IVANOVA SHOWS HER METTLE IN PARLIAMENT HEARING: Iliana Ivanova, the Bulgarian nominee for the vacant post of research and innovation commissioner passed the Parliament test yesterday. Among other promises, she said the east-west R&D performance gap will sit high on her agenda. But she did not give precise details of how she plans to help poorer EU member states catch up with the rest of the bloc during her short mandate.
The EU research community expects her to review the different funding schemes under the Widening Participation programme in Horizon Europe. The programme is meant to close the R&I gap but critics doubt it can have the intended effect.
REGIONAL INNOVATION VALLEYS: The European Commission has today published a matchmaking map to highlight the regions that have expressed interest in becoming a ‘regional innovation valley’, a new EU nomenclature for a programme aimed at encouraging collaboration between more and less advanced EU regions.
To date, 64 eligible regions from 22 member states and countries associated to Horizon Europe have said they would like to apply for the designation. The applicants comprise seven innovation leaders, 16 strong innovators, 18 moderate innovators, and 19 emerging innovators, according to the latest European Innovation Scoreboard.
The new map would help regional authorities to identify relevant partners.
ACADEMY FEARS BUDGET CUTS: The Romanian Academy, a behemoth overseeing more than 70 research centres and institutes which has not been reformed since the Communists came to power in the 1940s, laments government plans to cut its budget and merge some of its underperforming institutes.
In a statement published last month, the Academy says any budget cuts would further weaken Romania’s position in EU R&D league tables. Romania has consistently ranked last or second-to-last in the EU innovation scoreboard and this year it had no universities represented in the Shanghai ranking, which measures research performance.
The Academy acknowledged that the national research system needs to be “restructured” but concrete measures need to be taken with “professionalism, vision and responsibility”.
TRANSATLANTIC DEAL: The Central European Institute of Technology, Brno University of Technology (CEITEC BUT), and the University of Waterloo, Canada have signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at boosting cooperation in nanotechnology research and promoting researcher mobility.
Czechia’s deputy minister for foreign affairs Jiri Kozak said government representatives in Ottawa and Toronto can help Czech researchers find matching Canadian research partners. “Today's signing of the memorandum shows that such cooperation is developing successfully and that Czech researchers and nanotechnologists are promising counterparts for Canada,” he said. |