Jornada informativa organizada el 28 de noviembre de 2017 sobre convocatorias NMBP de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en lel Instituto de Ciencias de los Materiales de Sevilla (ICMS), fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, Airbus, FADA-CATEC e ICMS.
5 tzamtzis introduction to sme instrument ma-reMARE EuroMed
The document discusses opportunities for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) through the SME Instrument of the Horizon 2020 program. The SME Instrument provides funding across three phases to support innovation in SMEs: Phase I provides feasibility assessments, Phase II provides funding for demonstration and development of innovations, and Phase III involves support for commercializing innovations. The SME Instrument aims to bridge funding gaps for SMEs and support the development of new products, services, and processes. It receives approximately €3 billion in funding and involves evaluation of proposals based on excellence, impact, and implementation.
Presentación de Marta Conde (CDTI) sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto Social 2 de Horizonte2020.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3 y la Enterprise Europe Network.
Presentación de Marta Conde (CDTI) sobre EIP-AGRI y Multi-Actor Approach.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3
The document discusses Torino, Italy's efforts to become a smarter city through urban innovation and strategic public procurement. It outlines Torino's initiatives including its smart city strategy and priorities in areas like energy, mobility, and administrative innovation. A key part of the strategy is using pre-commercial procurement and procurement of innovation (PPI) to drive solutions in sustainable construction and energy efficiency. Torino has participated in EU-funded projects like SCI-Network and Pro-LITE to build capacity for PPI, stimulate the market for innovations, and launch procurement procedures for innovative lighting solutions in schools. The goal is to better meet urban needs, boost the local economy, and reduce energy consumption and emissions through public demand for innovative technologies and
This document summarizes Horizon 2020 funding opportunities for ICT projects in 2016-2017. There are three main actions - Innovation, Research & Innovation, and Coordination & Support. Funding is available for industry and academic consortia through grants of up to 70-100% of eligible costs. Priority topics include excellent science, leadership in enabling technologies, and social challenges. Specific subtopics are listed in each of these areas, focusing on technologies like computing, internet, electronics, and applications in areas such as transport, energy, environment, health, and security.
WP 2012 - Crearea de servicii excelente de promovare a inovatiei in cercetareNicolaie Constantinescu
Crearea de servicii excelente de promovare a inovatiei in cercetare. Prezentare susținută de domnul Tudor Constantinescu, consilier principal în cadrul Direcției Generale pentru Energie a Comisiei Europene cu ocazia „Lansării apelului de propuneri de proiecte în domeniul cercetării și inovării”.
ICTFOOTPRINT.eu at Data Centre World - a web platform to help organisations i...ICT FOOTPRINT .eu
The document discusses the ICTFOOTPRINT.eu project, which aims to raise awareness of metrics and best practices for measuring the energy and environmental efficiency of the ICT sector. It notes that ICT accounts for 8-10% of European electricity consumption and up to 4% of greenhouse gas emissions. The ICTFOOTPRINT.eu website provides factsheets on ICT methodologies, webinars, a marketplace for sustainable solutions, and a helpdesk. It also discusses using various methodologies to measure the carbon footprint of cloud services and data centers.
5 tzamtzis introduction to sme instrument ma-reMARE EuroMed
The document discusses opportunities for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) through the SME Instrument of the Horizon 2020 program. The SME Instrument provides funding across three phases to support innovation in SMEs: Phase I provides feasibility assessments, Phase II provides funding for demonstration and development of innovations, and Phase III involves support for commercializing innovations. The SME Instrument aims to bridge funding gaps for SMEs and support the development of new products, services, and processes. It receives approximately €3 billion in funding and involves evaluation of proposals based on excellence, impact, and implementation.
Presentación de Marta Conde (CDTI) sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto Social 2 de Horizonte2020.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3 y la Enterprise Europe Network.
Presentación de Marta Conde (CDTI) sobre EIP-AGRI y Multi-Actor Approach.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3
The document discusses Torino, Italy's efforts to become a smarter city through urban innovation and strategic public procurement. It outlines Torino's initiatives including its smart city strategy and priorities in areas like energy, mobility, and administrative innovation. A key part of the strategy is using pre-commercial procurement and procurement of innovation (PPI) to drive solutions in sustainable construction and energy efficiency. Torino has participated in EU-funded projects like SCI-Network and Pro-LITE to build capacity for PPI, stimulate the market for innovations, and launch procurement procedures for innovative lighting solutions in schools. The goal is to better meet urban needs, boost the local economy, and reduce energy consumption and emissions through public demand for innovative technologies and
This document summarizes Horizon 2020 funding opportunities for ICT projects in 2016-2017. There are three main actions - Innovation, Research & Innovation, and Coordination & Support. Funding is available for industry and academic consortia through grants of up to 70-100% of eligible costs. Priority topics include excellent science, leadership in enabling technologies, and social challenges. Specific subtopics are listed in each of these areas, focusing on technologies like computing, internet, electronics, and applications in areas such as transport, energy, environment, health, and security.
WP 2012 - Crearea de servicii excelente de promovare a inovatiei in cercetareNicolaie Constantinescu
Crearea de servicii excelente de promovare a inovatiei in cercetare. Prezentare susținută de domnul Tudor Constantinescu, consilier principal în cadrul Direcției Generale pentru Energie a Comisiei Europene cu ocazia „Lansării apelului de propuneri de proiecte în domeniul cercetării și inovării”.
ICTFOOTPRINT.eu at Data Centre World - a web platform to help organisations i...ICT FOOTPRINT .eu
The document discusses the ICTFOOTPRINT.eu project, which aims to raise awareness of metrics and best practices for measuring the energy and environmental efficiency of the ICT sector. It notes that ICT accounts for 8-10% of European electricity consumption and up to 4% of greenhouse gas emissions. The ICTFOOTPRINT.eu website provides factsheets on ICT methodologies, webinars, a marketplace for sustainable solutions, and a helpdesk. It also discusses using various methodologies to measure the carbon footprint of cloud services and data centers.
Piedmont Region towards Public Procurement for Innovation: the ongoing process - by Stefania Crotta - Head of Sustainable Energy Development Unit, Directorate for Innovation Research, University and Sustainable Energy Development Piedmont Region
Innovative and digital solutions for circularity and sustainability in textilesCISUFLO
CISUFLO project was presented during the “Workshop on Innovative and digital solutions for circularity and sustainability in textiles” organized by the European Commission DG Growth, last 15th October.
Dr. Jan Vincent Jordan, on behalf of RWTH Aachen, introduced CISUFLO as potential best practices on how digitalisation supports sustainability and on how SMEs can be supported in digitalization (with a focus on RWTH Aachen “Systemic Transition Support Tool”). During the workshop the DG CNECT presented the concept of the Digital Product Passport and DG RTD explained the “Research & Innovation for Sustainable and Circular Textiles”. The EC’s priority on the sustainability and circular economy underlines once again how important it is that CISUFLO is working in this direction to lead the flooring sector in Europe towards the circular economy.
ERIAFF Conference 2014
Seinäjoki, Finland
Niklas von Weymarn, Vice President of Research (LINK to the presentation)
Metsä Fibre Ltd., Finland
"Bio-based Industries PPP"
This project summary provides information on the SMART GROUND project:
1) The SMART GROUND project received €2.496.800,10 in funding from the Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 641988 to last from October 1, 2015 to March 31, 2018.
2) The project aims to foster resource recovery from landfills by improving data availability and accessibility on secondary raw materials in the European Union. It will integrate existing and new data into a single EU database.
3) Additionally, the project seeks to enhance the economic and employment potential of secondary raw materials by providing training and forming a network of stakeholders committed to research and technology transfer.
Presentation 5 Slides - Oscar Miguel - EGVIA CIDETECFabrice Stassin
The document discusses the European Green Vehicles Initiative (EGVI) public-private partnership, which aims to deliver green vehicle solutions to address societal, environmental, and economic challenges. It provides funding for research and development of technologies like electrification and long-distance transport. The initiative's goals are to help meet EU targets on renewable energy, CO2 emissions, and air quality standards. It also supports the EU Transport White Paper and addresses challenges like decarbonization, safety, and automated driving. Recent EGVI activities have included funding battery projects and workshops on battery cell production in Europe.
On 20th June 2018, the European Technology Platform for Sustainable Chemistry (SusChem) started the collaborative process to build a new Strategic Innovation and Research Agenda (SIRA), in light of Horizon Europe.
Ict enabled public sector innovation in h2020SarahBuelens
1) The document discusses ICT-enabled public sector innovation opportunities in Horizon 2020, the EU's research and innovation program.
2) Key areas of focus include open government through open data, processes, and services to empower citizens, increase transparency and efficiency.
3) Specific Horizon 2020 calls are identified that relate to ICT-enabled public sector innovation in areas like open participation, personalised mobile public services, and using emerging technologies in government.
