3. Cybersecurity incidents are
increasing at an alarming pace
with potentially profound effect on daily
functioning of society & economy,
both online and offline
3
…as well as financial theft, loss of intellectual property, data breaches, etc.
4. Increase
capabilities
& cooperation
Strengthen EU
Cybersecurity
industry
NIS Directive - NIS
platform – ENISA - CEF
Key EU Objectives and Actions
Strengthening industrial
Capabilities – €600M in H2020
(incl. €450M for the cPPP)
Cooperation on new policy
initiatives – Sectorial cybersecurity
strategies
Mainstream
cybersecurity
in EU policy
5. The NIS Directive: objectives
Increased national
cybersecurity capabilities
EU level
cooperation
Risk management &
reporting
Boosting the
overall
online
security in
Europe
6. Dependence on public procurement
& government purchase
Lack of interoperability solutions, practices and
well-functioning mechanisms of certification
Different NIS policies across MS
(to be addressed by the NIS directive)
Barriers of trust for cross-border
purchase
6
Cyberspace is borderless by
nature…
unlike
heavily
fragmented
European market
for ICT security
products &
services due to:
7. What does this mean in practice?
7
The survival of strong European cybersecurity industry all together is at stake!
9. Cybersecurity contractual Public-Private
Partnership (cPPP)
• Stimulate the
competitiveness and
innovation capacities of the
digital security and privacy
industry in Europe
• Ensure a sustained supply of
innovative cybersecurity
products and services in
Europe
9
10. Objectives of the cPPP
10
Gather industrial and public resources to deliver innovation against a
jointly-agreed strategic research and innovation roadmap.
Maximize available funds through better coordination with MS.
Focus on a few technical priorities defined jointly with industry.
Seek synergies to develop common, sector-neutral technological building
blocks with maximum replication potential
Obtain economies of scale through engagement with users/demand side
industries and bringing together a critical mass of innovation capacities.
Be a platform to discuss other supporting measures for the industry
12. 12
Making the most of NIS cooperation mechanisms
(blueprint, information hub, high-level advisory group)
Moving towards ENISA 2.0
Increased efforts in education,
training & exercises
Addressing inter-sectoral interdependencies
(ISACs, sector systemic risks assessment, guidance on cyber-risk preparedness,
voluntary reporting on cyber theft of trade secrets, mainstreaming cybersecurity
across sectors)
Key public networks infrastructure resilience
16. BUDGET
The EC will invest up to €450 million in this partnership, under its research and
innovation programme Horizon 2020 for the 2017-2020 calls (4 years). Cybersecurity
market players are expected to invest three times more (€ 1350 Mio) in the next 10
years (leverage factor = 3) for a total of €1800 Mio.
Contributions are expected from private investments (users/operators, suppliers,
RTOs/Universities, national R&I funds, other EU funds: regional / structural, capital
venture, insurances, etc.) and public funding
A DIFFERENT PPP
The cPPP will focus on R&I, developing a SRIA and supporting its implementation in the
H2020 Work Programme
The ECSO Association will tackle other industry policy aspects for the market and the
industrial / economic development
REFERENCE DOCUMENTS
1. Industry proposal
2. Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (SRIA) proposal
About the Cybersecurity cPPP
4
17. H2020 = legal framework for the establishment of the cPPP
H2020 LEIT-ICT to focus on technology-driven digital security building blocks
and horizontal requirements
H2020 Societal Challenge 'Secure Societies' to deliver societal
benefits for users of technologies (citizens, SMEs, critical infrastructures…).
H2020 public funds to be matched by private sector investment
17