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The Helmholtz Association „Joining forces – Achieving more together“

The Helmholtz Association „Joining forces – Achieving more together“. Walter Kröll Helmholtz Association of National Research Centres. Structure. Helmholtz – Facts and Figures Helmholtz – Main Characteristics Helmholtz – Basic Reform. Helmholtz Head Office.

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The Helmholtz Association „Joining forces – Achieving more together“

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  1. The Helmholtz Association„Joining forces – Achieving more together“ Walter Kröll Helmholtz Associationof National Research Centres

  2. Structure • Helmholtz – Facts and Figures • Helmholtz – Main Characteristics • Helmholtz – Basic Reform

  3. Helmholtz Head Office 1. Helmholtz – Facts and Figures List Helgoland Greifswald • 15 Research Centres • 250 Institutes • 24,000 Employees • 8,500 Scientists and Engineers • Budget 2.2 billion € (including grants) Bremerhaven Hamburg Geesthacht Berlin Braunschweig Potsdam Zeuthen Wolfenbüttel-Remlingen Magdeburg Teltow Niemegk Göttingen Halle Bad Lauchstädt Leipzig Jülich Köln Germany Bonn Germany Darmstadt Heidelberg Lampoldshausen Karlsruhe Suttgart Neuherberg Garching München Oberpfaffenhofen Helmholtz Centre Branch of Helmholtz Centre

  4. Research in German Non-university Institutions (2002) • Helmholtz Association • Max Planck Society • Fraunhofer Society • Leibniz Association • Total approx. • Budget • Employees • Institutes • 2.2 billion € • 1.2 billion € • 1.0 billion € • 0.9 billion € • 5.3 billion € • 24,000 • 12,700 • 12,500 • 12,400 • 61,600 • 250 • 80 • 57 • 80 • 467

  5. Funding of the Helmholtz Association Total sum 2002: 2.2 billion € Third party means 27 % 7 % Federal States 66 % Federal Government

  6. AWI DESY DLR FZJ FZK GBF GKSS GSF GSI IPP MDC UFZ DKFZ GFZ HMI Bodies and Committees of theHelmholtz Association Senate SenateCommission Board ofFinancing Partners Review Panels President Assembly of Members (15 Research Centres)

  7. Energy Earth and Environment Health Key Technologies Structure of Matter Transport and Space Six Research Fields

  8. Mission • We contribute to solving grand challenges which face society, science and industry by performing top-rate research in strategic programmes. • We research systems of great complexity with our large-scale facilities, cooperating closely with national and international partners. • We contribute to shaping our future by combining research and technology development with innovative applied and forward-planning perspectives.

  9. 2. Helmholtz – Main Characteristics • Strategic Programmes • Research into systems of great complexity • Competence for planning and operating large-scale facilities and scientific infrastructure

  10. Research into Systems ofGreat Complexity • Global models of the Earth‘s gravity field (GRACE) GFZ |GeoForschungsZentrumPotsdam

  11. DKFZ | Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum GSI | Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung Research into Systems of Great Complexity • Tumor therapy with precise exposure of „heavy ions“

  12. Research into Systems of Great Complexity • Ice cores as climate archives • EPICA – European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica AWI | Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung

  13. Scientific Infrastructure andLarge-scale Facilities • Scientific infrastructure and large-scale facilities are a… • focal point of national and international collaborative research projects • nucleus for high-tech development X-FEL at DESY GSI Future Project

  14. 3. Helmholtz – Basic Reform • What is the goal? • To improve • Scientific quality • Performance • International competitiveness • Effectivity und efficiency in the use of resources

  15. Helmholtz – Basic Reform • Competition and cooperation • Programme-oriented funding • Science adequate controlling

  16. Programme-oriented Funding • What does it mean? • Financing activities (programmes)instead of financing institutions (centres) • What is at its core? • International strategic evaluation

  17. Programme-oriented Funding 6 Research Fields 30 Programmes 126 Programme Topics

  18. Programmorientierte Förderung Programme-oriented Funding • A comparative and competitive procedurewith several steps: • Competition between • Programme Topics • Programmes • Research Fields

  19. Programme-oriented Funding Procedure Programme proposals by Helmholtz scientists Programme evaluation by international experts Recommendations by Senate Commission Funding recommendations by Senate Funding by Financing Partners

  20. Programme-oriented Funding • Requirements for drawing up programmes • Strategic goals and milestones • Prospects of success and contribution due to longer-term development of the research field • Cost and capacity planning • Management structures

  21. Programme-oriented Funding Procedure Programme proposals by Helmholtz scientists Programme evaluation by international experts Recommendations by Senate Commission Funding recommendations by Senate Funding by Financing Partners

  22. Programme-oriented Funding Evaluation criteria • Scientific Quality • Originality • Competence for realisation of the programme • Relevant scientific publications, prizes/awards, third party funding

  23. Kriterien für die Begutachtung 2 Programme-oriented Funding Evaluation criteria • Strategic Significance • Relevance • Relation to defined Helmholtz fields of research • Cooperation and networking with national and international Partners • Innovation potential • Promotion of young researchers and equal opportunity

  24. Programme-oriented Funding Evaluation criteria • Use of human and financial resources • Appropriateness in regard to the set goal • Programme-specific infrastructure required andneed for large investments

  25. Science adequate Controlling ProgrammeControlling FinancialControlling ScientificEvaluation • assures scientific quality • creates transparency • monitors progress • enables better process management

  26. Wissenschaftsadäquates Controlling Science-adequate Controlling Prerequisite • Definition of clearly outlined, but flexible goalsand specific milestones • Principle • Precision in planning determines precision of controlling • Process • Differentiated evaluation of indicators and controlling of milestones attained through progress reports • Controlling results as input for scientificevaluation and the centres‘ internal evaluations

  27. First Results as of 2004 • More cooperation and competition • Strategic goals and milestones • Distinctive profiles • Enhanced flexibility • Greater visibility

  28. Strengthening International Cooperation Helmholtz in Beijing: • Helmholtz Association • of National Research Centres • Landmark Tower 2-1723 • Dongsanhuanbeilu 8, Chaoyang District • Beijing 100004  Tel: +86-(0)10-65907866 • Fax: +86-(0)10-65907867E-Mail: hehong@helmholtz.cn Dr. HE, HongChief Representative

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