The TWIST project aims to promote innovation in water management through transnational cooperation. With a budget of over 1.5 million euros, the project brings together partners from Spain, France, and Portugal to develop common strategies, share best practices through three living labs, and carry out procurement of innovation pilot actions. The overall goal is to strengthen regional actors in water-related research and development and improve coordination between stakeholders in the water sector.
The European Commission has taken several actions to promote resource efficiency and a circular economy among SMEs in the EU. This includes establishing centers to build capacity for SMEs in resource efficiency, providing funding support through Horizon 2020, LIFE, and other programs, and developing standards and guidelines. The Commission's Circular Economy Package aims to close product lifecycles and bring environmental and economic benefits through greater recycling and reuse.
Market opportunities for lighting industry in western europeBusiness Finland
This document discusses opportunities for lighting companies in Western Europe's growing market for energy-efficient LED lighting solutions. It outlines drivers like rising electricity prices and EU energy efficiency directives creating demand. New customers in areas like architectural lighting and greenhouses using LED lights are opportunities. Case studies show cities and countries increasingly switching to LED street and indoor lights, with estimated energy savings of 40-75%. The Dutch greenhouse sector is a large and advanced market replacing old facilities with new technologies. Europe is forecast to lead the world in LED lighting penetration by 2020. Finnish companies can tap into these opportunities by first expanding to nearby European markets.
This document summarizes a presentation on standards for sustainable biomass and socio-economic considerations regarding GMOs. It discusses how most sustainability standards are neutral toward GMOs and address them primarily as an environmental risk. Socio-economic aspects examined in standards include labor conditions, land rights, business practices, and local community impacts. While difficult, assessing these requires analyzing compliance, stakeholder consultation, and reviewing documents. The presentation raises whether sustainability standards should consider GMOs as a socio-economic factor and if standardization could provide best practices for GMO risk management.
Fibre-based innovations for tomorrow's high-tech productsEuropeanPaper
By Frank Miletzky, Papiertechnische Stiftung. This was presented during the mid-term conference on future skills and competences in the pulp and paper industry, jointly organised by the European Paper Sector Social Partners, industriAll Europe and Confederation of European Paper Industries, in Vienna 22 February 2016. More at (link tbc).
The document discusses battery markets and technologies, with a focus on the EMIRI program. It provides an overview of the growing lithium-ion battery market, driven by applications in portables, automotive, and stationary energy storage. It outlines technology trends toward higher energy densities, lower costs, and improved safety. These include advanced cathode and anode materials, electrolyte modifications, and solid-state batteries. The EMIRI program addresses stationary storage, automotive, and lightweight electric vehicles.
Advanced Materials International Forum, Bari 18-19 settembre, conferenza internazionale dedicata ai materiali avanzati e alle loro possibili applicazioni nei settori industriali, con un focus particolare sui trasporti (aerospazio, automotive, navale e cantieristico).
The OptEEmAL project will develop an Optimised Energy Efficient Design Platform to provide optimized solutions for improving energy efficiency at the district level. The platform will be tested on demonstration sites in Italy, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey. It aims to reduce costs by 19% during the design phase and operational costs by 25% while increasing market competitiveness and job growth in the construction sector.
Revitalizing Welsh Manufacturing: The Role of Research InstitutesObiajulu Egbunike
The document summarizes research on the relationship between universities and manufacturers in Wales. It discusses how the ASTUTE program, funded by the EU, aims to help manufacturers adopt advanced technologies and improve sustainability. Case studies were conducted with academics and companies involved in ASTUTE projects. Findings showed that ASTUTE acts as a gateway connecting manufacturers to university resources, translates academic concepts for practical application, and provides learning opportunities rather than consulting services. Both universities and companies benefited from collaboration through ASTUTE.
Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency within Urban Development. Case study: Vi...RCREEE
Vienna has ranked as the city with the highest quality of living for the past 9 years according to an annual survey. In 2014, Vienna adopted the Smart City Wien Framework Strategy to develop the city using radical resource protection, high quality of life, and innovation. The strategy aims to provide the best quality of life for inhabitants while minimizing resource consumption through comprehensive innovation in areas like energy, cost reduction, technology, and policy. Key targets include reducing per capita greenhouse gas emissions by at least 35% by 2030 and 80% by 2050 compared to 1990 levels, sourcing over 20% of energy from renewables by 2030 and 50% by 2050, and shifting traffic to eco-friendly modes like walking and cycling.
The FOODIE Project aims to create an open data platform for the agriculture sector. It will integrate spatial and non-spatial data from various sources to provide applications and services supporting decision making. The platform will allow public and private stakeholders to publish and link their own datasets. Three pilot programs will test the platform for precision viticulture, strategic farm planning, and integrating logistics and farm management. The project seeks to make better use of existing spatial data resources and provide interoperability between heterogeneous agricultural data sources.
The document provides information on the EU's Horizon 2020 program for clean, secure and efficient energy for the 2016-2017 work program. It discusses the political context, budget details, focus areas of energy efficiency, low carbon technologies, and smart cities and communities. Cross-cutting activities and opportunities for SMEs are also outlined. Participation data from the April 2015 call showed 264 proposals submitted, with 16 receiving funding. Common weaknesses identified in proposals included limited innovation value, lack of market analysis, undefined user needs, and unsupported economic impact claims.
POAT 2012 - 2015.Presentation on partenariati pubblico privati in Horizon 202...formezeu
Seminario "Internazionalizzazione della ricerca pugliese: strategia di networking a livello europeo", svoltosi a Bari il 30 aprile 2015 nell'ambito del progetto"Azioni a supporto della partecipazione ai programmi comunitari a gestione diretta e al lavoro in rete" Ambito 1, Linea 3 del POAT 2013 – 2015
Piedmont Region towards Public Procurement for Innovation: the ongoing process - by Stefania Crotta - Head of Sustainable Energy Development Unit, Directorate for Innovation Research, University and Sustainable Energy Development Piedmont Region
Innovative and digital solutions for circularity and sustainability in textilesCISUFLO
CISUFLO project was presented during the “Workshop on Innovative and digital solutions for circularity and sustainability in textiles” organized by the European Commission DG Growth, last 15th October.
Dr. Jan Vincent Jordan, on behalf of RWTH Aachen, introduced CISUFLO as potential best practices on how digitalisation supports sustainability and on how SMEs can be supported in digitalization (with a focus on RWTH Aachen “Systemic Transition Support Tool”). During the workshop the DG CNECT presented the concept of the Digital Product Passport and DG RTD explained the “Research & Innovation for Sustainable and Circular Textiles”. The EC’s priority on the sustainability and circular economy underlines once again how important it is that CISUFLO is working in this direction to lead the flooring sector in Europe towards the circular economy.
ERIAFF Conference 2014
Seinäjoki, Finland
Niklas von Weymarn, Vice President of Research (LINK to the presentation)
Metsä Fibre Ltd., Finland
"Bio-based Industries PPP"
This project summary provides information on the SMART GROUND project:
1) The SMART GROUND project received €2.496.800,10 in funding from the Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 641988 to last from October 1, 2015 to March 31, 2018.
2) The project aims to foster resource recovery from landfills by improving data availability and accessibility on secondary raw materials in the European Union. It will integrate existing and new data into a single EU database.
3) Additionally, the project seeks to enhance the economic and employment potential of secondary raw materials by providing training and forming a network of stakeholders committed to research and technology transfer.
Presentation 5 Slides - Oscar Miguel - EGVIA CIDETECFabrice Stassin
The document discusses the European Green Vehicles Initiative (EGVI) public-private partnership, which aims to deliver green vehicle solutions to address societal, environmental, and economic challenges. It provides funding for research and development of technologies like electrification and long-distance transport. The initiative's goals are to help meet EU targets on renewable energy, CO2 emissions, and air quality standards. It also supports the EU Transport White Paper and addresses challenges like decarbonization, safety, and automated driving. Recent EGVI activities have included funding battery projects and workshops on battery cell production in Europe.
On 20th June 2018, the European Technology Platform for Sustainable Chemistry (SusChem) started the collaborative process to build a new Strategic Innovation and Research Agenda (SIRA), in light of Horizon Europe.
Ict enabled public sector innovation in h2020SarahBuelens
1) The document discusses ICT-enabled public sector innovation opportunities in Horizon 2020, the EU's research and innovation program.
2) Key areas of focus include open government through open data, processes, and services to empower citizens, increase transparency and efficiency.
3) Specific Horizon 2020 calls are identified that relate to ICT-enabled public sector innovation in areas like open participation, personalised mobile public services, and using emerging technologies in government.
