December 2011
“Brussels in Brief”:
Highlights on EU policies and funding programmes
related to the knowledge-based economy: The “Lisbon
Strategy”
El Boletín Interface Europe está disponible unicamente en inglés
Para recibir la newsletter por email, contacte con nosotros
General EU Information
Council of the EU
European Parliament
EU policies and funding programmes for Research, Innovation, Training and Competitiveness
Research Policy
General points
European Research & Innovation projects
ICT
Health
Environment
Environment
Agriculture
Nanosciences
Space
Energy
Maritime Affairs
Socio-economic sciences and Humanities
Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development 2007- 2013 (FP7)
News
European Technology Plateformes
Joint Technology Initiatives
Education policy
Regional policy
Information society
Enterprises
Other EU Policies and funding programmes supporting the Lisbon Strategy
Employment and social affairs
Environment
Health
Transport
Agriculture and fisheries
Energy
Maritime Affairs
Maritime Affairs
Research, Innovation, Training and Competitiveness related EU events
List of opened calls for proposals launched by the European Commission
Special chapter on training opportunities
Next Sessions in English in Brussels
Prochaines sessions en français à Paris et Bruxelles
Próximas sesiones en español
-
General EU Information
-
Council of the EU
2011-12-21 - Danish government sets priorities for EU council presidency
As 2011 nears its end, it's that time of year when the rotating Presidency of the Council of the European Union welcomes a new country; as the bells strike midnight on New Year's Eve, it will be the Danes' turn to step up to the plate, and organize and lead the work of the Council over the coming six months. The Danish government has just announced its presidency work programme: the main objectives are to make Europe responsible, dynamic, green and safe. And with the economic crisis in Europe far from over, it seems that inspiring growth will remain top of the Danes to-do list.
Más información -
European Parliament
2011-12-12 - 2011-12-15 - Plenary Session - Strasbourg
The outcomes of the Eurozone crisis summit and the Durban climate change conference were highlighted by Parliament's President Jerzy Buzek in his opening address at the 12-15 December plenary session in Strasbourg. Mr Buzek welcomed 17 new MEPs, and also noted the 60th anniversary of the Geneva Convention on refugees and the 30th anniversary of the imposition of martial law by Poland's communist regime.
Más información
-
-
EU policies and funding programmes for Research, Innovation, Training and Competitiveness
-
Research Policy
-
General points
2011-12-22 - Scientists explore negative ions' dancing patterns
A team of Swedish and German researchers has uncovered how negative ions interact, according to findings set out in the Review of Scientific Instruments. Negative ions play a crucial role in everything from how our bodies function to how the universe is structured. These results are important for our knowledge of superconductors and radiocarbon dating, as one of the study authors, Anton Lindahl, from the Department of Physics at the University of Gothenburg, explains: 'By studying atoms with a negative charge, "negative ions", we can learn how electrons coordinate their motion in what can be compared to a tightly choreographed dance. Such knowledge is important in understanding phenomena in which the interaction between electrons is important, such as in superconductors.'
Más información -
European Research & Innovation projects
-
ICT
2011-12-09 - Study finds Spanish gender gap in Internet use and frequencyA new study reveals how the digital gender gap in Spain is larger than the European average. Presented in the journal Reis, the study investigated the use and frequency of the Internet in Spain and 30 other European countries. The findings indicate that Spanish men use the Internet more frequently than Spanish women do.
Más información2011-12-14 - Measuring greenhouse gas emissions: focus of two new EU-funded projectsTwo new EU-funded projects that aim to investigate how we measure greenhouse gases have just got under way. One of the projects, titled AMITRAN ('Assessment methodologies for ICT in multimodal transport from user behaviour to CO2 reduction') aims to scientifically underpin carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions estimations by developing a methodology to assess the impact of ICT (information and communication technologies) and ITS (intelligent transport systems) on transport sector CO2 emissions. Bringing together partners from Belgium, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands and Romania, AMITRAN received EUR 1 900 000 of funding as part of the 'ICT' Theme of the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información2011-12-20 - New EU-funded project hopes to create first 100 Gbps optical RAM silicon chipsA new EU project that aims to develop a 100 gigabits per second (Gbps) optical random access memory (RAM) chip has just kicked off. This chip will be the first of its kind. There are six project partners participating in RAMPLAS ('100 Gbps optical RAM on-chip: silicon-based, integrated optical RAM enabling high-speed applications in computing and communications'). The project has been funded in part by almost EUR 2 million under the 'Information and communication technologies' (ICT) Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información -
Health
2011-01-02 - Proteins stopping HIV in its tracks?Researchers in the United Kingdom have shed new light on how the body's proteins can fight the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). The study, presented in journal Nature, was funded in part by the NIMBL ('Nuclease immune mediated brain and Lupus-like conditions: natural history, pathophysiology, diagnostic and therapeutic modalities with application to other disorders of autoimmunity') project, which is backed with EUR 5.4 million under the Health Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información2011-12-02 - EU-funded researchers get to grips with genetics of blood cell formationIn a new major EU-funded study into the genetics of blood cell formation a team of international scientists has identified 68 regions of the genome that affect platelet size and number. This new data could lead to better treatments for those who suffer from platelet-related diseases. The 124-strong research team behind the study, published in Nature, hail from 13 countries all over the world and received a funding boost from no less than 6 EU projects.
Más información2011-12-05 - ERC awards German researcher EUR 2.5 million for liver disease researchA German researcher hopes to develop therapeutic strategies to slow or even reverse the pathological development of fibrous connective tissue in body organs. The European Research Council (ERC) has awarded the scientist EUR 2.5 million to help him meet his research objectives. Professor Dr Detlef Schuppan from Mainz University Medical Center is a specialist in biochemistry and gastroenterology - the study of the digestive system. His work focuses on liver diseases: it includes hepatic cancer, fibrosis, and cirrhosis, the terminal stage of fibrosis.
Más información2011-12-05 - Study finds chimney-stoves help cut risk of pneumoniaPeople who cook over open fires and dirty cookstoves are at a higher risk of suffering from illnesses than those who do not, new international research shows. Presented in the journal The Lancet, the findings reveal a 33% drop in the number of reported pneumonia cases in children living in homes with smoke-reducing chimneys on the cookstoves. Pneumonia is the leading cause of death for children aged 5 and under; around 43% of the global population, representing approximately 3 billion people, use open fires and cookstoves as their primary source of cooking and heating. This translates to a serious health risk being posed for children daily via indoor air pollution.
Más información2011-12-06 - Scientists find way to design new brain drugsA Belgian-British team of researchers has found a way to design drugs able to target specific areas of the brain. Presented in the journal Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the findings could help researchers develop treatments to fight diseases without triggering adverse events in other parts of the nervous system. Researchers led by Professor Neil Marrion at the University of Bristol's School of Physiology and Pharmacology in the United Kingdom worked on a subtype of ion channel called SK (Small conductance calcium-activated potassium) channels. Ion channels are proteins able to control the excitability of nerves. Ion channels, which are constructed like an electrical circuit, enable the flow of 'charged' potassium, sodium and calcium ions to enter or exit cell membranes through a network of pores formed by the channels, a subtype of which is the SK channel family.
Más información2011-12-07 - EU-funded scientists uncover gene that causes spread of skin cancerA new EU-funded study has pinpointed the specific gene that must be present before malignant melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, can spread. The gene P-Rex1 causes cancer cells to break away from the original tumour and spread or metastasise to other organs like the brain, something which can cause them to fail. Cancer's ability to metastasise is what makes it so dangerous, so understanding what triggers metastatic behaviour is vital for furthering our knowledge of the disease and reducing high death rates.
