jpi healthy and productive seas and oceans a new frontier · 2. objectives 3. jpi oceans 1. goals...
TRANSCRIPT
JPI Healthy and Productive Seas and Oceans
A New Frontier
ERANET MARTEC II - Brokerage Event
Paris, Tuesday 5 February 2013
Florence Coroner, JPI OCEANS
Content
1. What is Joint Programming?
1. Concept
2. Objectives
3. JPI Oceans
1. Goals & Objectives
2. Governance
3. State of play
4. Next steps
What is Joint Programming?
A concept to tackle challenges that can not be solved solely at national level
COM/2008/0468 “Towards joint programming in research : working together to tackle common challenges more effectively”
85%
15%
Research funding in Europe
EU27 + EC
JPI Oceans
A coordinating and integrating platform
for marine and maritime research
-Long term perspective
-High-level commitment
-Voluntary basis (variable geometry)
18 Participating countries (+ Outermost regions)
Goals & Objectives
Vision document
1. Enable the advent of a knowledge based maritime
economy, maximising its value in a sustainable way
2. Ensure Good Environmental Status of the seas and
optimise planning of activities in the marine space
3. Optimise the response to climate change and mitigate
human impacts on the marine environment
3 Goals
· Foster enabling cross-cutting marine technologies across the maritime sectors · Foster the marine bio economy in relation to new products, services and jobs · Create the best enabling environment to maximise the development of marine renewable energy · Develop the necessary knowledge and technologies to conquer the new deep-sea frontier · Understand and mitigate impact of climate change and pressure from human activities on the marine environment, to reach GES (Good Environmental Status) of our seas by 2020 · Improve understanding of marine ecosystems and their processes, in particular delivery of ecosystem services and the impacts of human activities · Understand climate change impact on coastal areas and design marine and maritime structures and activities, to optimise mitigation and significantly reduce costly damages · Develop and sustain infrastructure to support an integrated data and information base enabling industrial development and supporting maritime governance · Develop a research to policy mechanism, in particular to support of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive and Marine Spatial Planning and Management · Foster the inter-disciplinary human capacities that are necessary to the JPI goals
1. Foster enabling cross-cutting marine technologies across the maritime sectors
2. Foster the marine bio economy in relation to new products, services and jobs
3. Create the best enabling environment to maximise the development of marine renewable energy
4. Develop the necessary knowledge and technologies to conquer the new deep-sea frontier
5. Understand and mitigate impact of climate change and pressure from human activities on the marine environment, to reach GES (Good Environmental Status) of our seas by 2020
10 Objectives
6. Improve understanding of marine ecosystems and their processes, in particular delivery of ecosystem services and the impacts of human activities
7. Understand climate change impact on coastal areas and design marine and maritime structures and activities, to optimise mitigation and significantly reduce costly damages
8. Develop and sustain infrastructure to support an integrated data and information base enabling industrial development and supporting maritime governance
9. Develop a research to policy mechanism, in particular to support of the MSFD and MSP and Management
10.Foster the inter-disciplinary human capacities that are necessary to the JPI goals
Governance
Management Board
(high level MS/AC representatives)
Executive committee
Strategic Advisory
Board
Implementation Plan Strategic
Research & Innovation Agenda
Operational Toolkit
Secretariat
Variable Geometry Action Plan
Manuel Barange – Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Catherine Boyen - CNRS
Laura Giuliano - CIESM
Arturo González Romero - INNOVAMAR
Peter Herzig - Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences, IFM-GEOMAR
Karin Lochte - Alfred Wegener Institute
John Lock - DEFRA
Niall McDonough - Marine Board-ESF
Jean-Francois Minster - Total
Sigve Nordrum - AKER BIOMARINE ANTARCTIC
JPI Oceans’ Strategic Advisory Board (1st meeting – 30th November)
Sevcan Çolpan Polat Beken - TÜBITAK Marmara Research Center
Eeva-Liisa Poutanen - Ministry of the Environment, Finland
Frank Roland - Center of Maritime Technologies e.V. (CMT)
Yvonne Shields - Commissioners of Irish Lights
Nils Christian Stenseth - CEES, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Dept. of Biology, Univ. of Oslo
Gert Verreet - OSPAR Secretariat
Wendy Watson-Wright - UNESCO - Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC)
State of play
SRIA
Prepare for next FP
2013 2014 2015
Collaboration JPI – ERA nets
Differences
We are not an ERA-net. JPI Oceans collaborate with era nets to reach our goals and objectives.
We focus on a global challenges on a long term actions and institutional budgets.
How?
There is no common approach for JPI Era-net interaction
There is still no formal process in place
Feed era-nets calls - possible topics of common interest (input to thematic calls)
We consider to have a joint call with era-nets if a topic is of our interest
Era-nets – to contribute to provide input to feed the early gap analysis for H2020 and SRIA of JPI Oceans
Coordinate mapping exercises