The TWIST project aims to promote innovation in water management through transnational cooperation. With a budget of over 1.5 million euros, the project brings together partners from Spain, France, and Portugal to develop common strategies, share best practices through three living labs, and carry out procurement of innovation pilot actions. The overall goal is to strengthen regional actors in water-related research and development and improve coordination between stakeholders in the water sector.
The European Commission has taken several actions to promote resource efficiency and a circular economy among SMEs in the EU. This includes establishing centers to build capacity for SMEs in resource efficiency, providing funding support through Horizon 2020, LIFE, and other programs, and developing standards and guidelines. The Commission's Circular Economy Package aims to close product lifecycles and bring environmental and economic benefits through greater recycling and reuse.
Market opportunities for lighting industry in western europeBusiness Finland
This document discusses opportunities for lighting companies in Western Europe's growing market for energy-efficient LED lighting solutions. It outlines drivers like rising electricity prices and EU energy efficiency directives creating demand. New customers in areas like architectural lighting and greenhouses using LED lights are opportunities. Case studies show cities and countries increasingly switching to LED street and indoor lights, with estimated energy savings of 40-75%. The Dutch greenhouse sector is a large and advanced market replacing old facilities with new technologies. Europe is forecast to lead the world in LED lighting penetration by 2020. Finnish companies can tap into these opportunities by first expanding to nearby European markets.
This document summarizes a presentation on standards for sustainable biomass and socio-economic considerations regarding GMOs. It discusses how most sustainability standards are neutral toward GMOs and address them primarily as an environmental risk. Socio-economic aspects examined in standards include labor conditions, land rights, business practices, and local community impacts. While difficult, assessing these requires analyzing compliance, stakeholder consultation, and reviewing documents. The presentation raises whether sustainability standards should consider GMOs as a socio-economic factor and if standardization could provide best practices for GMO risk management.
Fibre-based innovations for tomorrow's high-tech productsEuropeanPaper
By Frank Miletzky, Papiertechnische Stiftung. This was presented during the mid-term conference on future skills and competences in the pulp and paper industry, jointly organised by the European Paper Sector Social Partners, industriAll Europe and Confederation of European Paper Industries, in Vienna 22 February 2016. More at (link tbc).
The document discusses battery markets and technologies, with a focus on the EMIRI program. It provides an overview of the growing lithium-ion battery market, driven by applications in portables, automotive, and stationary energy storage. It outlines technology trends toward higher energy densities, lower costs, and improved safety. These include advanced cathode and anode materials, electrolyte modifications, and solid-state batteries. The EMIRI program addresses stationary storage, automotive, and lightweight electric vehicles.
Advanced Materials International Forum, Bari 18-19 settembre, conferenza internazionale dedicata ai materiali avanzati e alle loro possibili applicazioni nei settori industriali, con un focus particolare sui trasporti (aerospazio, automotive, navale e cantieristico).
The OptEEmAL project will develop an Optimised Energy Efficient Design Platform to provide optimized solutions for improving energy efficiency at the district level. The platform will be tested on demonstration sites in Italy, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey. It aims to reduce costs by 19% during the design phase and operational costs by 25% while increasing market competitiveness and job growth in the construction sector.
Revitalizing Welsh Manufacturing: The Role of Research InstitutesObiajulu Egbunike
The document summarizes research on the relationship between universities and manufacturers in Wales. It discusses how the ASTUTE program, funded by the EU, aims to help manufacturers adopt advanced technologies and improve sustainability. Case studies were conducted with academics and companies involved in ASTUTE projects. Findings showed that ASTUTE acts as a gateway connecting manufacturers to university resources, translates academic concepts for practical application, and provides learning opportunities rather than consulting services. Both universities and companies benefited from collaboration through ASTUTE.
Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency within Urban Development. Case study: Vi...RCREEE
Vienna has ranked as the city with the highest quality of living for the past 9 years according to an annual survey. In 2014, Vienna adopted the Smart City Wien Framework Strategy to develop the city using radical resource protection, high quality of life, and innovation. The strategy aims to provide the best quality of life for inhabitants while minimizing resource consumption through comprehensive innovation in areas like energy, cost reduction, technology, and policy. Key targets include reducing per capita greenhouse gas emissions by at least 35% by 2030 and 80% by 2050 compared to 1990 levels, sourcing over 20% of energy from renewables by 2030 and 50% by 2050, and shifting traffic to eco-friendly modes like walking and cycling.
The FOODIE Project aims to create an open data platform for the agriculture sector. It will integrate spatial and non-spatial data from various sources to provide applications and services supporting decision making. The platform will allow public and private stakeholders to publish and link their own datasets. Three pilot programs will test the platform for precision viticulture, strategic farm planning, and integrating logistics and farm management. The project seeks to make better use of existing spatial data resources and provide interoperability between heterogeneous agricultural data sources.
The document provides information on the EU's Horizon 2020 program for clean, secure and efficient energy for the 2016-2017 work program. It discusses the political context, budget details, focus areas of energy efficiency, low carbon technologies, and smart cities and communities. Cross-cutting activities and opportunities for SMEs are also outlined. Participation data from the April 2015 call showed 264 proposals submitted, with 16 receiving funding. Common weaknesses identified in proposals included limited innovation value, lack of market analysis, undefined user needs, and unsupported economic impact claims.
POAT 2012 - 2015.Presentation on partenariati pubblico privati in Horizon 202...formezeu
Seminario "Internazionalizzazione della ricerca pugliese: strategia di networking a livello europeo", svoltosi a Bari il 30 aprile 2015 nell'ambito del progetto"Azioni a supporto della partecipazione ai programmi comunitari a gestione diretta e al lavoro in rete" Ambito 1, Linea 3 del POAT 2013 – 2015
Christiana Siambekou - National Documentation Centre (EKT)WWW.ERFC.GR
This document summarizes information about funding opportunities under the Horizon 2020 program's "Secure, Clean and Efficient Energy" work programme. It outlines the four main funding areas: energy efficiency, smart cities and communities, competitive low-carbon energy, and support for SMEs. Call deadlines and budgets for 2014-2015 are provided for each area. National contact points that can provide guidance on Horizon 2020 applications are also mentioned.
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in UCC Cork
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in DCU, Dublin
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in NUIG, Galway
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in UCD Dublin
The document summarizes funding opportunities under the Horizon 2020 program for secure, clean and efficient energy. It outlines the priorities and budget of Horizon 2020, including excellence in science, industrial leadership, and societal challenges like energy. For energy, the work program focuses on energy efficiency, smart cities and communities, competitive low-carbon energy, and support for SMEs. Key deadlines for energy-related calls in 2014-2015 are provided. The National Contact Point helps researchers and businesses in Greece access Horizon 2020 funding and support.
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in University College, Cork
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in NUI, Galway 27.04.16
The document provides an overview of Horizon 2020 funding opportunities related to climate action, environment, resource efficiency and raw materials. It discusses the objectives and budget for Societal Challenge 5, as well as several funding priority areas for 2016-2017 including industry and the circular economy, blue growth, climate services, a low-carbon Europe, nature-based solutions for cities, water, and raw materials. Relevant initiatives and programs are also mentioned.
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in DCU 05.05.16
EPA Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5: Climate Action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials Roadshow presentation by Alice Wemaere (EPA) and Mark Sweeney (Enterprise Ireland) in Queens University, Belfast
Jornada informativa sobre el Reto Social 2: "Seguridad alimentaria, agricultura sostenible, investigación marina y marítima y bioeconomía" dentro del Programa Marco Europeo Horizonte 2020 organizada por la Agencia en colaboración con la Universidad de Córdoba. Noviembre, 2016.
This document discusses water innovation opportunities under the Horizon 2020 research and innovation program. It notes that water is a major component of EU environmental research programs and a key sector for economic growth and innovation. Horizon 2020 aims to boost the competitiveness of the European water sector through supporting activities across the innovation cycle from research to market uptake. One of its focus areas is on water innovation, with the goal of reinforcing Europe's water innovation capacity and positioning the EU as a global leader in water technologies and solutions. The document outlines some of the EU policy drivers and areas of focus for water research under Horizon 2020, including integrated approaches to water and climate change and strengthening international cooperation.
Advanced materials and nanotechnologies in Horizon 2020JIC
The document discusses key enabling technologies (KETs) and their role in the Horizon 2020 framework program. It outlines several work programs within Horizon 2020 related to nanotechnologies, advanced materials, biotechnologies, and advanced manufacturing and processing. These areas are consolidated under the NMBP pillar. The document provides an overview of topics, budgets, and timelines for the NMBP-related calls in 2016-2017. It also discusses public-private partnerships involved in NMBP research and innovation.
