • The size of the problem (or of the solution) • Standardization and integration of data collected in different countries • The availability of e-infrastructures for data collection is an essential element of the international and global RIs www.themegallery.com

  15. Joint Institute for Nuclear Research JINR, Dubna • The Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) is an international intergovernmental scientific research organisation established in 1956 • It is situated in Dubna not far from Moscow in the Russian Federation • JINR has 18 Member States: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, Cuba, the Czech Republic, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Moldova, Mongolia, Poland, Romania, Russia, the Slovak Republic, Ukraine, Uzbekistan and Vietnam; Agreements are signed on the governmental level with Egypt, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Serbia and the Republic of South Africa • The main fields of JINR's activity are theoretical and experimental studies in elementary particle physics, nuclear physics, and condensed matter physics. • The research policy of JINR is determined by the Scientific Council, which consists of eminent scientists from the Member States as well as famous researchers from China, France, Germany, Greece, India, Italy, Switzerland, the USA, and the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) • http://www.jinr.ru/section.asp?sd_id=39

  16. International Megaprojects with the Russian participation http://www.kiae.ru/pages/main/5354/5917/index.shtml • International thermonuclear experimental reactor (ITER) http://www.iter.org • European XFEL (http://www.xfel.eu/en/) • The Large Hadron Collider (http://public.web.cern.ch/public/en/LHC/LHC-en.html) • Facility for Antiprotonand Ion Research (FAIR) http://www.fair-center.de/index.php?id=1 • A large volume detector for low energy neutrino spectroscopy Borexino www.themegallery.com

  17. International ThermonuclearExperimental Reactor

  18. The European XFEL (I) • The European XFEL is being realized as a joint effort of many partners • 12 countries are participating in the project (Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland) • Construction started in early 2009: Commissioning is planned for 2015 • Costs amount 1082 million Euro: 54% Germany, 23% Russia, the other international partners between 1 and 3.5% • The European XFEL will generate ultra short X-ray flashes (27 000 times per second) Website: http://www.xfel.eu/en/

  19. The European XFEL (II)

  20. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) • The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a world’s largest particle accelerator near Geneva • The LHC accelerator was originally conceived in the 1980s and approved for construction by the CERN Council in late 1994 • It was built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) from 1998 to 2008 • Preparations for experiments was conducted under the general “Agreement between CERN and the Government of Russia on participation in construction of the LHC” http://public.web.cern.ch/public/en/LHC/LHC-en.html

  21. Facility for Antiprotonand Ion Research (I) The FAIR accelerator centre is one of the largest projects for basic research in physics worldwide FAIR will be built in Darmstadt Right from the beginning in the year 1999 the FAIR project has been a cooperation of various international research and technical institutes Partners: Germany, Spain, Finland, France, India, Poland, Romania, Russia, Switzerland, Slovenia Russia signed the FAIR Communiqué on the occasion of the official launch of the FAIR project on 7 November 2007 in Darmstadt and declared its contribution to the FAIR construction to be 178.05 M€. http://www.fair-center.de/index.php?id=1

  22. Facility for Antiprotonand Ion Research (II) • The State Atomic Energy Corporation "Rosatom“ is the Russian funding agency in FAIR • The Scientific and Technical Committee (STC) for FAIR organizes the Russian activities in the FAIR GmbH • The Russian institutions participate in construction of all FAIR accelerators • The Russia is responsible for the development and delivery of many key components within the FAIR experiments: • In PANDA project Russia participates in construction of superconducting solenoid • Seven Russian institutions contribute to the NUSTAR project • The Russia is a major participant of the HEDgeHOB experiment

  23. Borexino • Borexino is an experiment performed by an international collaboration and located in the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS) • Borexino physics program is centered on Solar Neutrino Physics, but also includes other relevant topics in low background neutrino detection and underground physics • Partners: Italy, Germany, France, Russia, USA, Poland, Ukraine • Russian partners: Russian Scientific Centre "Kurchatov Institute“, J.I.N.R. Dubna, B. P. Konstantinov Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute of RAS; Lomonosov Moscow State University - Skobeltsyn Institute of Nuclear Physics http://borex.lngs.infn.it/

