SSTI Digest
Québec Commits $1B+ for Innovation & Research Strategy
The provincial government of Québec committed to infusing $888 million (Canadian) into its science and technology community over the next three years, as a result of the innovation and research strategy released earlier this month. The new investment is in addition to $278 million committed this year alone for research infrastructure and the Québec Aeronautical Industry Development Strategy.
To help put the magnitude of the nearly $1.2 billion total Canadian three-year investment into perspective for most Digest readers (approximately $1.01 billion US), Québec’s 2006 population of nearly 7.7 million people would make it the 12th-largest state, between New Jersey and Virginia.
An Innovative and Prosperous Québec outlines the province’s mechanisms to increase the development of knowledge and technology transfer, with specific and aggressive goals by 2010 of increasing:
the annual domestic expenditures on research and development to 3 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP), which would be up from 2.7 percent of GDP in 2004, and
the private sector’s share of R&D financing to over 66 percent (…
Job Corner
ANGLE, an international venture management and consulting company with broad experience in technology development initiatives at the regional and national level, has position openings for a consultant and a senior executive. These starting-level positions would assist ANGLE's U.S. Consulting and Management operation on domestic and international projects. Both positions require someone with a Ph.D. or a master's degree in business, public policy, development studies, economics, or technology and interests in technology-based economic development, technology transfer, technology and innovation policy, and strategy. A full description of these opportunities and others is available through the SSTI Job Corner at http://www.ssti.org/posting.htm.
Bahrain Seeks to Become Research Leader with $1B Science and Technology Park
The Economic Development Board of Bahrain and Kuwait Finance House have begun planning a $1 billion (US) Science and Technology Park in Bahrain. The park will be modeled on the Sophia Antipolis Technology Park in France, which is the largest of its kind in Europe and the second-largest technology park in the world, according to the European Commission’s PAXIS innovation program. The Kuwait Finance House has appointed Philippe Mariani, former director of the French park to oversee the new project.
Bahrain Science and Technology Park has already announced several partnerships with Middle Eastern and European universities to attract research in clean technology, renewable energy, environmental technology, IT, and communications. The two million square meter campus will host small, medium and large companies in these and other emerging industries.
The project will be executed in three phases, though a final timeline has not yet been announced. The first phase will concentrate on the initial infrastructure for the park, while the later stages will introduce additional laboratories, university partnerships, and quality of…
United Kingdom, California to Collaborate on Climate Change Policy
Recognizing an immediate need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate the adverse consequences of climate change, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and British Prime Minister Tony Blair have announced their intention to become partners and act aggressively to address climate change and promote energy diversity.
Gov. Schwarzenegger and Prime Minister Blair signed an agreement during an hour-long roundtable focusing on clean energy and climate issues. The event, held July 31, was attended by more than a dozen CEOs. At the signing, Gov. Schwarzenegger did not shy away from criticizing the lack of action on the federal level.
California will not wait for our federal government to take strong action on global warming, Gov. Schwarzenegger said. Today, we are taking an unprecedented step by signing an agreement between California and the United Kingdom. International partnerships are needed in the fight against global warming and California has a responsibility and a profound role to play to protect not only our environment, but to be a world leader on this issue as well.
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Technology Parks are Vital to Brazilian Competitiveness, Says Report
A new report released in conjunction with the Fourth International Competitive Brazil Congress gives a positive assessment of the country's potential as a leader in life sciences and provides useful model for competitiveness assessments in other regions. The report, Mechanisms of Innovation and Competitiveness, was prepared by the Center for the Support of Technology Development at the University of Brasilia and coordinated by the five-year-old Competitive Brazil Movement (Movimento Brasil Competitivo, MBC).
Five science and technology parks were selected for analysis in order to collect data on the progress of Brazilian innovation over the course of two years. During the study, the MBC developed an assessment methodology that can be applied to evaluate the potential of an environment to foster innovation and improve regional competitiveness. This model, based on previous studies by the U.S. Council on Competitiveness in North Carolina and Mexico, relies on several categories of high-tech competitiveness indicators including:
Business Environment;
Regulation System;
Regional Knowledge and…
Toronto Considers Strategies for Building Regional Creative Economies
In a report released last week, a Toronto group says that creative industries may soon overtake ICT and business services as the fastest growing sector in the region's economy. In order to preserve this momentum and ensure that other industries benefit from the presence of a strong creative sector, the authors recommend enlisting regional leaders to create programs that support creative people, creative enterprises, affordable spaces for creative work, and a shared community vision.
The report is the culmination of almost two years of work by Toronto's Creative Cities Leadership Team, with support from the University of Toronto, the Ontario Ministry of Culture, the City of Toronto, and the Ministry of Research and Innovation. Similar case studies by the Strategies for Creative Cities project are now being undertaken in New York, San Francisco, London, Barcelona and Berlin. A report on London was released earlier this year.
According to the project, creative industries are those producing cultural goods, including media and broadcasting, architecture, the performing arts, advertising, design, and publishing. Creative…
Ireland Committing $3.4B to Science, Technology & Innovation
Ireland, a country the geographic size of West Virginia and with only four million citizens, about the same as Kentucky, is launching a comprehensive strategy to significantly strengthen the nation's position in the knowledge economy by 2013. And it is investing 2.7 billion Euros by 2008 - or $3.4 billion U.S. - toward implementing more than 75 specific action items.