Presentación de Lorenzo Vallés, Jefe de la Unidad de Producción y Biotecnología de la Dirección KETs de la Comisión Europea, sobre las convocatorias H2020 NMBP 2016
Presentation on Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 5 "Climate action, Environment, Resource Efficiency and Raw Materials" 2017 calls given by Alison Imrie, EC DG Research and Innovation at Session 2 at EPA H2020 SC5 Info Day 7.10.16
This document discusses the integrated approach for developing advanced materials and systems in the Horizon 2020 program. It provides an overview of key enabling technologies and their role in competitiveness. Horizon 2020 aims to bring together excellent science, industrial leadership, and addressing societal challenges. The priorities for nanotechnologies and advanced materials calls in 2014-2015 are outlined, focusing on developing technologies from research to market deployment. Future directions emphasize further vertical and horizontal integration, addressing both industrial and policy needs.
Mainstreaming sustainability: what role for innovation?Céline Charveriat
The document discusses the role of innovation in achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals and remaining within environmental boundaries. It addresses defining relevant questions and priorities for innovation, embracing the complexity of the SDGs, and dealing with potentially conflicting priorities. The document also provides an example of how environmental regulations can unintentionally create barriers for eco-innovation and recommends exploring changes to legislation, improving information sharing and support for innovation hubs to create an enabling environment.
Similar to "Programa de Trabajo NMBP 2018-2020. Convocatorias 2018", por Nieves González, NCP de NMBP en Horizonte 2020. (20)
Este documento describe un proyecto para desarrollar sistemas de detección de cambios no convencionales para mejorar los procesos de producción y actualización de bases de datos de información geográfica. El proyecto utilizará técnicas como inteligencia artificial y aprendizaje automático aplicadas a datos espaciales de varias fuentes como imágenes satelitales y redes sociales para identificar cambios en el territorio y actualizar más rápidamente la cartografía básica oficial de Andalucía.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de marzo de 2020 sobre "La Compra Pública de Innovación como elemento tractor de la I+D+I en Andalucía: próximos retos de la Administración'. El acto se celebró en la sede de la Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad y fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento y la Consejería.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de marzo de 2020 sobre "La Compra Pública de Innovación como elemento tractor de la I+D+I en Andalucía: próximos retos de la Administración'. El acto se celebró en la sede de la Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad y fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento y la Consejería.
La jornada informativa discutió los próximos retos de la administración andaluza en compra pública de innovación para impulsar la investigación, desarrollo e innovación. Varios directores generales de diferentes consejerías presentaron proyectos futuros relacionados con la salud, agricultura, movilidad, educación y emergencias, con presupuestos totales de varios millones de euros y enfoques como inteligencia artificial, vehículos aéreos no tripulados, y viviendas sostenibles.
Presentación sobre oportunidades de financiación de proyectos en el Programa PRIMA: secciones 1 y 2. Recomendaciones para la preparación de propuestas. Autor: José Manuel Durán, NCP de PRIMA-sección 2 de CDTI. Jornada informativa organizada el 26 de febrero de 2020 sobre proyectos de cooperación científico-tecnológica en el Norte de África y Oriente Medio. Programa PRIMA y otros instrumentos de CDTI. Fue organizada por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la Universidad de Almería, el Parque Científico Tecnológico de Almería (PITA) y el CeiA3.
Presentación sobre los mecanismos de financiación CDTI para la cooperación tecnológica en Norte de África y Oriente Medio, de José Manuel Durán, delegado de Norte de África y Oriente Medio de CDTI. Jornada informativa organizada el 26 de febrero de 2020 sobre proyectos de cooperación científico-tecnológica en el Norte de África y Oriente Medio. Programa PRIMA y otros instrumentos de CDTI. Fue organizada por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la Universidad de Almería, el Parque Científico Tecnológico de Almería (PITA) y el CeiA3.
Ponencia sobre la experiencia de Roberto García de la Universidad de Jaén, como coordinador del proyecto SUSTAINOLIVE, financiado bajo la convocatoria 2018 del Programa PRIMA, sección 1. Jornada informativa organizada el 26 de febrero de 2020 sobre proyectos de cooperación científico-tecnológica en el Norte de África y Oriente Medio. Programa PRIMA y otros instrumentos de CDTI. Fue organizada por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la Universidad de Almería, el Parque Científico Tecnológico de Almería (PITA) y el CeiA3.
Ponencia sobre la experiencia de la empresa andaluza TEPRO Consultores agrícolas S.L., como socios del proyecto MEDWATERICE, financiado bajo la convocatoria 2018 del programa PRIMA, sección 2. Presentada por Concepción Mira de la empresa TEPRO. Jornada informativa organizada el 26 de febrero de 2020 sobre proyectos de cooperación científico-tecnológica en el Norte de África y Oriente Medio. Programa PRIMA y otros instrumentos de CDTI. Fue organizada por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la Universidad de Almería, el Parque Científico Tecnológico de Almería (PITA) y el CeiA3.
Presentación acerca de los servicios de apoyo que ofrece la Red Enterprise Europe Network (EEN) a la cooperación tecnológica Internacional, en especial, las búsquedas de socios para proyectos internacionales de I+D+I. Jornada informativa organizada el 26 de febrero de 2020 sobre proyectos de cooperación científico-tecnológica en el Norte de África y Oriente Medio. Programa PRIMA y otros instrumentos de CDTI. Fue organizada por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la Universidad de Almería, el Parque Científico Tecnológico de Almería (PITA) y el CeiA3.
Presentación de Ana Sánchez Montero (Instituto de Agricultura Sostenible - CSIC) sobre el proyecto SHui como caso de éxito - SC2 H2020.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3
Presentación de Marta Conde (CDTI) sobre Aspectos prácticos para preparación de propuestas en Horizonte2020.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3
Presentación de Marta Conde (CDTI) sobre Horizonte Europa.
Jornada informativa organizada el 10 de octubre de 2019 sobre las convocatorias 2020 del Reto 2 en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad de Córdoba, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía, la UCO, el CeiA3
Jornada informativa organizada el 19 de diciembre de 2017 sobre Instrumento PYME en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad Pablo Olavide, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía y la UPO.
Jornada informativa organizada el 19 de diciembre de 2017 sobre Instrumento PYME en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad Pablo Olavide, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía y la UPO.
Jornada informativa organizada el 19 de diciembre de 2017 sobre Instrumento PYME en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad Pablo Olavide, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía y la UPO.
Jornada informativa organizada el 19 de diciembre de 2017 sobre Instrumento PYME en el marco de Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en la Universidad Pablo Olavide, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía y la UPO.
El documento describe las nuevas oportunidades de negocio en teledetección usando plataformas como HAPS y drones a baja altitud, y el Centro Tecnológico CATEC y su experiencia en el desarrollo de tecnologías para drones ligeros y aplicaciones de teledetección. CATEC participa en proyectos europeos como STEPHANIE para promover el intercambio de conocimientos sobre políticas de apoyo a la investigación en fotónica espacial y observación de la Tierra.
Jornada informativa organizada el 1 de diciembre de 2017 sobre convocatorias 'Espacio' en Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en Aerópolis, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía y Aerópolis.
Jornada informativa organizada el 1 de diciembre de 2017 sobre convocatorias 'Espacio' en Horizonte 2020. El evento, celebrado en Aerópolis, fue organizado por la Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento en colaboración con CDTI, Red OTRI Andalucía y Aerópolis.
This document provides guidance for experts evaluating proposals submitted for the Horizon 2020 (H2020) program. It outlines the objectives, roles and responsibilities of independent experts in evaluating proposals against the specified criteria of excellence, impact, and quality of implementation. Experts are responsible for carrying out impartial evaluations of assigned proposals within deadlines and reporting any misconduct. The evaluation criteria and process, including consensus reports, panel reviews, and proposal prioritization are also described.
The binding of cosmological structures by massless topological defectsSérgio Sacani
Assuming spherical symmetry and weak field, it is shown that if one solves the Poisson equation or the Einstein field
equations sourced by a topological defect, i.e. a singularity of a very specific form, the result is a localized gravitational
field capable of driving flat rotation (i.e. Keplerian circular orbits at a constant speed for all radii) of test masses on a thin
spherical shell without any underlying mass. Moreover, a large-scale structure which exploits this solution by assembling
concentrically a number of such topological defects can establish a flat stellar or galactic rotation curve, and can also deflect
light in the same manner as an equipotential (isothermal) sphere. Thus, the need for dark matter or modified gravity theory is
mitigated, at least in part.