  24. Borexino. The Italian partners Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare Sezione di Ferrara Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare Sezione di Genova Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), Milano LNGS - Gran Sasso National Laboratory Assergi (AQ) Dipartimento di Chimica Universita degli Studi di Perugia

  25. FP7 projects in the area of Research Infrastructures with Russian partners • 354 projects FP7-INFRA supported by EC • 26 projects with 50 Russian organizations • Acronyms: EURORIS-NET, NMI3, PRE-XFEL, SEADATANET, FAIR, • ERICON-AB, HIPER, EUCARD, MONDILEX, EGI-INSPIRE, VAMDC, • DEGISCO, SIOS-PP EUROPLANET RI NMDB, HILUMI LHC, PESI, • EUCARD, SEADATANET II, ORIENTPLUS GLORIA LAGUNA-LBNO • UP-GRADE BS-SCENE

  26. The development of mega-science projects in Russia • Mega-science projects are not only about the prestige of a nation • They help focus resources on priority areas, and to make breakthroughs first in fundamental science and then in technology • Through implementation of such mega science projects, Russia can deal with the most crucial staffing problem and fight the brain drain • Russia will get six major research installations in the near-distant future selected from 28 applications • Each of six projects suggested for realization in Russia will need over 1.5 bullion rubles of government funding and will be completed in 10 years or less • Government should start by drafting a roadmap for each of the proposed projects http://mon.gov.ru/press/reliz/8629/ www.themegallery.com

  27. 6 mega science projects in Russia • Tokamak fusion reactor called IGNITOR (Russia-Italy joint project open to accession of other international partners), Troitsk Institute for Innovation & Fusion Research (TRINITI). • High-flux research nuclear reactor (PIK) St.-Petersburg Institute of Nuclear Physics in Gatchina (in partnership with Germany and with probable involvement of North European and Baltic States). • Synchrotron light source, Multiturn Accelerator-Recuperator Source (MARS), National Research Centre "Kurchatov Institute" • NICA, Nuclotron based Ion Collider Facility, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna. • Sub-Exawatt Laser based International Research Centre on Extreme Light Fields, Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IAP RAS), Nizhny Novgorod • Electron-Positron Collider Super C-Tau Factory Project, Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics, Novosibirsk. www.themegallery.com

  28. PromotingRIs Partnership. Proposals from NCP I • To develop a roadmap for the new and upgraded large-scale research infrastructures in Russia and according to this also to give priority to some particular Russian research infrastructures of common interest for EU and Russia • To develop an interactive map and database of Joint Use Centers in English – this would create opportunities to increase the visibility of research infrastructures in Russia to European scientists. Such database would also facilitate partnering mechanisms for FP7 (Horizon 2020) projects, exchange of researchers. This database should be linked on the European portal of RIs and vice versa • To establish the Russian Forum of RIs similar to ESFRI, and to create an appropriate EU-Russian forum where synergies of RIs can be discussed www.themegallery.com

  29. Promoting RIs Partnership. Proposals from NCP II • To stimulate the access schemes for European researchers to Russian RIs and vice versa through additional support actions. • European academia and industry should use SKOLKOVO and ROSNANO actively and effectively. Those institutions are made for developing innovation infrastructure at international level and their rules for participation are quite convenient. • To encourage e-infrastructures both in EU and Russia; to establish, manage and join up on-line research collections in different research areas; to develop a legal framework or guidelines to facilitate the creation and/or operation of joint research databases. • To initiate specific EU-Russia coordination calls or joint calls in the area of RIs on topics of mutual interest identified by the EU-Russia joint working group on Ris

  30. Research Infrastructures National Contact Point • Established under FP7:::22nd February 2007 by the Russian Ministry of Education and Science on the basis of the National University of Science and Technology "MISIS" (MISIS) • Main mission: to facilitate the cooperation between EU and Russia in the field of Research Infrastructures.

  31. Research Infrastructures NCP Contact information Dr. Marine Melkonyan (Coordinator) Research Infrastructures NCP National University of Science and Technology «MISIS» 119049 Moscow, Leninsky prospect, 4 Tel.: +7 9167079257 Fax.: +7-499-236-21-05 E-Mail: fp7-infra@misis.ru; Web:fp7-infra.misis.ru

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