Más información2011-12-09 - Linking up cancer registries: EU-funded project on trackTaking stock on the progress of an EU-funded project that aims to link up European cancer registries was the aim of a recent summit organised by the European Cancer Organisation (ECCO). At the summit titled 'Eurocourse Oncopolicy Summit' that took place at the end of November in Brussels, project stakeholders got the chance to reflect on how the EUROCOURSE ('Europe against cancer: optimisation of the use of registries for scientific excellence in research') project was going. EUROCOURSE, which received EUR 1,999,408 of funding under the 'Health' Theme of the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7), brings together project partners from Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Más información2011-12-12 - Scientists discover what makes flies flyScientists in Austria and Germany have discovered a genetic switch that regulates the formation of flight muscles in flies, creatures with very small wings in relation to their bodies. The study, published in the journal Nature, suggests that spalt proteins switch myofibres from tubular to fibrillar fate during development. This function is potentially conserved in the heart of vertebrates: the stretch-stimulated muscle resembles the muscle used for insect flight.
Más información2011-12-14 - NEUROSTEMCELL advances stem cell therapy researchMaximising prospects for successful clinical trials of stem cell therapy for neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's and Parkinson's is possible through solid cooperation between experimental and clinical researchers. The NEUROSTEMCELL ('European consortium for stem cell therapy for neurodegenerative disease') project is driving this effort, and positive results are already coming in. NEUROSTEMCELL is supported under the Health Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) to the tune of EUR 11.9 million.
Más información2011-12-15 - ERC award for young researcher investigating common diseasesA young researcher has been awarded a EUR 1.5 million Starting Grant from the European Research Council (ERC) to support her research into the genetics of common diseases in humans. Dr Eleftheria Zeggini, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in the United Kingdom, will use the grant to help her identify the underlying genetic variants that contribute to human diseases, and develop new and more refined tools to help researchers tackle them. 'It's a great honour to be a recipient of this award, which will boost our research into the genetics of complex human traits,' says Dr Zeggini.
Más información2011-12-16 - Who's got the better nose? Study finds modern man doesAn EU-funded team of scientists has discovered that the human temporal lobes that play key roles in the sense of smell, memory, language and social functions are relatively larger in Homo sapiens than in Neanderthals. The findings, presented in the journal Nature Communications, indicate that modern man has a better olfactory system than what Neanderthals had. The study was funded in part by the EVAN ('European virtual anthropology network') project, which clinched a Marie Curie Research Training Networks (RTN) Grant under the EU's Sixth Framework Programme (FP6) to the tune of EUR 3.3 million.
Más información2011-12-16 - Less harmful pain relief on the way as researchers work out how paracetamol worksA team of researchers has discovered how one of the most common household painkillers works, meaning pain relief medication with less harmful side effects could soon be a reality. Presenting their findings in the journal Nature Communications, the researchers, from France, Sweden and the United Kingdom, explain how paracetamol, one of the most used drugs in the world, actually works. Although paracetamol was first discovered in the 1890s and has been marketed as an over-the-counter painkiller since the 1950s, exactly how it relieves pain has remained unknown - until now.
Más información2011-12-16 - EU study assesses obesity prevalence ratesResearchers believe obesity raises people's risk of suffering from chronic diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease and certain cancers. And with the incidence of obesity increasing in Europe and the rest of the world, it is important to achieve a more accurate estimate of future obesity prevalence. This can be achieved by obtaining and using data from longitudinal studies. The problem is that insufficient longitudinal data is published in literature compared with results of cross-sectional data. New research, presented in the journal PLoS ONE, tackles this issue through the DIOGENES ('Diet, obesity and genes') project, which received more than EUR 14 million under the 'Food quality and safety' Thematic area of the EU's Sixth Framework Programme (FP6).
Más información2011-12-19 - Scientists solve ricin riddle using new technologyA protein that controls how the deadly plant poison and bioweapon ricin kills has finally been identified by a team of Austrian researchers in a new study. With a combination of stem cell biology and modern screening methods, the team were able to get to the bottom of how the poison works. One of the deadliest plant based poisons in the world, ricin has frequently hit the headlines due to its association with terrorism. Everyone from Al Quaida to the United States Army in the First World War has been reported to have tested ricin's potential as a chemical warfare agent.
Más información2011-12-21 - Biological model system helps us understand the 'absorbing state'A team of EU-funded German scientists has investigated how fibres made of the muscle protein actin behave when they are transported and cross-linked at the same time. In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team explain how they discovered that at a certain point, systems suddenly enter a so-called 'absorbing state', albeit without ceasing to consume energy. Their research was funded in part by the COMPNET ('Dynamics and Self-organisation in Complex Cytoskeletal Networks') project, which has clinched a EUR 1.5 million European Research Council (ERC) grant under the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información -
Environment
2011-12-01 - EU project develops advanced data management systemAn EU-funded team of researchers has succeeded in developing a novel accounting framework that uses sophisticated tools for policy analysis. The EXIOPOL ('A new environmental accounting framework using externality data and input-output tools for policy analysis') project is backed under the 'Sustainable development, global change and ecosystems' Thematic area of the EU's Sixth Framework Programme (FP6) to the tune of EUR 5 million.
Más información2011-12-05 - Scientists shed light on ice sheet formationAn international team of scientists has discovered that the Antarctic ice sheet was potentially formed by a decrease in the levels of carbon dioxide (CO2). Presented in the journal Science, the study's findings highlight how this greenhouse gas was involved in the one of our planet's most significant climate events, and how it is contributing to the current and future climate scenario. Scientists from Australia, China, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States evaluated molecules from ancient algae found in deep-sea core samples. They identified a threshold for low CO2 levels below which an ice sheet forms in the South Pole. However, why CO2 must rise before the ice sheet melts is not yet known.
Más información2011-12-06 - Where do you winter? Scientists map migrating birds' flexible overwintering patternsFor humans, it is generally just the super-rich and the upper echelons of society who get to choose where they 'summer' or 'winter', with the rest of us having to acclimatise and adapt to the onset of extreme conditions from one end of the year to the other. But in the animal kingdom, for species like the Antarctic skua, migrating as the seasons change is normal. What's more, it seems that these seabirds are pretty flexible in their flight routes - not only about where they pass the chilliest months, but also about the company they keep. In a new study, a team of international researchers has discovered that although a large number of the South Polar skuas spend the Antarctic winter in the northern Atlantic, about one third of the same species overwinters - the practice of waiting out the winter season in regions where temperatures are warmer or food is more readily available - in the northern Pacific, tens of thousands of miles in the other direction.
Más información2011-12-08 - Insecticide use to threaten European streams: studyChanges in the climate and the way we use land is playing havoc with our planet's ecosystem. The pressure is now on streams, as researchers in Germany predict that they will be more heavily polluted with insecticides than ever before. The study, presented in the journal Ecological Applications, highlights how the use of insecticides in agriculture will jeopardise the state of streams across Europe, especially in central Europe, and the Baltic and Nordic regions. The researchers established a link between the use of insecticides and temperature.
Más información2011-12-09 - Moon cycles and petrels ... migration and matingCreatures on Earth have annual cycles consisting of life history stages of breeding, moult and migration. For some, moon cycles influence their periodic behaviour, particularly in the case of birds. New research from Université de La Réunion on Réunion, France probed the influence of photoperiod and moon phases on the migration dates and at-sea activity of Barau's petrel, a tropical seabird species, throughout its annual cycle. The study, published in the journal PLoS ONE, was funded in part by the RUN-EMERGE ('Supporting the research potential on emerging infectious diseases in La Reunion Island, and EU outermost region in the south-western Indian Ocean') and the RUN SEA SCIENCE ('Improvement of the tropical sea sciences research potential in western Indian Ocean, and of the technology capacities in La Reunion Island') projects, which received EUR 1.8 million and EUR 922 953 respectively under the 'Capacities' Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información2011-12-12 - Study identifies factors to help save great apesAfrican great apes are in jeopardy; their populations are shrinking, particularly for those located in areas that are managed poorly and protected weakly. A new international study provides fresh insight into how the hardest hit areas of the last 20 years are those that are not well protected against poaching. The study, presented in the journal Conservation Letters, suggests law enforcement is crucial to help secure the future of the great apes.