Candidate young stellar objects in the S-cluster: Kinematic analysis of a sub...Sérgio Sacani
Context. The observation of several L-band emission sources in the S cluster has led to a rich discussion of their nature. However, a definitive answer to the classification of the dusty objects requires an explanation for the detection of compact Doppler-shifted Brγ emission. The ionized hydrogen in combination with the observation of mid-infrared L-band continuum emission suggests that most of these sources are embedded in a dusty envelope. These embedded sources are part of the S-cluster, and their relationship to the S-stars is still under debate. To date, the question of the origin of these two populations has been vague, although all explanations favor migration processes for the individual cluster members. Aims. This work revisits the S-cluster and its dusty members orbiting the supermassive black hole SgrA* on bound Keplerian orbits from a kinematic perspective. The aim is to explore the Keplerian parameters for patterns that might imply a nonrandom distribution of the sample. Additionally, various analytical aspects are considered to address the nature of the dusty sources. Methods. Based on the photometric analysis, we estimated the individual H−K and K−L colors for the source sample and compared the results to known cluster members. The classification revealed a noticeable contrast between the S-stars and the dusty sources. To fit the flux-density distribution, we utilized the radiative transfer code HYPERION and implemented a young stellar object Class I model. We obtained the position angle from the Keplerian fit results; additionally, we analyzed the distribution of the inclinations and the longitudes of the ascending node. Results. The colors of the dusty sources suggest a stellar nature consistent with the spectral energy distribution in the near and midinfrared domains. Furthermore, the evaporation timescales of dusty and gaseous clumps in the vicinity of SgrA* are much shorter ( 2yr) than the epochs covered by the observations (≈15yr). In addition to the strong evidence for the stellar classification of the D-sources, we also find a clear disk-like pattern following the arrangements of S-stars proposed in the literature. Furthermore, we find a global intrinsic inclination for all dusty sources of 60 ± 20◦, implying a common formation process. Conclusions. The pattern of the dusty sources manifested in the distribution of the position angles, inclinations, and longitudes of the ascending node strongly suggests two different scenarios: the main-sequence stars and the dusty stellar S-cluster sources share a common formation history or migrated with a similar formation channel in the vicinity of SgrA*. Alternatively, the gravitational influence of SgrA* in combination with a massive perturber, such as a putative intermediate mass black hole in the IRS 13 cluster, forces the dusty objects and S-stars to follow a particular orbital arrangement. Key words. stars: black holes– stars: formation– Galaxy: center– galaxies: star formation
EWOCS-I: The catalog of X-ray sources in Westerlund 1 from the Extended Weste...Sérgio Sacani
Context. With a mass exceeding several 104 M⊙ and a rich and dense population of massive stars, supermassive young star clusters
represent the most massive star-forming environment that is dominated by the feedback from massive stars and gravitational interactions
among stars.
Aims. In this paper we present the Extended Westerlund 1 and 2 Open Clusters Survey (EWOCS) project, which aims to investigate
the influence of the starburst environment on the formation of stars and planets, and on the evolution of both low and high mass stars.
The primary targets of this project are Westerlund 1 and 2, the closest supermassive star clusters to the Sun.
Methods. The project is based primarily on recent observations conducted with the Chandra and JWST observatories. Specifically,
the Chandra survey of Westerlund 1 consists of 36 new ACIS-I observations, nearly co-pointed, for a total exposure time of 1 Msec.
Additionally, we included 8 archival Chandra/ACIS-S observations. This paper presents the resulting catalog of X-ray sources within
and around Westerlund 1. Sources were detected by combining various existing methods, and photon extraction and source validation
were carried out using the ACIS-Extract software.
Results. The EWOCS X-ray catalog comprises 5963 validated sources out of the 9420 initially provided to ACIS-Extract, reaching a
photon flux threshold of approximately 2 × 10−8 photons cm−2
s
−1
. The X-ray sources exhibit a highly concentrated spatial distribution,
with 1075 sources located within the central 1 arcmin. We have successfully detected X-ray emissions from 126 out of the 166 known
massive stars of the cluster, and we have collected over 71 000 photons from the magnetar CXO J164710.20-455217.
Immersive Learning That Works: Research Grounding and Paths ForwardLeonel Morgado
We will metaverse into the essence of immersive learning, into its three dimensions and conceptual models. This approach encompasses elements from teaching methodologies to social involvement, through organizational concerns and technologies. Challenging the perception of learning as knowledge transfer, we introduce a 'Uses, Practices & Strategies' model operationalized by the 'Immersive Learning Brain' and ‘Immersion Cube’ frameworks. This approach offers a comprehensive guide through the intricacies of immersive educational experiences and spotlighting research frontiers, along the immersion dimensions of system, narrative, and agency. Our discourse extends to stakeholders beyond the academic sphere, addressing the interests of technologists, instructional designers, and policymakers. We span various contexts, from formal education to organizational transformation to the new horizon of an AI-pervasive society. This keynote aims to unite the iLRN community in a collaborative journey towards a future where immersive learning research and practice coalesce, paving the way for innovative educational research and practice landscapes.
JAMES WEBB STUDY THE MASSIVE BLACK HOLE SEEDSSérgio Sacani
The pathway(s) to seeding the massive black holes (MBHs) that exist at the heart of galaxies in the present and distant Universe remains an unsolved problem. Here we categorise, describe and quantitatively discuss the formation pathways of both light and heavy seeds. We emphasise that the most recent computational models suggest that rather than a bimodal-like mass spectrum between light and heavy seeds with light at one end and heavy at the other that instead a continuum exists. Light seeds being more ubiquitous and the heavier seeds becoming less and less abundant due the rarer environmental conditions required for their formation. We therefore examine the different mechanisms that give rise to different seed mass spectrums. We show how and why the mechanisms that produce the heaviest seeds are also among the rarest events in the Universe and are hence extremely unlikely to be the seeds for the vast majority of the MBH population. We quantify, within the limits of the current large uncertainties in the seeding processes, the expected number densities of the seed mass spectrum. We argue that light seeds must be at least 103 to 105 times more numerous than heavy seeds to explain the MBH population as a whole. Based on our current understanding of the seed population this makes heavy seeds (Mseed > 103 M⊙) a significantly more likely pathway given that heavy seeds have an abundance pattern than is close to and likely in excess of 10−4 compared to light seeds. Finally, we examine the current state-of-the-art in numerical calculations and recent observations and plot a path forward for near-future advances in both domains.
Microbial interaction
Microorganisms interacts with each other and can be physically associated with another organisms in a variety of ways.
One organism can be located on the surface of another organism as an ectobiont or located within another organism as endobiont.
Microbial interaction may be positive such as mutualism, proto-cooperation, commensalism or may be negative such as parasitism, predation or competition
Types of microbial interaction
Positive interaction: mutualism, proto-cooperation, commensalism
Negative interaction: Ammensalism (antagonism), parasitism, predation, competition
I. Mutualism:
It is defined as the relationship in which each organism in interaction gets benefits from association. It is an obligatory relationship in which mutualist and host are metabolically dependent on each other.
Mutualistic relationship is very specific where one member of association cannot be replaced by another species.
Mutualism require close physical contact between interacting organisms.
Relationship of mutualism allows organisms to exist in habitat that could not occupied by either species alone.
Mutualistic relationship between organisms allows them to act as a single organism.
Examples of mutualism:
i. Lichens:
Lichens are excellent example of mutualism.
They are the association of specific fungi and certain genus of algae. In lichen, fungal partner is called mycobiont and algal partner is called
II. Syntrophism:
It is an association in which the growth of one organism either depends on or improved by the substrate provided by another organism.
In syntrophism both organism in association gets benefits.
Compound A
Utilized by population 1
Compound B
Utilized by population 2
Compound C
utilized by both Population 1+2
Products
In this theoretical example of syntrophism, population 1 is able to utilize and metabolize compound A, forming compound B but cannot metabolize beyond compound B without co-operation of population 2. Population 2is unable to utilize compound A but it can metabolize compound B forming compound C. Then both population 1 and 2 are able to carry out metabolic reaction which leads to formation of end product that neither population could produce alone.
Examples of syntrophism:
i. Methanogenic ecosystem in sludge digester
Methane produced by methanogenic bacteria depends upon interspecies hydrogen transfer by other fermentative bacteria.
Anaerobic fermentative bacteria generate CO2 and H2 utilizing carbohydrates which is then utilized by methanogenic bacteria (Methanobacter) to produce methane.
ii. Lactobacillus arobinosus and Enterococcus faecalis:
In the minimal media, Lactobacillus arobinosus and Enterococcus faecalis are able to grow together but not alone.
The synergistic relationship between E. faecalis and L. arobinosus occurs in which E. faecalis require folic acid
The debris of the ‘last major merger’ is dynamically youngSérgio Sacani
The Milky Way’s (MW) inner stellar halo contains an [Fe/H]-rich component with highly eccentric orbits, often referred to as the
‘last major merger.’ Hypotheses for the origin of this component include Gaia-Sausage/Enceladus (GSE), where the progenitor
collided with the MW proto-disc 8–11 Gyr ago, and the Virgo Radial Merger (VRM), where the progenitor collided with the
MW disc within the last 3 Gyr. These two scenarios make different predictions about observable structure in local phase space,
because the morphology of debris depends on how long it has had to phase mix. The recently identified phase-space folds in Gaia
DR3 have positive caustic velocities, making them fundamentally different than the phase-mixed chevrons found in simulations
at late times. Roughly 20 per cent of the stars in the prograde local stellar halo are associated with the observed caustics. Based
on a simple phase-mixing model, the observed number of caustics are consistent with a merger that occurred 1–2 Gyr ago.
