Nu är det ganska klart att EU kommer att inrätta ett European Innovation Council, EIC. Efter beslut i EU-kommissionen har man allokerat 2,5 miljarder euro till ett första steg- Det ska tas för åren fram till 2020, dvs i lite drygt tre år. För att utveckla EIC och satsa de nästan 25 miljarder kronor som står till förfogande nu har EU-kommissionen tillsatt en High Level Group.
Den nya Högnivå Gruppen börjar sitt arbete i mars månad. Kommissionär Carlos Moedas vill att den ska utveckla satsningar på de innovation som gör att Europa kan konkurrera med USA och Silicon Valley. Läs om detta här. Gruppen har alltså testpengar på nästan 25 miljarder kronor. Från och med 2021, i den nya Ramprogrammet, ska den här verksamheten sedan utvecklas fullt ut.
Det finns anledning att ta EU-kommissionens tankar på allvar. Nyligen var det ett möte med ansvariga i Sverige, inklusive regeringsföreträdare, men man insåg nog knappast att det var allvar.
Så här ser högnivågruppen ut. Däri ingår en svensk, Nicklas Bergman. Du som är intresserad av den nya panelens ledamöter finner länkar till samtliga här nedan:
Nicklas Bergman, entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Quid Tu Vides and Intergalactic Industries, co-founder of Nirab Parts.
Bergman is a Swedish entrepreneur and technology investor, participating in 15 companies in web services, nanotechnology, computing, new materials, and new media art. Apart from his businesses, he is a popular speaker and has published several books on the future of technology.
Martin Bruncko, founder and managing partner of Steam Capital
Bruncko is a Slovak technology entrepreneur, investor, and former public policy leader. He’s the founder and managing partner of Steam Capital, a venture fund that invests in transformational, deep tech companies in Europe. He is chief strategy officer of AeroMobil, a company that sells a ‘flying car’, which claims to transform in seconds from a car to a plane. Previously, he was the head of Europe for the World Economic Forum and held several senior positions in the government of Slovakia.
Paddy Cosgrave, founder and CEO of Web Summit and f.ounders
Cosgrave set up Web Summit, the biggest Internet conference in Europe, in 2009. Last year it hosted more than 50,000 participants in Lisbon – its first time out of Dublin, which it quit partly because there weren’t enough hotel rooms at the right prices. He also created founders, an annual private gathering of 200 CEOs of the world’s leading technology companies which happens alongside Web Summit, described by Bloomberg as “Davos for Geeks”.
Gráinne Dwyer, CEO of Ludgate Hub
Dwyer is a 26-years-old entrepreneur. She started Ludgate Hub, a co-working space with one of the fastest internet connections in Ireland. It is located in Skibbereen, a small village in a rural coastal area of the country. Ludgate Hub seeks to be an example of how to help less populated areas compete with cities in a connected world. She is also the CEO of the Irish National Digital Week, a conference which explores opportunities for digital in rural areas. Its second edition attracted 1,600 digital entrepreneurs and other geeks to Skibbereen last November.
Hermann Maria Hauser, entrepreneur, co-founder of Amadeus Capital Partners
Hauser co-founded Amadeus Capital Partners in 1997, a company that claims to have supported more than 90 young firms in its nearly 20 years of life. His first company, Acorn Computer, was in the 1980s the biggest European competitor to a then-young Apple Computer, but eventually failed. He went on to co-found ARM Holdings, the world’s biggest designer of microchips for smartphones, which was purchased last year for £24 billion by Japan’s Softbank.
Marjolein Helder, founder and CEO of Plant-e
In 2012, Helder established Plant-e, a company that generates electricity from living plants. She holds a PhD in environmental technology, which she combines with a minor in business management to run her five-person firm in Wageningen, southern Netherlands. She claims algae could be the next energy revolution.
Taavet Hinrikus, co-founder and CEO of TransferWise
Along with his colleague Kristo Käärman, Hinrikus started a war against hidden costs on international money transfers. To do so, in 2011 these Estonians created TransferWise, an app for sending money using its “real exchange rate”. Today, they employ more than 600 in their headquarters in London and process more than €690 million euro every month, according to Bloomberg.
Ingmar Hoerr, co-founder and CEO of CureVac
Hoerr started CureVac in 2000, after he discovered a new way of administering RNA-based vaccines, together with his colleagues Florian von der Muelbe and Steve Pascolo, during his PhD studies. Today, this German company employs around 290 and has raised €350 million in equity; investors include the Bill & Belinda Gates Foundation.
Bindi Karia, start-up expert and advisor
Karia is known among UK geeks as “queen of the startups”. She started at Microsoft, but has since then seen the venture capital market from all perspectives: she was an employee in a startup herself, worked for a consultancy and had roles as a startup banker, connector and advisor.
Jana Kolar, CEO of CERIC-ERIC and governing board member of the European Institute for Innovation and Technology
Kolar is the executive director of CERIC-ERIC, a distributed research infrastructure for characterisation of materials, located in seven Central and East European countries. She advises the Austrian science minister and is a member of another Commission advisory group on innovation in SMEs. In 2004, she founded her own company, Morana ltd, a firm that develops applications for material identification.
Carlos Oliveira, entrepreneur, founder of Skyuber, CEO of ebankIT, NED of ASAP54, Codevision, CardMobili, PepFeed, President of InvestBraga and Startup Braga
Oliveira established Skyuber, an app that allows you to find empty seats in private planes. Skyuber connects pilots and passengers, who share the costs of the trip. There is no connection to the taxi-hailing Uber app, despite its similar-sounding name and business model.
Jim Hagemann Snabe, Board of Trustees member, World Economic Forum, and adjunct professor at Copenhagen Business School
Snabe will bring in-depth knowledge of high-level management to the panel. He sits on the board of the World Economic Forum, as well as at some of the biggest firms in Europe: the world-leading maritime cargo Maersk, software developer SAP, insurance company Allianz and tech companies Siemens and Bang & Olufsen. He is also the only (part) academic in the group, as an adjunct professor at Copenhagen Business School.
Kinga Stanisławska, managing partner and founder of Experior Venture Fund
Stanisławska has worked in startup finance for more than fifteen years. She is responsible for the Experior Venture Fund’s operations, including deal sourcing, mentoring and supervision of exits from investments and obtaining debt financing for her portfolio companies.
Constantijn Van Oranje-Nassau, special envoy of StartupDelta
Besides being prince of the Netherlands, he is enthusiastic for the startup environment. He leads StartupDelta, an entity that supports the Dutch startup ecosystem. He also established Startup Fest Europe, a week-long event gathering companies, investors and entrepreneurs in Amsterdam. He is currently an advisor on digital technologies to the European Commission, where he has held several roles, including head of cabinet of former Digital Agenda EU Commissioner Neelie Kroes. He is the younger brother of the current Dutch king.
Roxanne Varza, CEO of StationF
Varza is one of the youngest names on the list at 31, a co-founder of tech.eu online news site and head of StationF, an incubator in Paris with the ambition of becoming the biggest in the world when it opens this year. Previously she worked for Microsoft Ventures in France as ‘startup lover’ (as she defines her position there).