Más información2011-12-13 - Bedrock rises as ice melts in GreenlandGreenland is becoming greener again, a new international study shows. The year 2010 was hot, triggering accelerated ice loss in southern Greenland by 100 billion tonnes. The study results also reveal how large portions of the island's bedrock rock rose another quarter of an inch during this period. Ice weighs down bedrock, but the rocky coast rises as the ice melts away. Scientists from Denmark, Luxembourg and the United States measured the natural response of the island's bedrock to the shrinking weight of ice above it. They used a network of almost 50 global positioning systems (GPSs) located across the coast of Greenland to get the data they needed for the Greenland GPS Network (GNET) project.
Más información2011-12-15 - Study sheds light on natural carbon cycle dynamicsAn international team of scientists has reconstructed the Last Ice Age's marine and terrestrial productivity and carbon stocks by combining isotope data that are relevant to both global quantities and models. The study, published in the journal Nature, is funded in part by the MOTIF ('Models and observations to test climate feedbacks') project, which clinched more than EUR 181 000 under the 'Energy, environment and sustainable development' (EESD) Thematic programme of the EU's Fifth Framework Programme (FP5).
Más información2011-12-19 - Researchers re-examine water policy focusAlthough the world's forests supply a significant amount of moisture that creates rain, the important contribution they make to the water cycle is often overlooked in water resource policy. This is the conclusion of a new study published by Swedish and Hungarian researchers in the journal Global Change Biology. The pan-European team warn that reducing forest area reduces regional and continental rainfall.
Más información2011-12-20 - Scientists spotlight wildfire regimesWildfires have a huge impact on terrestrial ecosystems across the globe. These fires are triggered by an interaction of weather, vegetation and land use, making them highly sensitive to change. Understanding the mechanisms that control wildfire regimes and improving the predictions of when and how they will change is important. Enter a German-US team of scientists that demonstrates how threshold values for wildfires exist. The research is an outcome of the PATRES ('Pattern resilience') project, which received EUR 1.2 million under the 'New and emerging science and technology' (NEST) Cross-cutting Activity of the EU's Sixth Framework Programme (FP6). Their findings are presented in the journal The American Naturalist.
Más información2011-12-20 - Collecting carbon in a concrete jungleThanks to microscopic tubes that suck in carbon dioxide from the air, land that has been deemed unsuitable for tree planting could still be used to reduce levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere - even without trees. A team of innovative researchers from the University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom believe that a one 1m2 unit of land containing these tiny tubes could adsorb the same amount of carbon that 10 average-sized trees can.
Más información2011-12-22 - Why dark clouds loom over frankincense productionAccording to the Christian tradition, Balthazar, one of the three Magi, presented the world's purest incense to the Christ Child on the night of His birth. Moving forward, frankincense was burnt during ancient religious rituals, symbolising Christ's divinity and sacrifice. And with that, we have come to associate frankincense with Christmas. But researchers from Ethiopia and the Netherlands bring bad tidings to us all: a dramatic decline of the trees that produce frankincense has begun, with a 50% drop estimated between now and 2027. The results of the study are presented in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology.
Más información -
Environment
2011-12-01 - EU project develops advanced data management systemAn EU-funded team of researchers has succeeded in developing a novel accounting framework that uses sophisticated tools for policy analysis. The EXIOPOL ('A new environmental accounting framework using externality data and input-output tools for policy analysis') project is backed under the 'Sustainable development, global change and ecosystems' Thematic area of the EU's Sixth Framework Programme (FP6) to the tune of EUR 5 million.
Más información2011-12-05 - Scientists shed light on ice sheet formationAn international team of scientists has discovered that the Antarctic ice sheet was potentially formed by a decrease in the levels of carbon dioxide (CO2). Presented in the journal Science, the study's findings highlight how this greenhouse gas was involved in the one of our planet's most significant climate events, and how it is contributing to the current and future climate scenario. Scientists from Australia, China, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States evaluated molecules from ancient algae found in deep-sea core samples. They identified a threshold for low CO2 levels below which an ice sheet forms in the South Pole. However, why CO2 must rise before the ice sheet melts is not yet known.
Más información2011-12-06 - Where do you winter? Scientists map migrating birds' flexible overwintering patternsFor humans, it is generally just the super-rich and the upper echelons of society who get to choose where they 'summer' or 'winter', with the rest of us having to acclimatise and adapt to the onset of extreme conditions from one end of the year to the other. But in the animal kingdom, for species like the Antarctic skua, migrating as the seasons change is normal. What's more, it seems that these seabirds are pretty flexible in their flight routes - not only about where they pass the chilliest months, but also about the company they keep. In a new study, a team of international researchers has discovered that although a large number of the South Polar skuas spend the Antarctic winter in the northern Atlantic, about one third of the same species overwinters - the practice of waiting out the winter season in regions where temperatures are warmer or food is more readily available - in the northern Pacific, tens of thousands of miles in the other direction.
Más información2011-12-08 - Insecticide use to threaten European streams: studyChanges in the climate and the way we use land is playing havoc with our planet's ecosystem. The pressure is now on streams, as researchers in Germany predict that they will be more heavily polluted with insecticides than ever before. The study, presented in the journal Ecological Applications, highlights how the use of insecticides in agriculture will jeopardise the state of streams across Europe, especially in central Europe, and the Baltic and Nordic regions. The researchers established a link between the use of insecticides and temperature.
Más información2011-12-09 - Moon cycles and petrels ... migration and matingCreatures on Earth have annual cycles consisting of life history stages of breeding, moult and migration. For some, moon cycles influence their periodic behaviour, particularly in the case of birds. New research from Université de La Réunion on Réunion, France probed the influence of photoperiod and moon phases on the migration dates and at-sea activity of Barau's petrel, a tropical seabird species, throughout its annual cycle. The study, published in the journal PLoS ONE, was funded in part by the RUN-EMERGE ('Supporting the research potential on emerging infectious diseases in La Reunion Island, and EU outermost region in the south-western Indian Ocean') and the RUN SEA SCIENCE ('Improvement of the tropical sea sciences research potential in western Indian Ocean, and of the technology capacities in La Reunion Island') projects, which received EUR 1.8 million and EUR 922 953 respectively under the 'Capacities' Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información2011-12-12 - Study identifies factors to help save great apesAfrican great apes are in jeopardy; their populations are shrinking, particularly for those located in areas that are managed poorly and protected weakly. A new international study provides fresh insight into how the hardest hit areas of the last 20 years are those that are not well protected against poaching. The study, presented in the journal Conservation Letters, suggests law enforcement is crucial to help secure the future of the great apes.
Más información2011-12-13 - Bedrock rises as ice melts in GreenlandGreenland is becoming greener again, a new international study shows. The year 2010 was hot, triggering accelerated ice loss in southern Greenland by 100 billion tonnes. The study results also reveal how large portions of the island's bedrock rock rose another quarter of an inch during this period. Ice weighs down bedrock, but the rocky coast rises as the ice melts away. Scientists from Denmark, Luxembourg and the United States measured the natural response of the island's bedrock to the shrinking weight of ice above it. They used a network of almost 50 global positioning systems (GPSs) located across the coast of Greenland to get the data they needed for the Greenland GPS Network (GNET) project.