We also compare the observed phase-space distribution to FIRE-2 Latte simulations of GSE-like mergers, using a quantitative
measurement of phase mixing (2D causticality). The observed local phase-space distribution best matches the simulated data
1–2 Gyr after collision, and certainly not later than 3 Gyr. This is further evidence that the progenitor of the ‘last major merger’
did not collide with the MW proto-disc at early times, as is thought for the GSE, but instead collided with the MW disc within
the last few Gyr, consistent with the body of work surrounding the VRM.
Evidence of Jet Activity from the Secondary Black Hole in the OJ 287 Binary S...Sérgio Sacani
Wereport the study of a huge optical intraday flare on 2021 November 12 at 2 a.m. UT in the blazar OJ287. In the binary black hole model, it is associated with an impact of the secondary black hole on the accretion disk of the primary. Our multifrequency observing campaign was set up to search for such a signature of the impact based on a prediction made 8 yr earlier. The first I-band results of the flare have already been reported by Kishore et al. (2024). Here we combine these data with our monitoring in the R-band. There is a big change in the R–I spectral index by 1.0 ±0.1 between the normal background and the flare, suggesting a new component of radiation. The polarization variation during the rise of the flare suggests the same. The limits on the source size place it most reasonably in the jet of the secondary BH. We then ask why we have not seen this phenomenon before. We show that OJ287 was never before observed with sufficient sensitivity on the night when the flare should have happened according to the binary model. We also study the probability that this flare is just an oversized example of intraday variability using the Krakow data set of intense monitoring between 2015 and 2023. We find that the occurrence of a flare of this size and rapidity is unlikely. In machine-readable Tables 1 and 2, we give the full orbit-linked historical light curve of OJ287 as well as the dense monitoring sample of Krakow.
Authoring a personal GPT for your research and practice: How we created the Q...Leonel Morgado
Thematic analysis in qualitative research is a time-consuming and systematic task, typically done using teams. Team members must ground their activities on common understandings of the major concepts underlying the thematic analysis, and define criteria for its development. However, conceptual misunderstandings, equivocations, and lack of adherence to criteria are challenges to the quality and speed of this process. Given the distributed and uncertain nature of this process, we wondered if the tasks in thematic analysis could be supported by readily available artificial intelligence chatbots. Our early efforts point to potential benefits: not just saving time in the coding process but better adherence to criteria and grounding, by increasing triangulation between humans and artificial intelligence. This tutorial will provide a description and demonstration of the process we followed, as two academic researchers, to develop a custom ChatGPT to assist with qualitative coding in the thematic data analysis process of immersive learning accounts in a survey of the academic literature: QUAL-E Immersive Learning Thematic Analysis Helper. In the hands-on time, participants will try out QUAL-E and develop their ideas for their own qualitative coding ChatGPT. Participants that have the paid ChatGPT Plus subscription can create a draft of their assistants. The organizers will provide course materials and slide deck that participants will be able to utilize to continue development of their custom GPT. The paid subscription to ChatGPT Plus is not required to participate in this workshop, just for trying out personal GPTs during it.
PPT on Direct Seeded Rice presented at the three-day 'Training and Validation Workshop on Modules of Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Technologies in South Asia' workshop on April 22, 2024.
The cost of acquiring information by natural selectionCarl Bergstrom
This is a short talk that I gave at the Banff International Research Station workshop on Modeling and Theory in Population Biology. The idea is to try to understand how the burden of natural selection relates to the amount of information that selection puts into the genome.
It's based on the first part of this research paper:
The cost of information acquisition by natural selection
Ryan Seamus McGee, Olivia Kosterlitz, Artem Kaznatcheev, Benjamin Kerr, Carl T. Bergstrom
bioRxiv 2022.07.02.498577; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.07.02.498577
2. 2 (27/11/2017)
• Horizonte 2020.
• Contexto político 2018-2020
• Novedades en el Plan de trabajo 2018-2020.
– Open Innovation Test Beds
• Convocatorias 2018 y 2019
• Recomendaciones para presentar una propuesta.
• Apoyo de CDTI y otras informaciones prácticas.
3. 3 (27/11/2017)
¿Qué es Horizonte 2020?
ICT
Nanotechnology
Biotechnology
Advanced Materials
Advanced Manufacturing
& Processing
Space
Access to Risk Finance
Innovation in SMEs
European Research
Council (ERC)
Future and Emerging
Technologies (FET)
Marie Skłodowska-Curie
actions on skills, training
and career development
European research
infrastructures
Health, demographic change and wellbeing
Food security, sustainable agriculture and
forestry, marine and maritime and inland
water research and the bioeconomy;
Secure, clean and efficient energy;
Smart, green and integrated transport;
Climate action, environment, resource
efficiency and raw materials
Secure Societies: Protecting freedom and
security of Europe and its citizens
Europe in a changing world-Inclusive,
innovative and reflexive societies
Excellent Science Societal
Challenges
Industrial
Leadership
Programa Marco de Investigación e Innovación (2014-2020)
LEIT
5. 5 (27/11/2017)
RIA: R&I ActivitiesIA: Innovation Activities
CSA
Coordination & Support Actions
Instruments
100%
70%
100%
Simplified funding rates:
• Up to 100 % of the eligible costs; but up to 70% (*) in IA if profit-
seeking organisations
• Single indirect cost model: 25% flat rate for all
6. 6 (27/11/2017)
NMBP Evaluation
Excellence (4/5)
Impact (4/5)
TOTAL (8/10)
Excellence (4/5)
Impact (4/5)
Quality and efficincy of the
implementation (3/5)
TOTAL* (12/15)
Ph2
/
One
stage
Ph1
7. 7 (27/11/2017)
Contractual Public-Private Partnerships
(cPPPs)
• Technological and sector related objectives – commitment
from industry.
• Industry plays leading role in defining research priorities
• Using fully open H2020 calls
Factories of the Future Energy-efficient Buildings
(FoF) (EeB)
Sustainable Process
Industry (SPIRE)
8. 8 (27/11/2017)
Análisis RESULTADOS NMBP 2014-2017
2.578 propuestas, 1.646 con presencia ES
(64%)
485 coordinadas ES (19%)
Tasa de éxito ES: razonable, algo más alta
que la media (17% vs. 16%)
417 proyectos, 285 con presencia ES (68%)
86 coordinados ES (20%)
294 M€ para entidades ES
2º puesto detrás de DE
9. 9 (27/11/2017)
H2020– NMBP - Resultados 2014-2017
294 M€ 14,4% UE-28
E – Empresa
T – Centro Tecnológico
U – Universidad
C – Centro Público de
Investigación
I – Asociación de
Investigación
Cierto aumento de participación industrial,
aunque la coordinación se reparte
Participación en
proyectos por tipo de
entidad:
10. 10 (27/11/2017)
Official WP 2018-20 published!:
http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h20
20/wp/2018-2020/main/h2020-wp1820-leit-
nmp_en.pdf
11. 11 (27/11/2017)
EU Policy Context
R&I in the context of European policy priorities (Political Guidelines for the
Juncker Commission, July 2014)
• To boost jobs, growth and investment
• To realise a connected digital single market
• To implement a resilient Energy Union with a forward
looking climate change policy
• To make Europe a stronger global actor
Commissioner Moedas' priorities
– Open innovation, Open science, Open to the world
12. 12 (27/11/2017)
Work Programme 2018-2020
• Policy Context
• Technology Roadmaps
• Interim Evaluation H2020
(2014-2016)
- Fewer topics, more funding per topic
(Non prescriptive topics)
- Extension of concept of pilot lines:
Open Innovation Test Beds
- International cooperation
- Pilot experiences IAs 50%; lump sum
13. 13 (27/11/2017)
Open to the world
• EU-China Flagship initiative on Biotechnology for environment and
Human Health
• New biotechnologies for environmental remediation CE-BIOTEC-04-2018
• Microorganism communities for plastics biodegradation CE-BIOTEC-05-
2019
• Custom-made biological scaffolds for specific tissue regeneration and
repair NMBP-21-2020
- Chinese universities and research centers
- 1 phase evaluation
- Deadline: 25/04/2018
- Check Participant Portal:
http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/docs/h2020-funding-guide/cross-cutting-
issues/international-cooperation_en.htm
• EU-USA Flagship on Nanosafety (NNI program: Communities of
Research https://us-eu.org/) (Topics NMBP-13 a NMBP-17)
Collaboration in nanosafety is also encouraged with South Korea, Brazil, Canada,
Australia, China, Japan and South Africa.
