1 / 12

The first steps in Europe 1/2

The evolution of European security research and innovation programmes: changing purposes and rationales Jean- Marc Suchier. ETTIS R&I strategies and policy priorities in new mission -oriented programs: The case of security ” Brussels , 18 September 2014. The first steps in Europe 1/2.

fleta
Download Presentation

The first steps in Europe 1/2

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. The evolution of European security research and innovation programmes:changing purposes and rationales Jean-Marc Suchier ETTIS R&I strategies and policy priorities in new mission-oriented programs: The case of security” Brussels, 18 September 2014

  2. The first steps in Europe 1/2 • Situation of security research in 2000 • Not covered at EU level • No national programme • The triggers • End of Cold War • Development of international terrorism: it can strike anywhere • September 11, 2001 • 12/12/2003 - European Council document : “European Security strategy” “A secure Europe in a better World” • We need new security instruments • We need common instruments for all Member States

  3. The first steps in Europe 2/2 • March 2004 - Recommendations from Group of Personalities (GOP) to develop a European Security Research Programme (ESRP) • For improving European security • For improving European competitiveness • In full respect of civil liberties and ethical principals • ESRP must • Be complementary to nationals efforts • Finance mission oriented research from capability to demonstrator projects • Be focused on technology • Technology is not security, but no there is security without technology • Take benefit of dual civil/military research • Recommendation to put in place an advisory board to help prepare an agenda for implementation of ESRP

  4. few comments on security context in 2003 1/2 • What is security ? • Vague and inconsistent definitions among Member States (MS) • Covers many different and disconnected domains • Who is in charge of security? • The Member States  security is under MS responsibility • With various organisation/management of security matters • EU defines security rules for a few domains (airports,..) • But MS decide on implementation • MS usually have very limited resources available for security investments • What are the key perceived threats? • Mainly terrorism and organised crime • Perception of “insecurity” widely dependant on country, culture, age,… and events • Societal aspects: only a concern to take in consideration

  5. few comments on security context in 2003 2/2 • Who develops security solutions? • Mainly defence and aeronautic companies, located in a few MS • What is the security market? • Regulated • Operators invest in security solutions only to follow regulations • No ROI for security • Fragmented • MS defines their rules and protect their national market • No major investment from industry • Industry needs market visibility • In security, the market is mainly defined when regulation is clear and stable and when funding for implementation programme is available

  6. Preparation of ESRP 1/2 • The Preparatory Action for Security Research (PASR) • A 3 year programme (2004-2006) before FP7 • Limited budget (15M€ /year) for small projects • Goals • To investigate a few research topics • To help defining the ESRP content • Outcome • Not very useful for preparing ESRP content, because of projects schedule • But helped putting in place a new security research community • Managed, at DG Entr, by a team with a successful experience in air transportation • ACARE, SRIA

  7. Preparation of ESRP 2/2 • The European Security Research Advisory Board (ESRAB) 2005-2006 • 50 members from • Governmental agencies • Research labs • Industry • Tasked by EC to propose a content and priorities for ESRP • Focused on short term technology needs • No basic research, but applied research on existing technology for security solutions • Mission oriented • Border, Critical infrastructures, Crisis management,.. • Does not cover digital security (DG Infso) • Societal aspects covered in parallel (Security & Socierty) • Outcome (ESRAB report) • Good results for short term technology priorities • The societal aspects not seen as a major potential problem for security research • Good basis for the first calls of FP7 security theme (ERSP)

  8. European Security and innovation forum • In parallel with ESRP, a new advisory board in place: ESRIF (2007-2009) • The goal: to define a strategic security research agenda (ESRIA) • For mid and long term needs • Based on the ACARE model • Concept of security covers man-made and natural catastrophic events • The main difficulty • No major European policy document yet published (beyond the high level definition of “European Security Strategy”) • Which strategy options to use for the agenda? • Outcome • A strong message requesting that societal aspects be of major concern in ESRP • DG Entr put in place a Societal Impact Expert Group (2008 – 2013) • A raising understanding that • Technology is only one of the parameter • Resilience is an important aspect of security • European citizens must be involved • A weak and almost useless “strategic agenda”

  9. Status at FP7 ESRP completion • Overall, ESRP is a successful programme • >1,4B€, >200 funded projects • Modest impact on European security • Many new technology products • But limited real innovation • No major new security solutions so far • It takes years from research to innovation • Raising understanding that societal issues are crucial • The weaknesses • Work programme more a concatenation of MS needs than answer to EU policies • Lack of fast track mechanism • Very difficult to build a long term strategy in security

  10. Towards Horizon 2020 • Focused on societal challenges (Secure societies) , and pushing for • More innovation • Looking for higher TRLs • PCP (Pre Commercial Procurement) and PPI (Public Procurement of Innovative solutions) • Deeper cooperation of all stakeholders • Enhancement of the societal dimension • Covering Cyber security • Proposing a new fast track mechanism ? • A few open questions • Will PCPs and PPIs be efficient? • How to extract from EU policy initiatives effective research agendas? • How to effectively enhance the societal dimension?  All topics of interest for ETTIS

  11. Thank you for your attention

More Related