Post on 28-Mar-2015
The role of the European Strategic Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI)
Prof. Caterina PetrilloItalian Delegate to FP7 Capacities - Infrastructures Director of the Physics Department - University of
Perugia
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
Mission of ESFRI The Roadmap mandate 2020 Vision
Why Research Infrastructures?
Research Infrastructures in the ERA
catalyze the knowledge creation process facilitate the networking of researchers stimulate knowledge flows enhance the prospects for downstream impacts have important accelerator effects on local economies
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
Characteristics of a PanEU Research Infrastructure
• Offers cutting-edge, essential service to research, on a non-economic basis, within an ERA outlook
• Awards free open access through international peer-review competition at world level
• Results published/shared in the public domain• Proprietary and/or training access is marginal• Clear pan-European added value: e.g. at least 30% of
selected users coming from non-host countries
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
Today the economic contingency and the globalization of the challenges may jeopardize the efforts for a new European renaissance.
A concentrated effort on common, internationally shared research infrastructures that will keep producing new knowledge, could be a cheaper solution than the fully distributed effort.
We should therefore elaborate the concept that investing in large RI is the best strategy in time of crisis.
Research Infrastructures Today
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
Research Infrastructures TomorrowEUROPE 2020 Vision
Innovation Union commitments
5. By 2015, Member States together with the Commission should have completed or launched the construction of 60% of the priority European research infrastructures currently identified by the European Strategy Forum for Research Infrastructures (ESFRI). The potential for innovation of these (and ICT and other) infrastructures should be increased. The Member States are invited to review their Operational Programmes to facilitate the use of cohesion policy money for this purpose.
Research Infrastructures contribute to implementation of the Europe 2020 strategy and “Innovation Union”
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
What is ESFRI?
ESFRI is a strategic instrument created in 2002 by the Member States and the European Commission to develop the scientific integration of Europe and to strengthen its international outreach.
ESFRI gives national authorities the opportunity to explore common and integrated activities for the best development and use of Research Infrastructures of pan-European relevance.
In this way, ESFRI contributes to the implementation of a critical, strategic part of the Lisbon agenda by integrating national policies and bringing together national and EU resources to develop the European Research Area.
The ESFRI delegates are nominated by the Research Ministers of the Member States and Associated Countries, and include a representative of the Commission.
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
Mission of ESFRI
• To support a coherent and strategy-led approach to policy-making on new and existing pan-European and global RIs
• To facilitate multilateral initiatives leading to the better use and development of Research Infrastructures, at EU and international level
The Roadmap Mandate
• The Competitiveness Council of the EU mandated ESFRI on November 2004 to develop a strategic roadmap in the field of RI for Europe
• The ESFRI roadmap identifies new pan-European Research Infrastructures (RIs) or major up-grades to existing ones, corresponding to the needs of European research communities in the next 10 to 20 years, regardless of possible location
Roadmap ESFRI 2010 and thematicReports
ESFRI Success Stories
• From more than 260 proposals, 50 projects have been identified through several review stages between 2006 and 2010
• Projects meets the “grand challenges”• Update in 2010 in the areas Energy and Biological
and Medical Sciences (3+3 new projects)• The Roadmap 2010 contains 48 projects in total; 2
have been removed• 10 of the projects are in the implementation phase
and further 16 are proceeding towards the implementation phase until end of 2012
ESFRI Projects
Area Roadmap 2010
Implemented
Social Science and Humanities (SSH) 2 3
Environmental Sciences (ENV) 9 0
Biological and Medical Sciences (BMS) 13 0
Energy 6 1
Engineering, Physical Sciences, Materials and Analytical Facilities (EPS)
8 5
E-Infrastructures 0 1
• 34 projects on the 2006 ESFRI Roadmap (Call 1 – 2007)
• 10 projects on the 2008 ESFRI Roadmap (Call 6 – 2009)
• 6 projects on the 2010 ESFRI Roadmap (Call 10 – 2011)
Support through the FP7 Preparatory Phase action call
State of Progress of PP projects
Publication of call
Call deadline
Start of support
ESFRI Projects – SSH in the implementation phase
CESSDA is a distributed Research Infrastructure providing and facilitating access to high qualitydata and supports their use. It includes 20 social science data archives in 20 European countries.Collectively they serve over 30.000 researchers, providing access to more than 50.000 data collections per annum.