14. 14 (27/11/2017)
Open to the world
Other topics where international cooperation is particularly
encouraged:
• Catalytic transformation of hydrocarbons, (European Neighbourhood
Policy countries, Iran e Iraq) CE-NMBP-24-2018
• Standardisation in Synthetic Biology BIOTEC-01-2018
• Conservation of cultural heritage (in particular with relevant
international organisations) NMBP-33-2018
• Photocatalytic synthesis CE-NMBP-25-2019
• SPIRE, may be particularly appropiate in some areas of Sustainable
Process Industry (in particular with Eastern Partnership Countries)
CE-SPIRE-1 a 10
15. 15 (27/11/2017)
Open Innovation
GREATER OUTREACH
- Active contribution with ongoing
activities, clusters, networks.
- «include actions designed to facilitate
cooperation with other projects across
Europe» - 25 topics
http://www.characterisation.eu/
https://www.nanosafetycluster.eu/
www.emmc.info
http://eppn.eu/
TEST BEDS.
- Open, transparent access at fair cost
- To any SME in all Europe
- Links to other test-beds, clusters:
INNOVATION ECOSYSTEM
16. 16 (27/11/2017)
Pilot experience: Inovation actions 50%
• For profit-making entities (instead 70% IA)
• Innovation actions reaching TRL 7
• High-cost desmonstrators integrating different technologies
in industrial settings
• DT-FOF-04-2018 Pilot lines for metal Additive Manufacturing
• DT-FOF-08-2019 Pilot lines for modular factories
• DT-FOF-20-2020 Pilot lines for large-part high precision manufacturing
• CE-SPIRE-03-2018 Energy end resource flexibility in highly energy intensive
industries.
• CE-SPIRE-05-2019 Adaptation to variable feedstock through retrofitting
• LC-EEB-06-2018-2020 ICT enabled, sustainable and affordable residential
building construction, design to end of life.
17. 17 (27/11/2017)
Pilot experience: LUMP SUM
• DT-NMBP-20-2018: A digital "plug and produce" online
equipment platform for manufacturing.
• Lump-sum Payments
– Payment on the basis of deliverables instead of costs.
– Fixed lump-sum defined in work program: 7.5 M€
– Payment when work packages are fully completed; without cost
reporting, or financial audits.
• Cascading Grants
– To connect small manufacturing business to the platform
– Open call to select third parties for which financial support will be
granted (50.000-100.000 €).
Deadline: 08/03/2018
18. 18 (27/11/2017)
Convocatorias NMBP 2018-20: Focus Areas
• Digitisation /
Transformation of
Industry
• Circular Economy
• De-carbonisation
and Energy
19. 19 (27/11/2017)
MNBP main priorities
Bringing the digital to the
physical world
Industry 4.0
Climate, Energy and the
Circular Economy
Circular Economy (20%)
Climate, Energy (20%)
FOUNDATIONS for
tomorrow's industry
(~395M€)
TRANSFORMING
European industry
(~525M€)
Industrial
SUSTAINABILITY
(~665M€)
Eco-system
for
design/testing/upscaling
Global industrial
leadership for
re-industrialisation
Less energy input, more
energy/ resource
efficiency
60%
40%
0%
Priorities Calls Impacts
20. 20 (27/11/2017)
Calls NMBP 2018-20
Foundations
Tomorrow’s
Industry
FOUNDATIONS for
tomorrow's industry
(~395M€)
TRANSFORMING
European industry
(~525M€)
Industrial
SUSTAINABILITY
(~525M€)
Open Innovation
TestBeds
Characterisation &
Modelling
Governance, risk-
assessment &
regulatory
Biotechnology
Medical Technology
Factories of the
Future (FoF)
Sustainable
Process Industry
(SPIRE)
Catalysing Circular
Economy
Materials Clean
Energy
Cultural Heritage
Energy-efficient
Buildings (EEB)
24. 24 (27/11/2017)
Open Innovation Test Beds
Develop new /upgrade existing facilities.
- Demonstration in relevant industrial environments.
Complementary services:
- Identification and assesment of regulatory, economic and technical barriers.
Open: accesible at fair cost to any SME in Europe.
Set up network of test beds and services, sharing knowledge,
offering a single entry point to users.
-Characterisation - Regulation - IPR
-Modelling - Standardisation - Market analysis
- … - … - Mentoring, …
26. 26 (27/11/2017)
Example of Test Bed with Facilities & Services in House
and Provided by External Entities
27. 28 (27/11/2017)
Open Innovation Test Beds - Impact
Reduced cost and lower risk for SMEs:
Accelerate innovation
Improve productivity
Increased access to finance.
Test Beds to become Sustainable → Business case
Attract users from all Europe → Dissemination
Questions? Check FAQs
28. 29 (27/11/2017)
NMBP 2018-2019: Foundations for Tomorrow´s Industry
OPEN INNOVATION TEST BEDS
DT-NMBP-01-2018: Open Innovation Test Beds for
Lightweight nano-enabled multifunctional composite
materials and components (IA) TRL 4-7 7-15M€
DT-NMBP-02-2018: Open Innovation Test Beds for
Safety Testing of Medical Technologies for Health (IA)
DT-NMBP-03-2019: Open Innovation Test Beds for
nano-enabled surfaces and membranes(IA)
29. 30 (27/11/2017)
MATERIALS CHARACTERISATION &
COMPUTATIONAL MODELLING
DT-NMBP-07-2018: Open Innovation Test Beds for
Characterisation (IA) TRL 4-6 9M€
DT-NMBP-09-2018: Accelerating the uptake of
materials modelling software (IA) TRL 4-7 4M€
DT-NMBP-08-2019: Real-time nano-characterisation
technologies (RIA) TRL 4-6 4-5M€
DT-NMBP-10-2019: Adopting materials modelling in
manufacturing processes (RIA) TRL 4-6 5M€
DT-NMBP-12-2019: Sustainable Nano-Fabrication
(CSA) 2M€
NMBP 2018-2019: Foundations for Tomorrow´s Industry
30. 31 (27/11/2017)
NMBP-13-2018: Risk Governance of nanotechnology
(RIA) TRL 4-6 5M€
NMBP-14-2018: Nanoinformatics: from materials
models to predictive toxicology and ecotoxicology
(RIA) TRL 4-6 6M€
NMBP-15-2019: Safe by design, from science to
regulation: metrics and main sectors (RIA)
TRL 4-6 5-6M€
GOVERNANCE, SCIENCE-BASED RISK
ASSESSMENT & REGULATORY ASPECTS
NMBP 2018-2019: Foundations for Tomorrow´s Industry
31. 32 (27/11/2017)
Calls NMBP 2018-20
Foundations
Tomorrow’s
Industry
FOUNDATIONS for
tomorrow's industry
(~395M€)
TRANSFORMING
European industry
(~525M€)
Industrial
SUSTAINABILITY
(~525M€)
Open Innovation
TestBeds
Characterisation &
Modelling
Governance, risk-
assessment &
regulatory
Biotechnology
Medical Technology
Factories of the
Future (FoF)
Sustainable
Process Industry
(SPIRE)
Catalysing Circular
Economy
Materials Clean
Energy
Cultural Heritage
Energy-efficient
Buildings (EEB)
32. 33 (27/11/2017)
FACTORIES OF THE FUTURE (FOF) - 2018
NMBP 2018-2019: Transforming European Industry
DT-FoF-01-2018: Skills needed for new Manufacturing
jobs (CSA) 1-2M€
DT-FoF-02-2018: Effective Industrial Human-Robot
Cooperation (RIA) TRL 4-6 6-8M€
DT-FoF-03-2018: Innovative manufacturing of opto-
electrical parts (RIA) TRL 4-6 6-8M€
DT-FoF-04-2018: Pilot lines for metal Additive
Manufacturing (IA 50%) TRL 5-7 12-15M€
DT-NMBP-20-2018: A digital 'plug and produce' online
equipment platform for manufacturing (IA)
TRL 5-7 7.5M€
33. 34 (27/11/2017)
FACTORIES OF THE FUTURE (FOF) 2019
DT-FoF-05-2019: Open Innovation for collaborative
production engineering (IA) TRL 4-6
DT-FoF-06-2019: Refurbishment and re-
manufacturing of large industrial equipment (IA)
DT-FoF-08-2019: Pilot lines for modular factories
(IA 50%) TRL 5-7
DT-FoF-12-2019: Handling systems for flexible
materials (RIA) TRL 4-6
DT-NMBP-18-2019: Materials, manufacturing
processes and devices for organic and large area
electronics (IA) TRL 3-5