Released June 25 by Ireland's Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment, the Strategy for Science, Technology and Innovation presents the reasons for making such a sizable commitment as well as the areas to receive the targeted investment. For instance, in the area of delivering world class research, the island nation will expand its recent expenditures for its university research infrastructure with the goal of doubling the number of Ph.D. graduates by 2013.
Public research activities, those carried out or supported by the national government, will be expanded in research thrusts of: agriculture and food; health; environment; marine sciences; and energy.
In its comprehensive scope, the plan outlines action items for…
Recent Research: Harnessing Geographic Knowledge Spillovers to Fuel Regional Growth
[Editor's Note: SSTI is excited to welcome Phillip Battle to its staff as a policy analyst. The author of this article, Phil recently received his Master in Public Affairs degree from the LBJ School at the University of Texas at Austin. His area of research interest is technology policy and economic development.]
A forthcoming article from Regional Studies suggests that despite the rise of the Internet as a global medium for the distribution of knowledge, location still matters within the innovation community. Proximity and industry networks speed the transmission of new technologies, which in turn accelerates regional growth.
Thomas Döring of the University of Cassel and Philipps-University Marburg and Jan Schellenbach of Philipps-University Marburg present more than 50 years of theory and empirical research examining the spread of knowledge across regional economies. The article explores several hypotheses about how and why the dissemination of new technologies is limited by proximity and, more importantly, why disadvantaged regions persistently fail to benefit from technological advances.
The…
Making Summer Travel Plans? Check Out SSTI's Calendar of TBED Events
It's probably the case that not all of your travel over the next few months will be for personal vacation. Conference excursions can stimulate new ideas, add to your professional growth, and establish or strengthen opportunities for collaboration. In addition to reserving Oct. 31-Nov. 2 for SSTI's 10th Annual Conference in Oklahoma City, we encourage you to check out our web calendar of events to scan more than 140 additional opportunities for professional development.
While most national technology-based economic development (TBED) organizations, unfortunately, limit announcements to their own events or those of members, SSTI attempts on its web calendar to include activities spanning most issues related to growing a knowledge economy. Examples of three upcoming events include:
June 4-6
The Southern Innovation Summit, to be held at the New Orleans Marriott, will focus on the creation, accumulation and application of knowledge for the South's businesses, universities, citizens and governments, and develop strategies for increasing innovation as part of the South's economic growth…
International Innovation Investments Announced in France, Russia, China
France
President Jacques Chirac announced last month plans to invest nearly 600 million euros ($758.6 million US) into five high-tech government-industry projects. The projects center on making France a European leader in innovation, as well as restoring national pride, which is currently low, according to Global Insight. The five initial projects were selected by France's Agency for Industrial Innovation (AII), which was launched last year with an investment budget of 2 billion euros ($2.5 billion US). Following is a description of each project and funding levels:
Quaero - This is a Franco-German project to create a search engine comparable to Google and Yahoo! The total project investment is 250 million euros. France will invest 90 million euros with a project duration of five years.
BioHub - The state will invest 43 million euros in a "bio-refinery" that can use starch to create plastics and food additives. Total project funding is 98 million euros for a total of six years.
NeoVal - The successor to Val, the automatic metro, NeoVal will use an energy-storing technology allowing…
Singapore Plans $4.6B R&D Investment
Hard evidence of the increasing global research competence discussed in the Thursby's paper above was provided last week when the Singapore Ministry of Trade & Industry (MTI) announced plans last week to commit $7.5 billion ($4.6 billion US) over the next five years to sustain innovation-driven growth through economic-oriented R&D. All figures below are in U.S. dollars.
To help Digest readers to appreciate the size of the commitment, Singapore had an estimated population of 4.4 million residents in July 2005, which would rank it 25th among U.S. states -- comparable to Colorado, Alabama, Louisiana, South Carolina or Kentucky in population size.
MTI’s R&D plans are set out in the Science & Technology Plan 2010 (STP2010), released Feb. 16 by Minister for Trade and Industry Lim Hng Kiang. STP2010 is part of the Singapore Government’s overall strategy to make significant investments in R&D in the next five years, so as to increase national spending in R&D to 3 percent of gross domestic product by 2010. The National Research Foundation will coordinate the research of…
Britain to Double Support for Stem Cell Research
Britain’s Pre Budget Report 2005, released Dec. 5, calls for the United Kingdom to double spending for stem cell research to £100M within the next two years and launch a number of new initiatives to sustain innovation and science. The plan also calls for the creation of a National Institute for Health Research to support 10 new university-based centers for excellence in medical research, as many as 250 academic fellowships and 100 clinical lecture training opportunities each year, according to the Press Association.
Also, on the academic front, the budget calls for establishing a new UK-China University Partnership Scheme to support scholarships and encourage academic exchanges and collaboration between centers of excellence in science and technology within the two countries. To encourage in-migration of young foreign scientists and technologists, the government is proposing to allow all international students on completion of post-graduate degree, or an undergraduate degree in a shortage sector, to work in the UK for up to 12 months, benefiting up to 50,000 students.
More information on the…