Construction costs: 30 M€Operation costs: 3 M€/yearDecommissioning: not applicable
Steering committee established, will go for ERIC application soon.
ESFRI Projects – SSH in the implementation phase
European Social Survey is a distributed Research Infrastructure - Upgrade of the European Social Survey, set up in 2001 to monitor long-term changes in social values.It produces data relevant to academic debate,policy analysis, better governance.
Construction costs: 2 M€Operation costs: 2 M€/yearDecommissioning: not applicable
Steering committee established, will apply for ERIC status soon.
ESFRI Projects – SSH in the implementation phase
SHARE-ERIC is a data Infrastructure for the socio-economic analysis of ongoing changes due to an ageing population. The panel database contains data of about 45.000 Europeans aged 50 or over.The data are harmonised with the U.S. Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA).
Construction costs: 23 M€Operation costs: 1.4 M€/yearDecommissioning: not applicable
5 countries have already signed the ERIC Statutes; 8 more have signed the MoU and 6 of these have already announced to step into the ERIC-agreement soon;SHARE-ERIC has its seat at first in Tilburg, the Netherlands.
ESFRI Projects – EPS in the implementation phase
ESRF is the Upgrade of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility,located in Grenoble, France. Supported and shared by 17 Europeancountries and Israel.It operates the most powerful high energy synchrotron light source inEurope; and covers a wide range of disciplines.Industrial applications are pharmaceuticals, cosmetics,petrochemicals and microelectronics.
Construction costs: 241.3 M€Operation costs: 93.5 M€/yearDecommissioning: not applicable
Capital costs 241.3 M€ (in 2010 prices), of which 67 M€ from the regular budget, recurrent costs 16.4 M€, personnel costs 18.5 M€.
ESFRI Projects – EPS in the implementation phase
European XFEL, the Hard X-Ray Free Electron Laser,under construction in Hamburg, Germany, will be a world leading facility for the production of intense, short pulses of X rays for scientific research in a wide range of disciplines.
Construction costs: 1.082 M€ (incl. commissioning)Operation costs: 77 M€/yearDecommissioning: 80 M€
Limited Liability Company under German lawwith international partners founded in 2009;Council, Scientific Advisory Committee andAdministrative and Finance Committee are working.
ESFRI Projects – EPS in the implementation phase
ILL 20/20 Upgrade of the European Neutron Spectroscopy Facility, thereactor-based laboratory at the Institute Laue Langevin (ILL), Grenoble, France is recognised as the world’s most productive and reliable source of slow neutrons for the study of condensed matter.
Construction costs: 171 M€ Operation costs: 5 M€/yearDecommissioning: 161 M€
Construction costs include 15 M€ of regional and local government funding towards additional infrastructural aspects for the proposed joint site together with ESRF; Upgrade is ongoing.
ESFRI Projects – EPS in the implementation phase
FAIR - Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research will provide high energy primary and secondary beams of ions of highest intensity and quality,Including an "antimatter beam" of antiprotons allowing forefront research in five different disciplines of physics.
Construction costs: 1.027 M€ (2005)Operation costs: 118 M€/year (2005)Decommissioning: to be estimated
Limited Liability Company under German lawwith international partners founded in 2010; Council, Administrative and Finance Committee and Scientific Committee are working; civil construction will start at the end of 2011.
ESFRI Projects – EPS in the implementation phase
SPIRAL2 is a new facility for the production and study of rare isotope radioactive beams with intensities not yet available with present machines, to be built at GANIL laboratory in Caen, France.
SPIRAL2 will reinforce the European leadershipin the field of nuclear physics based on exotic nuclei.
Construction costs: 196 M€ Operation costs: 10-12 M€/year Decommissioning: to be estimated
The construction phase is being coordinated within a consortium between CNRS, CEA and the region of Basse-Normandie and in collaboration with French, European and international institutions.
ESFRI Projects – E-Infrastructures in the implementation phase
PRACE - Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe is a European strategic approach to high-performance computing. A limited number of world-class top-tier centres are forming a scientific computing network as distributed RI at European level connected to national, regional and local centres.
Different machine architectures will fulfil the requirements of different scientific domains and applications.
Construction and operation costs: 100 M€ within the next 5 years + feesDecommissioning: not applicable
Company under Belgian law founded.
