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Innovation

Open Innovation 2.0 – A New Paradigm and Foundation for a Sustainable Europe

This is a new approach to driving forward innovation in Europe; and the ideas themselves have been created in a more open and participative way than is usual, delivering in direct consequence better ideas, faster and at lower cost.

[Text adopted from the European Commission’s Digital Agenda for Europe website: http://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/]: Report/Study: 06/06/2013: https://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/node/66731


Marking the successful conclusion of the Open Innovation 2.0 Conference held at Dublin Castle the EU Open Innovation Strategy and Policy Group (OISPG) have released a paper entitled ‘Open Innovation 2.0 – A New Paradigm’ which outlines the key emerging characteristics and practices of Open Innovation 2.0 (OI2) and how it can practically help address key European challenges.

Marking the successful conclusion of the Open Innovation 2.0 Conference held at Dublin Castle the EU Open Innovation Strategy and Policy Group (OISPG) have released a paper entitled ‘Open Innovation 2.0 – A New Paradigm’ which outlines the key emerging characteristics and practices of Open Innovation 2.0 (OI2) and how it can practically help address key European challenges.

The OI2 paper and the Dublin Innovation Declaration were the key outputs from the Open Innovation 2.0 Conference co-organized by the OISPG, Intel Labs Europe, The European Commission – DG Communications Networks, Media and Technology (DG CONNECT), Dublin City and Trinity College Dublin.  The OI2 paper outlines key emerging characteristics of the new Open Innovation 2.0 paradigm whilst the Declaration outlines 10 key actions to advance progress in the EU towards achieving the Europe 2020 goals of smart, inclusive and sustainable growth.

Releasing the OI2 paper, Prof Martin Curley, Vice President of Intel and Chair of the EU OISPG said “We now have a framework and action items which can help catalyse a European recovery through Innovation- the new Open Innovation 2.0 paradigm shines a  strong beacon of light towards our collective better future”.

Welcoming the publication of the OI2 paper and the Dublin Innovation Declaration, Director General of DG CONNECT Robert Madelin said ”This is a new approach to driving forward innovation in Europe; and the ideas themselves have been created in a more open and participative way than is usual, delivering in direct consequence better ideas, faster and at lower cost. As Commissioner Neelie Kroes has made clear in the past year, innovation needs a deeper embrace of riskier policies by public leaders: with this Dublin event, we have some of the tools we need to do just that”.

Addressing the Dublin Digital Leadership Forum Dublin on Tuesday June 4 Lord Mayor Naoise O’Muiri affirmed the Dublin Innovation Declaration sayingDublin is committed to the principles embedded in the Dublin Innovation Declaration and we are using Open Innovation 2.0 as a core vehicle for co-creating the future of Dublin”.

Open Innovation 2.0 Conference and The Dublin Innovation Declaration:
The Dublin Innovation Declaration was co-created at the Open Innovation 2.0 Conference and it was overwhelmingly ratified and endorsed through vote by participants during the concluding session of the two day international conference. The Declaration was formed as the challenges faced in Europe and beyond are too large to tackle in isolation and thus a new approach to innovation is required. Better solutions are needed globally in domains such as healthcare, transportation, climate change, youth unemployment, financial stability, prosperity, sustainability, and growth. These challenges provide a significant opportunity to create new shared value through innovation.  Society’s challenges may well reflect the transition to innovative solutions and today’s challenges are perhaps best seen as examples of Joseph Schumpeter’s creative destruction model where the failure of old approaches fuels the motivation for change and shapes the future. The challenges also call attention to the quadruple helix model of innovation where civil society joins with business, academia, and government sectors to drive changes far beyond the scope of what any one organization can do on their own.

Irish Minister for Research and Innovation, Seán Sherlock TD said: “We welcome the fact that this seminal conference took place in Ireland and during the Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU. I believe many of the actions identified in the declaration have merit and hold promise in terms of their potential to further strengthen our Innovation eco-system within the EU  – to the extent that they are not already being addressed, I think many of these actions deserve active consideration by the EU ”.

Bror Salmelin, Advisor for Innovation systems in DG CONNECT said: “Open Innovation 2.0 brings together the strengths of Europe in a new way, to increase seamless co-creation of innovative products and services to match the challenges we see in our economy and society“.

Related Documents:

OISPG Open Innovation 2.0 A New Paradigm – White Paper

Launch Smart Systems Future Center

The launch of the Smart Systems Future Center – an initiative of LIACS, the Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science, and Constable Research B.V., took place on 24th April 2014 at the Living Lab of the The Hague Centre for Innovation. A program for approximately 80 participants include presentations about the impact of big data in daily life (by Prof. dr. Jaap van den Herik), the next generation of Future Centers (by Dr. Paul Iske, Head of the Innovation Centre of ABN AMRO), how space can influence behaviour and creativity (by Ernst de Lange, director of Future Center “De Werf”), and an international perspective on the Innovation Dialogue (By Hank Kune of the Future Center Alliance). The second part of the program was an interactive sessions in which participants explored opportunities for further developing the Smart Systems FC.

As described in the program material Everything is a System, “Smart Systems will soon be everywhere. Smart Systems control the car you (still) drive and the planes you fly. Smart Systems trade on the stock market, will diagnose your illness and design sustainable buildings…They are capable of describing and analysing a situation, and taking decisions based on the available data in a predictive or adaptive manner, thereby performing smart actions (source: Wikipedia). Here we include larger (social and economic)systems up to an including whole value chains, using systems currently known as ‘big data’.

“The Future Center aims at bringing together (potential) clients and users of smart technology, with suppliers and developers; as well as technical scientists and researchers, with policy makers; as well as social and human scientists, bien etonné de se trouver ensemble with for instance philosophers, economists and biologists meeting artists.”

More information is available at requests@liacs.leidenuniv.nl, www.LIACS.nl, and http://hans.wyrdweb.eu/launch-future-center-smart-systems/


EURIS Project

EURIS is an inter-regional cooperation programme. European Collaborative and Open Regional Innovation Strategies.

EURIS project is happy to announce the launch of the “Open Innovation Toolbox”, a practical booklet proposing a handful of guides and tools targeting the main players on the Open Innovation game, companies and SMEs, and their main allies on such efforts, like networks and clusters organisations and knowledge and research centers.

The guides and tools disseminated through the toolbox are the main results of the 6 inter-regional sub-projects co-financed by EURIS, representing the concerted effort of more than 70 experts on the R&I field from the participant organisations.

The toolbox aims to support companies and their allies on better grasping the Open Innovation concept and to guide their first steps towards a more open and collaborative R&I. To that end, the guides and tools are keyed following their main target groups: copmanies; networks, clusters and intermediaries; research and knwledge institutes; and regional authorities and development and innovation agencies.

Following the needs of companies and potential practitioners of Open Innovation, the toolbox proposes 10 guides and tools, providing guidance and responses to the  key  O.I. topics.

via EURIS Project.