Más información2011-12-15 - Study sheds light on natural carbon cycle dynamicsAn international team of scientists has reconstructed the Last Ice Age's marine and terrestrial productivity and carbon stocks by combining isotope data that are relevant to both global quantities and models. The study, published in the journal Nature, is funded in part by the MOTIF ('Models and observations to test climate feedbacks') project, which clinched more than EUR 181 000 under the 'Energy, environment and sustainable development' (EESD) Thematic programme of the EU's Fifth Framework Programme (FP5).
Más información2011-12-19 - Researchers re-examine water policy focusAlthough the world's forests supply a significant amount of moisture that creates rain, the important contribution they make to the water cycle is often overlooked in water resource policy. This is the conclusion of a new study published by Swedish and Hungarian researchers in the journal Global Change Biology. The pan-European team warn that reducing forest area reduces regional and continental rainfall.
Más información2011-12-20 - Scientists spotlight wildfire regimesWildfires have a huge impact on terrestrial ecosystems across the globe. These fires are triggered by an interaction of weather, vegetation and land use, making them highly sensitive to change. Understanding the mechanisms that control wildfire regimes and improving the predictions of when and how they will change is important. Enter a German-US team of scientists that demonstrates how threshold values for wildfires exist. The research is an outcome of the PATRES ('Pattern resilience') project, which received EUR 1.2 million under the 'New and emerging science and technology' (NEST) Cross-cutting Activity of the EU's Sixth Framework Programme (FP6). Their findings are presented in the journal The American Naturalist.
Más información2011-12-20 - Collecting carbon in a concrete jungleThanks to microscopic tubes that suck in carbon dioxide from the air, land that has been deemed unsuitable for tree planting could still be used to reduce levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere - even without trees. A team of innovative researchers from the University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom believe that a one 1m2 unit of land containing these tiny tubes could adsorb the same amount of carbon that 10 average-sized trees can.
Más información2011-12-22 - Why dark clouds loom over frankincense productionAccording to the Christian tradition, Balthazar, one of the three Magi, presented the world's purest incense to the Christ Child on the night of His birth. Moving forward, frankincense was burnt during ancient religious rituals, symbolising Christ's divinity and sacrifice. And with that, we have come to associate frankincense with Christmas. But researchers from Ethiopia and the Netherlands bring bad tidings to us all: a dramatic decline of the trees that produce frankincense has begun, with a 50% drop estimated between now and 2027. The results of the study are presented in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology.
Más información -
Agriculture
2011-12-14 - The Baltic Sea, the food we eat, and what all this meansIf you thought your health and well-being are the only things affected by what you eat, think again. New research from Finland shows how you can help mitigate the burden and risks triggered by hazardous substances found in the food supply chain, by choosing the right foods and following dietary guidelines. Researchers from the Foodweb project, coordinated by MTT) Agrifood Research Finland, put the spotlight on the Baltic Sea, saying the food supply chain is playing havoc with this body of water. Conversely, the hazardous substances accumulated in the marine ecosystem can also increase our risk of consuming unsafe foods.
Más información -
Nanosciences
2011-12-07 - A noiseless, emission-free car? Europeans are on the right trackDutch and Swiss researchers have developed a four-wheel drive car that produces no noise and no emissions. Presented in the journal Nature, the study was funded in part by the MOLECULAR MOTORS ('Molecular motors - controlling movement at the nanoscale') project, which is supported through a European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant worth EUR 2.18 million under the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7). The researchers say this prototype symbolises lightweight construction at its most extreme.
Más información -
Space
2011-12-22 - Two new Earth-sized planets discoveredAn international team of astronomers has detected two Earth-sized planets orbiting around an old star that was once a red giant and is now in a late phase of stellar evolution characterised by high levels of luminosity and low or intermediate mass. Writing in the journal Nature, the team, made up of researchers from Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain and the United States, describe how this new planetary system they spotted, located a mere 3,900 light years from Earth, may have contributed to the increased loss of mass that their host star, KIC 05807616, experienced.
Más información -
Energy
2011-12-01 - Report suggests biomass energy won't harm food productionBiomass could cover 20% of the global energy supply without harming production of food, a new report released in the United Kingdom says. Reviewing over 90 international studies, the report was produced by the Technology and Policy Assessment function of the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC), which tackles the challenges faced by the energy sector and seeks to provide solid and accessible reports that set high standards for rigour and transparency.
Más información2011-12-19 - Boosting biofuels for sustainable energy and environmentEuropeans believe in a sustainable environment, and a way of ensuring its future is to promote and build energy resources based on residual biomass. Supporting this objective is the BIOBOOST ('Biomass-based energy intermediates boosting biofuel production') project. Set to kick off at the start of 2012, BIOBOOST will develop novel energy carriers, generating energy-rich intermediate products from biogenous residues, assess environmental compatibility and optimise logistics chains. The BIOBOOST partners will ultimately boost biomass and residues use across Europe. The project is funded under the Energy Theme of the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) to the tune of EUR 5.1 million.
Más información -
Maritime Affairs
2011-12-06 - Parasites outpace fish as temperatures go upClimate change is taking a toll on creatures the world over, fish included. A new study from the United Kingdom shows how parasite worms that infect fish are playing havoc with fish reproduction, and how they are growing four times faster at higher temperatures. Presented in the journal Global Change Biology, the findings highlight how global warming has the capacity to unsettle the balance between parasite and host, and could jeopardise fish populations.
Más información2011-12-13 - Homeless marine species? Blame climate changeNew international research suggests that increasing temperatures will affect the habitats of animals and plants, as several will be forced to leave their surroundings and find new environments; some marine species will have nowhere to go. The findings of the study, published in the journal Science, indicate how it will be difficult for marine species to keep up with the changes. Scientists led by the Scottish Association for Marine Science, Scottish Marine Institute in the United Kingdom compared changing temperatures for both land and sea and from across regions in the period from 1960 to 2009. The data helped the researchers project the speed at which both terrestrial and marine species populations would be forced to move in order to deal with the changing temperatures. Their results show there is no significant difference between movement rates in the environments.
Más información2011-12-21 - Study investigates whether groundwater is sustainableResearchers in the United Kingdom have discovered that agriculture practices developed in the last century that gave food security a boost also contributed to increasing nitrate pollution in both surface water and groundwater. The study, presented in the journal Water Resources Research, evaluated water quality measurement over the last 140 years to track this problem in the Thames River basin. Led by the University of Bristol, researchers used a simple model that combined two key elements: an estimate of nitrate available for leaching triggered by land use and land management, and an algorithm to determine this leachable nitrate through to surface water or groundwater.
Más información -
Socio-economic sciences and Humanities
2011-12-02 - Scientists unearth sites confirming early human migration into ArabiaResearchers have long postulated that early human populations expanded from Africa into Arabia during the Late Pleistocene, but they have never found an archaeological site in Arabia that resembles a specific African industry... until now. An international team of researchers sheds new light on the timing and identity of one of the first modern human groups to migrate out of Africa. The results challenge long-held beliefs about the timing and route of early human expansion out of Africa. The study is published in the journal PLoS ONE and brings together researchers from Australia, the Czech Republic, Germany, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Más información2011-12-08 - Big brain, small stomach? Not any moreContrary to what the expensive-tissue hypothesis says - that some tissues need more energy for their resting metabolism than others - researchers in Switzerland have discovered that when the brain of a mammal increases in size, the digestive organs do not become smaller. Presented in the journal Nature, the study was funded in part by the SYNTHESYS ('Synthesis of systematic resources') project, which has received EUR 7.2 million under 'Research Infrastructures' Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Más información2011-12-13 - 'Lads' mags' use same rhetoric as sex offenders, researchers say'Lads' mags', magazines aimed specifically at young heterosexual men, have long been controversial; their portrayal of women is often a subject of debate that raises concerns in many quarters. Now researchers from the United Kingdom have carried out a study that backs up these concerns, showing that the language used in these magazines shares characteristics with language used by sex offenders, and contributes to the objectification of women.