ESFRI Projects – Energy in the implementation phase
JHR - Jules Horowitz Reactor – is a high flux reactor for fission reactors material testing. It will be built on the CEA research centre at Cadarache, France, optimising efficiency and demonstrate safe operations of existing power reactors as well as support future reactor design.
Construction costs: 750 M€ Operation costs: 35 M€/year Decommissioning: ~80 M€
Construction costs come from consortium agreement (~500 M€) plus support from French "emprunt national" (~250 M€).
new! ESFRI Projects – BMS on the roadmap 2010
ANAEE - Infrastructure for Analysis and Experimentation on Ecosystems will be a distributed RI which aims at developing a coordinated set of experimental platforms to analyse, detect, and forecast the responses of ecosystems to environmental and land use changes.
Estimated CostsConstruction costs: 210 M€ Operation costs: 12 M€/year Decommissioning: not applicable
Coordination: FRANCE
Preparation phase: 2011-2014Construction phase: 2012-2017Operation phase: 2015-2035
new! ESFRI Projects – BMS on the roadmap 2010
ISBE - Infrastructure for Systems Biology-Europe - will be a distributed RI which interconnects hubs of technological excellence in Systems Biology, offering experimental and modelling facilities, establish and make available repositories of data and models and enable real-time connections within and between components and with external ‘user’ laboratories.
Estimated CostsPreparation: 6 M€Construction costs: 300 M€ Operation costs: 100 M€/year Decommissioning: not applicable
Coordination: UNITED KINGDOM
Preparation phase: 2012-2014Construction phase: 2014-2017Operation phase: 2017 onwards
new! ESFRI Projects – BMS on the roadmap 2010
MIRRI - Microbial Resource Research Infrastructure will be a distributed RI that will provide microbiological services facilitating access to high quality microorganisms, their derivatives and associated data for research, development and application. It includes over 70 microbial domain resource centres in 26 European countries.
Estimated CostsConstruction costs: 190 M€ Operation costs: 10.5 M€/year Decommissioning: not applicable
Coordination: FRANCE
Preparation phase: 2012-2014Construction phase: 2014-2017Operation phase: 2014 onwards
new! ESFRI Projects – Energy on the roadmap 2010
EU-SOLARIS - European Solar Research Infrastructure for Concentrating Solar Power, a distributed RI, will be a networking approach from outstanding solar research centres in 5 European countries to support the scientific and technological development of Concentrating Solar Power.It includes the upgrading of existing infrastructures along with new installations.
Estimated CostsPreparation: 3.5 M€Construction costs: 80 M€ Operation costs: 3 M€/year Decommissioning: 5 M€
Coordination: SPAIN
The upgrading and new installations are expected to be completed by 2015.
new! ESFRI Projects – Energy on the roadmap 2010
MYRRHA - Multipurpose hYbrid Research Reactor for High-Tech Applications will be a European Fast Spectrum Irradiation Facility. The hybrid system will consist of the combination of a high energy proton linear accelerator and a lead-alloy cooled fast spectrum irradiation facility. It can be operated in both sub-critical (accelerator driven system mode) and critical mode.
Estimated CostsConstruction costs: 960 M€ Operation costs: 46.4 M€/year Decommissioning: 105 M€
Coordination: BELGIUM
Preparation phase: 2009-2013Construction phase: 2014-2019Operation phase: 2020-2050
new! ESFRI Projects – Energy on the roadmap 2010
WINDSCANNER - will be a unique, distributed RI providing fundamentally new knowledge about the wind, which will lead to more efficient, stronger and lighter wind turbines. Exploiting recent advances in laser wind measurement techniques, mobile 3-D remote sensing wind scanners will be deployed by seven large energy research institutes.
Estimated CostsPreparation: 8 M€Construction costs: 45-60 M€ Operation costs: 4 M€/year Decommissioning: 0.1 M€
Coordination: DENMARK
Preparation phase: 2010-2012Construction phase: 2012-2015Operation phase: 2013-onwards
Challenges for World-Class Research Infrastructures
Implementation of ESFRI projects Ensuring long-term, sustainable funding for both
construction and operation Explore new forms of governance Involving global partners Storage and management of and access to data Training the next generation of RI managers Making the socio-economic case
Information Day on European Funding Opportunities for Research Infrastructures – Nicosia
Thank you for your attention