DT-NMBP-19-2019: Advanced materials for additive
manufacturing (IA) TRL 4-6
NMBP 2018-2019: Transforming European Industry
34. 35 (27/11/2017)
BIOTECHNOLOGY
BIOTEC-01-2018: Standardisation in Synthetic
Biology (CSA) 2M€
BIOTEC-03-2018: Synthetic biology to expand diversity
of nature's chemical production(RIA) TRL3-5 6-8M
CE-BIOTEC-04-2018: New biotechnologies for
environmental remediation (RIA) TRL 3-5 5M€
BIOTEC-02-2019: Boosting the efficiency of
photosynthesis (RIA) TRL 3-5 6-8M
CE-BIOTEC-05-2019: Microorganism communities for
plastics bio-degradation (RIA) TRL 3-5 5M€
NMBP 2018-2019: Transforming European Industry
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY INNOVATIONS
NMBP-22-2018: Osteo-articular tissues regeneration
(RIA) TRL 3-5 4-6M€
35. 36 (27/11/2017)
Calls NMBP 2018-20
Foundations
Tomorrow’s
Industry
FOUNDATIONS for
tomorrow's industry
(~395M€)
TRANSFORMING
European industry
(~525M€)
Industrial
SUSTAINABILITY
(~525M€)
Open Innovation
TestBeds
Characterisation &
Modelling
Governance, risk-
assessment &
regulatory
Biotechnology
Medical Technology
Factories of the
Future (FoF)
Sustainable
Process Industry
(SPIRE)
Catalysing Circular
Economy
Materials Clean
Energy
Cultural Heritage
Energy-efficient
Buildings (EEB)
36. 37 (27/11/2017)
SUSTAINABLE PROCESS INDUSTRY
(SPIRE)
CE-SPIRE-02-2018: Processing of material feedstock
using non-conventional energy sources (IA)
TRL 4-6 6-10M€
CE-SPIRE-03-2018: Energy and resource efficiency in
highly energy intensive industries (IA 50%)
TRL 5-7 8-12M€
CE-SPIRE-10-2018: Efficient recycling processes for
plastic containing materials (IA) TRL 5-7 6-8M€
CE-SPIRE-04-2019: Efficient integrated downstream
processes (IA) TRL 5-7 10-14 M€
CE-SPIRE-05-2019: Adaptation to variable feedstock
through retrofitting (IA 50%) TRL 5-7 8-12M€
DT-SPIRE-06-2019: Digital technologies for improved
performance in cognitive production plants(IA)
TRL 5-7 6-8M€
NMBP 2018-2019: Industrial sustainability
37. 38 (27/11/2017)
CATALYSING THE CIRCULAR ECONOMY
CE-NMBP-24-2018: Catalytic transformation of
hydrocarbons (RIA) TRL 3-5 5-7M€
CE-NMBP-26-2018: Smart plastic materials with
intelligent recycling properties by design (RIA)
TRL 3-5 4-6M€
CE-NMBP-25-2019: Photocatalytic synthesis (RIA)
TRL 3-5 5-7M€
NMBP 2018-2019: Industrial sustainability
CULTURAL HERITAGE
NMBP-32-2018: Innovative and affordable solutions for
the preventive conservation of cultural heritage (IA)
TRL 5-7 4-6M€
38. 39 (27/11/2017)
CLEAN ENERGY THROUGH INNOVATIVE
MATERIALS
LC-NMBP-30-2018: Materials for future highly
performant electrified vehicle batteries (RIA)
TRL 3-5 6-8M€
LC-NMBP-27-2019: Strengthening EU materials
technologies for non-automotive battery storage
(RIA) TRL 4-6 6-8M€
LC-NMBP-29-2019: Materials for non-battery based
energy storage (RIA) TRL 3-5 4-6M€
LC-NMBP-32-2019: Smart materials, systems and
structures for energy harvesting(RIA) TRL 3-5 5-7M€
NMBP 2018-2019: Industrial sustainability
39. 40 (27/11/2017)
ENERGY-EFFICIENT BUILDINGS (EEB)
LC-EeB-02-2018: Building information modelling
adapted to efficient renovation (RIA) TRL 4-6 5-7M€
LC-EeB-06-2018/20: ICT enabled, sustainable and
affordable residential building, design to end of life
(IA 50%) TRL 5-7 6-8M€
LC-EeB-01-2019: Integration of energy smart
materials in non-residential buildings (IA)
TRL 5-7 4-6M€
LC-EeB-03-2019: New developments in plus energy
houses (IA) TRL 5-7 6-8M€
LC-EeB-05-2019/20: Integrated storage systems for
residential buildings (IA) TRL 5-7 6-8M€
NMBP 2018-2019: Industrial sustainability
40. 41 (27/11/2017)
2018-19 budgets:
•FOUNDATIONS FOR TOMORROW’S INDUSTRY – 269 M€
•TRANSFORMING EUROPEAN INDUSTRY – 340 M€
•INDUSTRIAL SUSTAINABILITY – 447 M€
2018 Deadlines
•Two-stage topics: 23/01/18 and 28/06/18
•Single-stage topics: 22/02/18
•Lump sum funding pilot scheme topic: DT-NMBP-20-2018: 08/03/18
•EU-China flagship initiative on Biotechnology topic: CE-BIOTEC-04-2018:
25/04/18
NMBP Calls 2018-2019
43. 44 (27/11/2017)
Make an IMPACT!
Importancia en la evaluación
Cubrir TODOS los impactos del topic…e identificar
otros posibles.
Cuantificar los impactos de manera justificada.
Ser ambiciosos, definir una estrategia y plan de
futuro claro.
Prestar atención al Plan de Comunicación
«Relevant indicators and metrics, with baseline values, should be clearly
stated in the proposal.»
44. 45 (27/11/2017)
Business case & Exploitation strategy
• Market opportunities for European enterprises, innovators.
• Manufacturing capacities : growth and jobs in Europe.
– BUSINESS CASE: Targeted markets; user,
consumer needs, competitive advantage, etc.
• Realistic explotation strategy:
– Identify obstacles & needed actions to reach high TRLs :
• Industrial integrator, availability of testing facilities, reliability.
• Matching European value chains.
• Standardisation, IPR, Regulatory issues.
• User acceptance; sustainability of financing
45. 46 (27/11/2017)
Computational Modelling
• Highlighted in a number of topics .
• Should be described similar to Review of Material Modelling
(RoMM)
• Contribution to the European Materials Modelling Council (EMMC)
• Use of existing models from previous project is encouraged.
https://emmc.info/version-6-of-the-
romm-is-now-available/
46. 47 (27/11/2017)
Other cross-cutting issues
Synergies of funds: possibilities for further
funding from other relevant EU, national or
regional R&I funds.
Identify the Smart Specialisation fields of
your EU Member State or region (RIS3).
RIS3 Guide & map:
http://s3platform.jrc.ec.europa.eu/map
Gender aspects: explore, analyse and respond to possible sex and gender
differences.
Open research data: Engage in research data sharing by default (may opt
out)
Integration of social sciences and humanities (SSH).
Contribution to Standardization activities.
Life cycle Analysis as a tool (SPIRE topics).
48. 49 (27/11/2017)
Algunas recomendaciones
finales:
• No olvidar contexto político, directivas y roadmaps
• Leer muy bien el topic y las introducciones.
• Cumplir los TRLs de inicio y fin del proyecto y
justificarlos.
• Cumplir TODOS los impactos; cuantificar de forma
razonada.
• Pensar en el evaluador
51. 52 (27/11/2017)
Red de puntos de información sobre I+D+i (Red PI+D+i)
“NINGÚN PROYECTO INNOVADOR SIN AYUDA”
Amplia cobertura territorial
Medios de acceso al servicio
Canal Web: http://www.redpidi.es
Teléfono: 902.34.74.34
Presencial: Punto pidi más cercano http://www.redpidi.es
150 nodos de información en diferentes niveles
CDTI’s support
55. 56 (27/11/2017)
Contact information NMBP:
Leadership in Enabling and Industrial Technologies
(LEIT): NMBP
Nieves González: National Contact Point NMP - nieves.gonzalez@cdti.es
Lucía Íñigo: Spanish Delegate NMBP- lucia.inigo@cdti.es
Marta Conde: National Contact Point BioTech- marta.conde@cdti.es
Carlos León: National Contact Point NMP - carlos.leon@fis.ucm.es
http://eshorizonte2020.es/
@eshorizonte2020
@CDTIoficial
Consultas generales sobre
I+D+i y el Programa Marco:
http://www.cdti.es/pidi
Tel. 902 34 74 34
56. 57 (27/11/2017)
Muchas Gracias
por su atención
Nieves González (nieves.gonzalez@cdti.es)
División Programas de la UE-Dpto. Liderazgo Industrial
Dirección de Programas Internacionales
@NievesGonz_CDTI
https://www.linkedin.com/in/nievesgonzález/