Más información2011-12-13 - What kind of nationalism makes people happy?Does being proud of your country make you happy? An impossible question with an infinite number of answers. While previous research has concluded that feeling good about your country can be linked to feeling happy about your own life, researchers Tim Reeskens, from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium and Matthew Wright, a political scientist from American University in Washington, DC wanted to delve deeper into the topic and set out to find out the whole story behind happiness and nationalism.
Más información2011-12-15 - Out of time: seniors and shift workers suffer social exclusionResearchers in the United Kingdom have found that older people and employees who do not work the typical 'office' hours from 9 to 5 each day are more likely to feel excluded from society. 'Feeling part of society usually involves participating in certain activities such as sports, the arts, volunteering or social networking,' explains research coordinator Dr Matt Barnes of the National Centre for Social Research in the United Kingdom. 'Our research shows that older people and those who work unusual hours face particular barriers to participating in such activities.'
Más información
-
-
Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development 2007- 2013 (FP7)
-
News
2011-12-01 - Boosting growth: Commission announces EUR 80 billion for research and innovationOn 30 November, Research, Innovation and Science Commissioner Máire Geoghegan-Quinn announced an EUR 80 billion package of proposed measures that aim to give European research, innovation and competitiveness a much-needed boost. If accepted by the Council and the European Parliament, Horizon 2020 will be a key cornerstone of the EU's Innovation Union initiative, a Europe 2020 flagship policy that aims to secure Europe's science and technology base and industrial competitiveness.
Más información2011-12-05 - European Commission, EIB and EIF launch new scheme to help SMEs get loans for research and innovationToday the European Commission and the European Investment Bank Group launch a new guarantee facility for innovative small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to help them access finance from banks. This builds on the success of the Risk-Sharing Finance Facility (RSFF), launched in 2007, that has so far helped 75 companies benefit from over €7 billion in EIB loans to projects enhancing European growth and competitiveness. The new risk-sharing instrument for SMEs will be managed by the European Investment Fund (EIF). In addition, the EIB and the European Commission are to provide extra resources for research infrastructures.
Más información -
European Technology Plateformes
European Technology Platform on Smart Systems Integration (EPoSS)2-3 February 2012, Besancon - dMEMS 2012
Más información
20 March 2012, Zurich - MEMS Executive Congress Europe
20-21 March 2012, Berlin - Microsys Berlin - micro-optics and micro-optical systems convention
21-22 March 2012, Zurich - SSI 2012: International Conference & Exhibition on Integration Issues of Miniaturized Systems
10-13 April 2012, Brussels - Graphene Conference 2012
8-10 May 2012, Nuremberg - SMT Hybrid Packaging - System Integration in Micro Electronics
30-31 May 2012, Berlin - AMAA 2012
10-14 June 2012, Montecatini Terme - 4th International Conference "Smart Materials, Structures and Systems"
13-15 June 2012, Graz - EURIPIDES Annual Forum 2012
26-28 September 2012, Paris - EPoSS General Assembly & Annual Forum 2012Forest Based Sector Technology Platform (Forestry)7-8 February 2012, Helsinki - 4th WoodWisdom-Net Research Programme Seminar
Más información
22 February 2012, Basque Country - ROK-FOR Conference: Innovative and Sustainable Wood Arquitecture and Construction
28 February 2012, Brussels - PROsumer.NET workshop on innovation
21 March 2012, Copenhagen - International Conference on Research Infrastructures - ICRI2012
26-29 March 2011, London - Planet Under Pressure 2012 conference
15 May 2012, place tbc - FTP joint Partnering Event together with COST
21-24 May 2012, Tours - Tackling climate change: the contribution of forest scientific knowledge
18 June 2012, Milan - 20th European Biomass Conference and Exhibition
8-13 July 2012, Lisbon - 2012 IUFRO Conference
23 October 2012, Helsinki - 4th Nordic Wood Biorefinery ConferenceEmbedded Computing Systems (ARTEMIS)1-2 February 2012, Madrid - ITEA 2 PO Preparations Days 2012
Más información
1-3 February 2012, Toulouse - ERTS2 2012
1-4 February 2012, Vilamoura - HEALTINF 2012
22-23 February 2012, Stockholm - CELTIC-PLUS EVENT 2012
28 February-1 March 2012, Nuremberg - ARTEMIS Spring Event 2012
6-10 March 2012, Hannover - CEBIT 2012Nanoelectronics Technologies 2020 (ENIAC)7-8 February 2012, Frankfurt - Common Brokerage Event
Más información
26-28 February 2012, Munich - ISS Europe 2012 - 25th Anniversary
12-16 March 2012, Dresden - DATE Conference
9-11 October 2012, Dresden - SEMICON Europa
20-21 November 2012, Munich - European Nanoelectronics Forum 2012European Rail Research Advisory Council (ERRAC)17-19 April 2012, Dubai - GulfRail 2012
Más información
23-26 April 2012, Athens - TRA (Transport Arena)
24-26 April 2012, Stockholm - 10th UIC ERTMS World Conference "ERTMS - Global Dimensions"
10-13 July 2012, Philadelphia - UIC HIGHSPEED 2012, 8th World Congress on High-Speed Rail
18-21 September 2012, Berlin - INNOTRANSEuropean Road Transport Research Advisory Council (ERTRAC)14 February 2012, Brussels - Electrification Roadmap workshop
Más información
15 February 2012, Brussels - Steering Group meeting
15 March 2012, Brussels - ERTRAC PlenaryEuropean Technology Platform for the Electricity Networks of the Future (SmartGrids)No events planned
Más informaciónEuropean Technology Platform for the Future of Textiles and Clothing (Euratex)29-30 March 2012, Brussels - 7TH ANNUAL PUBLIC CONFERENCE: "FROM FP7 TO HORIZON 2020"
Más informaciónFuel Cells and Hydrogen (FCH)9 February 2012, Brussels - FCH public information session and Brokerage event
Más información
24 April 2012, Paris - Workshop of the International Energy Agency on On-site H2 supplyInnovative Medicines Initiative (IMI)27 February 2012, Brussels - Open Info Day: 5th Call for proposals
Más informaciónIntegral Satcom Initiative (ISI)22-23 March 2012, Bradford - PSATS 2012
Más información
10 April 2012, Brussels - 15th ISI General Assembly
11 April 2012, Brussels - 5th SatCom Event
18-20 April 2012, Poznana - European Wireless ConferenceMobile and Wireless Communications (eMobility)10-11 May 2012, Aalborg - Future Internet Assembly (FIA)
Más información
4-6 July 2012, Berlin - Future Network & Mobile Summit 2012Nanotechnologies for Medical Applications (NanoMedicine)27 February-2 March 2012, Dublin - NanoImpactNet – QNano conference
Más información
29 February-9 March 2012, Saarbrücken - Biological Barriers 2012
3 April 2012, Brighton - Tissue Regeneration Strategies and Innovative Biomaterials in Orthopaedic Surgery
16 April 2012, Brussels - Innovation in Healthcare without borders
19-20 April 2012, Berlin - Spring Conference “Nanomedicine: Visions, Risks, Potential”
7 May 2012, Basel - European Summit for Clinical Nanomedicine 2012
18 June 2012, Varese - Nanobio-Europe 2012
30 June 2012, Thessaloniki - ISSON12 Summer School on Nanosciences & Nanotechnologies:Organic Electronics & Nanomedicine
3 July 2012, Thessaloniki - NN12 - 9th International Conference on Nanosciences & Nanotechnologies
15 July 2012, Amsterdam - Colloids and Nanomedicine 2012
13-15 November 2012, Grenoble - Nanosafe 2012Networked and Electronic Media (NEM)22-23 February 2012, Stockholm - Celtic-Plus-Towards a Smart Connected World
Más información
20 March 2012, Brussels - 13th NEM General Assembly
10-11 May 2012, Aalborg - Future Internet Assembly
4-6 July 2012, Berlin - Future Network and MobileSummit 2012Photonics21 (Photonics)4-9 February 2012, San Diego - SPIE Medical Imaging 2012
Más información
14-16 February 2012, Munich - FTTH Council Europe 2012
16 February 2012, London - The Smart Building of the Future
4-8 March 2012, Los Angeles - OFC/NFOEC 2012
5 March 2012, Brussels - Intensive Training on Entrepreneurship in Photonics
27-28 March 2012, Brussels - Photonics21 Annual Meeting 2012
31 March-3 April 2012, Tunis - 1st EOS Topical Meeting on Photonics for Sustainable Development – Focus on the Mediterranean (PSDM 2012)
2-4 April 2012, Eindhoven - Photonics PhD Event 2012
16-20 April 2012, Brussels - SPIE Photonics Europe 2012
17-20 April 2012, Moscow - Photonics. World of Lasers and Optics 2012
23-27 April 2012, Baltimore - SPIE Defense, Security and Sensing 2012
15-17 May 2012, Florence - Fotonica 2012
5-7 June 2012, Lyon - LumiBat - The international indoor lighting trade fair
19-21 June 2012, Jena - ICOB 2012
2-4 July 2012, Amsterdam - SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation 2012
2-6 July 2012, Thessaloniki - 2nd International Exhibition on Nanotechnologies & Organic Electronics
4-6 July 2012, Berlin - Future Networks and Mobile Summit
12-16 August 2012, San Diego - SPIE Optics + Photonics 2012
17-22 September 2012, St Petersburg - Sixth International Congress on Advanced Electromagnetic Materials in Microwaves and Optics – Metamaterials 2012
24-27 September 2012, Edinburgh - SPIE Security and Defence + Remote Sensing
21-22 November 2012, Paris - ForumLED Europe 2012Robotics (EUROP)22-23 February 2012, Vienna - CogSys 2012
Más información
5-7 March 2012, Odense - European Robotics Forum 2012
5-8 March 2012, Boston - HRI 2012
8-9 March 2012, Megève - The third Augmented Human International Conference (AH 2012)
19-21 March 2012, Island of Kos - IEEE-ICIT'12 International Conference on Industrial Technology
11 April 2012, Guimarães - Robotica 2012
14-18 May 2012, St Paul - ICRA 2012
22-25 May 2012, Munich - Automatica 2012 - International Trade Fair for Automation and Mechatronics
4-8 June 2012, Valencia - AAMAS 2012
18-24 June 2012, Mexico City - RoboCup 2012
24-28 June 2012, Puerto Vallarta - International Symposium on Robotics and Applications (ISORA 2012)
24-28 September 2012, Thun - ELROB 2012European Technology Platform for Sustainable Chemistry (SusChem)17-18 April 2012, Brussels - SusChem's 10th Annual Stakeholder Event
Más informaciónSustainable Nuclear Energy Technology Platform (SNE-TP)11–12 January 2012, Paris - NUGENIA Executive Committee n. 1
Más información
30–31 January 2012, Karlsruhe - Executive Committee n. 13
20 March 2012, Brussels - NUGENIA General Assembly n. 1
21 March 2012, Brussels - Governing Board n. 9Water Supply and Sanitation Platform (WSSTP)15-16 May 2012, Brussels - “Water Innovation Europe” event
Más informaciónWaterborne ETP (Waterborne)22 February 2012, Brussels - SG 42 + Mirror Group
Más información
11 April 2012, Athens - TRA 2012Zero Emission Fossil Fuel Power Plants Technology Platform (ETP ZEP)7 February 2012, London - Carbon Capture and Storage: demonstration programmes and the 2050 roadmap
Más información
14-16 February 2012, Warsaw - COAL: Here to Stay. The Reality of Europe’s Energy Mix
15 February 2012, Edinburgh - Carbon Capture and Storage Club
27-28 February 2012, London - Platts 6th Annual European Carbon Capture and Storage Conference
12-18 March 2012, Leszcze - CGS Europe Spring School on CO2 geological storage
22-23 March 2012, Shanghai - Asia Green Fossil Power Plant Summit 2012
26-27 March 2012, Edinburgh - Third EAGE CO2 Geological Storage Workshop: Understanding the Behaviour of CO2 in Geological Storage
29-30 March 2012, Beijing - 8th Annual Clean Coal Forum 2012
17 April 2012, Abu Dhabi - Higher Technology Conference
17-19 April 2012, Venice - 7th CO2GeoNet Open Forum and CGS Europe Workshop
26-27 April 2012, Brussels - European Business Summit
15 May 2012, Brussels - 3rd Annual Brussels Carbon Capture and Storage Summit
15-17 May 2012, Bali - Clean Power Asia 2012
4-5 June 2012, Malta - Eurelectric Annual Conference
12-18 August 2012, Beijing - 6th IEAGHG International CCS Summer School
2 October 2012, Brussels - ZEP General Assembly
9-10 October 2012, Copenhagen - Global Green Growth Forum
18-22 October 2012, Pittsburgh - One Young World Summit 2012
22-26 October 2012, Perth - CSLF Annual MeetingEuropean Technology Platform on Renewable Heating & Cooling (RHC)13 February 2012, Brussels - Meeting of the HWG on Shared SRA
Más información
13 February 2012, Brussels - Steering Committee meeting of the Cross-cutting Technology Panel
14 February 2012, Brussels - Board Meeting of the RHC-Platform.
15 February 2012, Brussels - Meeting of the Biomass Technology Panel Steering Committee
1 March 2012, Offenburg - Meeting of the Geothermal Technology Panel
26-27 April 2012, Copenhagen - 3rd Annual conference of the RHC-Platform -
Joint Technology Initiatives
Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI)27 February 2012, Brussels - Open Info Day: 5th Call for proposals
Más informaciónEmbedded Computing Systems (ARTEMISA)1-2 February 2012, Madrid - ITEA 2 PO Preparations Days 2012
Más información
1-3 February 2012, Toulouse - ERTS2 2012
1-4 February 2012, Vilamoura - HEALTINF 2012
22-23 February 2012, Stockholm - CELTIC-PLUS EVENT 2012
6-10 March 2012, Hannover - CEBIT 2012Nanoelectronics Technologies 2020 (ENIAC)7-8 February 2012, Frankfurt - Common Brokerage Event
Más información
26-28 February 2012, Munich - ISS Europe 2012 - 25th Anniversary
12-16 March 2012, Dresden - DATE Conference
9-11 October 2012, Dresden - SEMICON Europa
20-21 November 2012, Munich - European Nanoelectronics Forum 2012Aeronautics and Air Transport (Clean Sky)29 February 2012, Madrid - Clean Sky Info Day - presentation of 2012 work programme
Más información
13 March 2012, Amsterdam - Clean Sky Symposium
11-16 September 2012, Berlin - ILA BerlinFuel Cells and Hydrogen (FCH)9 February 2012, Brussels - FCH public information session and Brokerage event
Más información
24 April 2012, Paris - Workshop of the International Energy Agency on On-site H2 supply
-
-
-
Education policy
2011-12-16 - Erasmus Mundus: funding boost for Arab Spring countries
The European Commission has more than doubled the number of education and teaching grants available for young people and university staff from countries involved in the 'Arab Spring' uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East. Funding for a further 559 scholarships, on top of the 525 that were already planned for 2011-2012, are being allocated to Southern Mediterranean countries through 'Erasmus Mundus', the international version of the European Commission's Erasmus student and staff exchange scheme. The recipients will be able to spend part of their studies, research or a teaching period in the European Union. The Commission is increasing its grant funding to encourage learning and training opportunities for individuals who are viewed as key to strengthening democracy in the region. The move is part of the EU's strategic response to the Arab Spring.
Más información -
Regional policy
2011-12-12 - Improved monitoring and reporting on financial instruments related to EU cohesion policy
The European Commission welcomes the approval today by the EU Member States to improve the monitoring and reporting on financial instruments available under cohesion policy like guarantee schemes to finance the start up of new small companies. This will mean that Member States will have to report once a year on progress made in financing and implementing these instruments. Such reporting will allow the Commission to better assess the overall performance of financial instruments across Member States. Together with additional information to be presented with each statement of expenditure, the Commission will be able to produce accurate and comprehensive accounts, which give a true image of the Union's assets and of the actual budgetary implementation.
Más información -
Information society
2011-12-07 - Digital Agenda: First meeting of EU Media Futures Forum
European Commission Vice-President Neelie Kroes has established a group to debate how to improve the policy framework for European media industries, chaired by Christian van Thillo, CEO of De Persgroep. The first of five group debates will take place today focussing on the impacts of the digital revolution on European media industries, and will provide input designed to foster pluralist media sector and quality journalism in spite of recent declining revenues.
Más información2011-12-10 - Digital Agenda: Coalition of top tech & media companies to make internet better place for our kids
28 leading companies have come together to form a new Coalition to make a better and safer internet for children. Put together by the Commission, founding Coalition members are: Apple, BSkyB, BT, Dailymotion, Deutsche Telekom, Facebook, France Telecom-Orange, Google, Hyves, KPN, Liberty Global, LG Electronics, Mediaset, Microsoft, Netlog, Nintendo, Nokia, Opera Software, Research in Motion, RTL Group, Samsung, Sulake, Telefonica, TeliaSonera, Telenor Group, Tuenti, Vivendi, Vodafone. Priority actions include making it easier to report harmful content, ensuring privacy settings are age-appropriate, and offering wider options for parental control, reflecting the needs of a generation that is going online at an increasingly young age.
Más información2011-12-12 - Digital Agenda: Turning government data into gold
The Commission has launched an Open Data Strategy for Europe, which is expected to deliver a €40 billion boost to the EU's economy each year. Europe’s public administrations are sitting on a goldmine of unrealised economic potential: the large volumes of information collected by numerous public authorities and services. Member States such as the United Kingdom and France are already demonstrating this value. The strategy to lift performance EU-wide is three-fold: firstly the Commission will lead by example, opening its vaults of information to the public for free through a new data portal. Secondly, a level playing field for open data across the EU will be established. Finally, these new measures are backed by the €100 million which will be granted in 2011-2013 to fund research into improved data-handling technologies.
Más información -
Enterprises
2011-12-07 - New EU fundraising rules: boosting venture capital for SMEs and easing access to credit
Access to finance is essential to enhance the competiveness and growth potential of SMEs. In the context of the current crisis, marked by a fall in lending to the real economy, it is increasingly difficult for such companies to access loans. For this reason the European Commission is presenting a strategy to promote better access to finance for SMEs with an EU Action Plan (see MEMO/11/879) which includes increasing financial support from the EU budget and the European Investment Bank and a proposal for a regulation setting uniform rules for the marketing of venture capital funds.
Más información
-
-
Other EU Policies and funding programmes supporting the Lisbon Strategy
-
Employment and social affairs
2011-12-15 - New analysis shows employment and social policies key to Europe’s job-rich recovery
The first annual review of Employment and Social Developments in Europe (ESDE) published today by the European Commission underlines that a mix of employment and social policies is necessary to ensure a long-term job-rich recovery in the current climate of fiscal consolidation and bleak economic outlook. Its findings show how the economic crisis has aggravated Europe’s structural weaknesses like income inequality and the disappearance of medium-paid jobs, especially in manufacturing and construction. Poverty remains high with 115 million Europeans (23 % of the EU population) at risk of poverty or social exclusion in 2010. The review also analyses labour mobility within Europe, reviews active ageing policies and draws attention to the problem of in-work poverty.
Más información2011-12-20 - EU calls for immediate action to drive down youth unemployment
Against the backdrop of Europe's persistent jobless youth rate of 21%, the Commission is pleading for Member States, workers' representatives and business to join forces and take decisive action to tackle youth unemployment. The new 'Youth Opportunities Initiative', adopted by the Commission today, calls on Member State to work on preventing early school leaving; helping youngsters develop skills relevant to the labour market; ensuring work experience and on-the-job training and helping young people find a first good job. The Commission is also urging Member States to make better use of the European Social Fund which still has €30billion of funding uncommitted to projects. In addition, the Commission has put forward a set of concrete actions to be financed directly by EU funds.
Más información -
Environment
2011-12-12 - Significant boost in EU support for the environment and climate through the new LIFE programme
The Commission proposes to allocate EUR 3.2 billion over 2014-2020 to a new Programme for the Environment and Climate Action - LIFE. The proposed new programme will build on the success of the existing LIFE+ Programme but will be reformed to have a greater impact, be simpler and more flexible and have a significantly increased budget.
Más información2011-12-13 - Environment: Meeting the waste water treatment challenge
Between 2007 and 2013, some 14 billion EUR will be spent across the EU on infrastructure for the collection or treatment of waste water under the Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive (UWWT). The aim is to ensure that human and industrial waste doesn't adversely affect human health and the environment. The latest report on implementation of the Directive, for the period 2007/2008, shows that work is progressing well but that collection and treatment compliance rates could still improve. It reveals that most longstanding EU Member States (EU-15)1 maintained good standards of waste water treatment and improved on treatment of sensitive waters, while newer Members States (EU-12) improved on overall collection and treatment.
Más información2011-12-15 - Eco-innovation Action Plan Launched: helping business to deliver green growth and environmental benefits
Eco-innovation is crucial to delivering the Europe 2020 strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth. The new Eco-Innovation Action Plan (EcoAP) will boost innovation that reduces pressure on the environment, and bridge the gap between innovation and the market. Eco-friendly technologies are good for business and help create new jobs, so eco-innovation is crucial to the economic competitiveness of Europe.
Más información2011-12-15 - Environment: Commission launches new initiative to help cutting-edge green technologies reach the market
The European Commission is launching a new instrument to help companies that are developing innovative environmental technologies. The Environmental Technology Verification (ETV) pilot programme will provide independent verification of the performance of new environmental technologies. This will help manufacturers prove the reliability of performance claims, and help technology purchasers identify innovations that suit their needs.
Más información -
Health
2011-12-08 - Public Health: Commission proposes effective measures to better protect citizens from a wide range of cross-border health threats
To better protect Europeans from a wide range of health threats, and provide for a fully co-ordinated response in the event of a crisis, the European Commission adopted today a legislative proposal on the means to address serious cross border health threats. Building on lessons learned with recent crises such as the H1N1 pandemic in 2009, the volcanic ash cloud in 2010 and the outbreak of E. coli in 2011, the Commission is proposing to beef up the means to prepare for and to address such crises.
Más información2011-12-22 - Health: driving forward the uptake of e-Health with a new network for European Co-operation
Today the European Commission adopted a Decision establishing an eHealth Network, as foreseen by the Directive (2011/24/EU) on Patients' Rights in Cross-border Healthcare. For the first time, EU legislation includes provisions on eHealth with clear objectives to find modern, innovative solutions for providing better and safer healthcare for all Europeans.
Más información -
Transport
2011-12-01 - "Better Airports" Package Launched
The European Commission today announced a comprehensive package of measures to help increase the capacity of Europe's airports, reduce delays and improve the quality of services offered to passengers. The measures address the quality of services passengers and airlines receive on the ground before they take off and after they land (for example, baggage handling, check-in, refuelling), the transparency of decisions on airport noise, as well as the efficiency of the complex network of take-off and landing slots that make up every journey.
Más información2011-12-01 - Air transport: Commission welcomes agreement on Siberian overflights
The European Commission and the Russian government have agreed to modernise the system of Siberian overflight payments. From 1 January 2014, any charges EU airlines have to pay for flying over Russian territory will be cost-related and transparent. They will not discriminate between airlines. The agreement is set out in an exchange of letters between Russian Economic Development Minister Ms Elvira Nabiullina, on the Russian side, and Vice-President Siim Kallas and EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht for the Commission. The agreement will enter into force on 1 January 2012 after the WTO Ministerial Conference has given its green light to Russia's WTO accession, which is expected to happen on 16 December 2011.
Más información2011-12-05 - Transport: public vote on electronic journey planners now open
European citizens have been invited today to start voting for their favourite multimodal journey planner as part of the first European Mobility Challenge launched by the Vice-President Siim Kallas, Commissioner for Mobility and Transport. The idea behind the challenge was to raise awareness about and stimulate development of all-in-one journey planners, going beyond national borders and offering alternative transport modes. Now it is time for the public to have their say on the submitted planners.
Más información -
Agriculture and fisheries
2011-12-01 - € 30.1 million EU support for the promotion of agricultural products in third countries
The European Commission has approved 20 programmes to promote agricultural products in third countries. The total budget of the programmes, running for a period of three years, is € 60.2 million of which the EU contributes € 30.1 million (50%). The selected programmes cover fresh and processed fruit and vegetables, milk and milk products, PDOs (Protected Designations of Origin), PGIs (Protected Geographical Indications) and TSGs (Traditional Specialities Guaranteed), organic food and farming, olive oil, wine and spirits, cereals and rice, horticulture and meat.
Más información2011-12-07 - JRC tackles alcohol fraud with denaturants
The Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission has revealed the list of denaturants that could potentially be used to harmonise denaturing practices at EU level. The denaturants shortlist reported on 6 December will mitigate both fraud and tax evasion practices related to alcoholic beverages.
Más información -
Energy
2011-12-02 - ITER: Agreement on the extra €1.3BN needed for 2012 and 2013
A full agreement was found at today's trilogue (Council, European Parliament, European Commission) on the funding of the experimental reactor "ITER" for the next two years.
Más información2011-12-15 - Energy Roadmap 2050: a secure, competitive and low-carbon energy sector is possible
To achieve the goal of cutting emissions by over 80% by 2050, Europe's energy production will have to be almost carbon-free. How to achieve this without disrupting energy supplies and competitiveness is the question answered by the Energy Roadmap 2050 the Commission is presenting today. Based on the analysis of a set of scenarios, the document describes the consequences of a carbon free energy system and the policy framework needed. This should allow member states to make the required energy choices and create a stable business climate for private investment, especially until 2030.
Más información2011-12-15 - Digital Agenda: Commission consults on massive expansion of LED lighting in Europe
The European Commission today adopted a Green Paper and launched a public consultation on the future of LED-based lighting. LED lighting is one of the most energy-efficient and versatile forms of lighting - saving up to 70% energy and money compared to other lighting technologies. Faster LED deployment will ensure the success of Europe's lighting industry and help reduce energy use from lighting by 20% by 2020. But Europe also faces a number of challenges and more input is needed from citizens and businesses to refine the policy. To this end a consultation will run until 29 February 2012 to collect feedback on the Commission's ideas.
Más información -
Maritime Affairs
2011-12-02 - A new European Fund for the EU's Maritime and Fisheries Policies
The European Commission has proposed a new fund for the EU's maritime and fisheries policies for the period 2014-2020: the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF). The Fund will help deliver the ambitious objectives of the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy and will help fishermen in the transition towards sustainable fishing, as well as coastal communities in the diversification of their economies. The fund will finance projects that create new jobs and improve quality of life along European coasts. Red tape will be cut so that beneficiaries have easy access to financing.
Más información2011-12-08 - EUR 9 million for new EU marine fund
A new EU-funded initiative is set to give the marine renewable energy sector a boost worth EUR 9 million. The MARINET ('Marine renewables infrastructure network') initiative will give companies access to test facilities in specialist marine renewable energy centres across Europe. Led by researchers at the Hydraulics and Maritime Research Centre (HMRC) at University College Cork in Ireland, the project, funded as part of the 'Infrastructures' Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7), will allow companies to carry out renewable energy testing at these centres at no extra cost.
Más información -
Maritime Affairs
2011-12-02 - A new European Fund for the EU's Maritime and Fisheries Policies
The European Commission has proposed a new fund for the EU's maritime and fisheries policies for the period 2014-2020: the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (EMFF). The Fund will help deliver the ambitious objectives of the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy and will help fishermen in the transition towards sustainable fishing, as well as coastal communities in the diversification of their economies. The fund will finance projects that create new jobs and improve quality of life along European coasts. Red tape will be cut so that beneficiaries have easy access to financing.
Más información2011-12-08 - EUR 9 million for new EU marine fund
A new EU-funded initiative is set to give the marine renewable energy sector a boost worth EUR 9 million. The MARINET ('Marine renewables infrastructure network') initiative will give companies access to test facilities in specialist marine renewable energy centres across Europe. Led by researchers at the Hydraulics and Maritime Research Centre (HMRC) at University College Cork in Ireland, the project, funded as part of the 'Infrastructures' Theme of the EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7), will allow companies to carry out renewable energy testing at these centres at no extra cost.
Más información
-
-
Research, Innovation, Training and Competitiveness related EU events
-
List of opened calls for proposals launched by the European Commission
To consult our updated table of calls, click on our dedicated webpage below
Más información
-
Special chapter on training opportunities
Next Sessions in English in Brussels
Financial aspects of FP7contracts-Webinar
Date : Monday 19 Mar 2012
Understand your rights and obligations for a smooth management of your European contract.
Training being held by former EC Officers having hands on experience in EU R&D projects.
Venue : Online Course - training language : English
Price : 390€ VAT excl
Prochaines sessions en français à Paris et Bruxelles
Négociation contractuelle et accord de consortium (7ème PCRD)
Date : mardi 06 mars 2012
Comment se préparer et négocier le contrat avec la
CE et l’accord de consortium ?
Formations dispensées par d’anciens "Project
Officers" de la Commission européenne ayant une
expérience pratique des projets européens de
R&D.
Lieu : Paris - Langue de formation : Français
Prix : 590€ HTVA
Le management de projets européens de recherche
Date : mercredi 07 mars 2012
Management de projets européens de recherche. Comment gérer efficacement et simplement un projet européen de recherche sous le 7ème PCRD ?
Formations dispensées par d’anciens "Project Officers" de la Commission européenne ayant une expérience pratique des projets européens de R&D.
Lieu : Paris - Langue de formation : Français
Prix : 590€ HTVA
Audits et contrôles de votre contrat européen de recherche
Date : jeudi 08 mars 2012
Les audits et contrôles de votre contrat européen
de recherche.
Comment s’y préparer et comment y réagir?
Formations dispensées par d’anciens "Project Officers" de la Commission européenne ayant une expérience pratique des projets européens de R&D.
Lieu : Paris - Langue de formation : Français
Prix : 590€ HTVA
