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Large research infrastructures: priorities and choices

Learn about the vital role of research infrastructures, ESFRI strategies, and UK best practices. Discover the evolving landscape of European research facilities and the criteria for selecting impactful projects.

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Large research infrastructures: priorities and choices

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  1. Large research infrastructures: priorities and choices Catherine Ewart, Head of Stakeholder and International Relations, Science and Technology Facilities Council (UK) Canadian Science Policy Conference, Ottawa, 26th November 2015

  2. Outline of talk • Importance of research infrastructures • The European approach – ESFRI • Lessons for the Canadian system • How we’ve done things in the UK

  3. One of Europe's largest multidisciplinary research organisations • Support university based research and skills in astronomy, particle physics and nuclear physics • Build Science and Innovation Campuses around our national laboratories to promote academic and industrial collaboration; • Provide access to world leading large scale research facilities for UK researchers and industry.

  4. Importance of Research Infrastructures • Broad consensus that future competitiveness in a globalising knowledge economy depends on research capability • Requires • Investment in higher education and research institutions • Access to first class research infrastructures • Coordination on European (and global) scale increasingly needed because • Limited investment funds available • Increasing level of infrastructure investments needed to remain at the cutting edge • Problems require broad data sharing and networking between national nodes – distributed RIs • RIs are Innovation and skills hubs, not (just) big machines or big datasets

  5. The European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) Roadmapping process

  6. Role of ESFRI • Set up by the EU Council of Research Ministers in 2002 • Brings together representatives of Ministers of the 27 Member States, 10 Associated States, and of the European Commission • Supports a coherent and strategy-led approach to policy making on Research Infrastructures in Europe • Mandate to develop a Roadmap and prioritise research infrastructures • ESFRI provides a forum for coordination, information sharing, help and best practice, but Member States must be the major source of funding, in variable geometry • Strong support for these principles

  7. ESFRI Roadmap • Roadmap identifies new pan-European Research Infrastructures or major upgrades to existing ones, to meet the needs of European research communities in the next 10 to 20 years, in all fields of research • First Roadmap published in 2006 • Followed by two updates in 2008 and 2010 • Now contains 48 projects • Requires major financial investment (~20 B€) and long term commitment for operation (~2 b€/year)

  8. ESFRI Roadmap 2010 ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ *Projects from CERN’s European Strategy for Particle Physics ✓ Implemented according to AEG (2013) Red: 10-years expires in 2016

  9. Roadmap 2016 Process ESFRI Road-map RI proposal by Member State(s) ESFRI SWG SWG SWG SWG SWG Recommended projects and analysis of landscape Experts assigned to each SWG E-IRG • Pan-European • Science case IG Peer reviewers • Technical case • Business case • Overall maturity External experts

  10. New ESFRI Roadmap 2016 ESFRI mandate updated at Informal Competitiveness Council in Milano (July 2014) to complete a new Roadmap for 2016 with new criteria of selection and format New Roadmap will contain fewer, more mature projects It will also be more of a strategy document that analyses: • the landscape of RIs in EU and internationally • gaps in the EU RI ecosystem • pan-European projects • synergies with the national/regional projects • synergies with existing RIs and strategies for optimal use, continuous upgrade, sustainability and end of life perspectives • global research infrastructure opportunities

  11. Rules for new Roadmap • Much shorter – only ~25 Projects on the new Roadmap • Projects that have been on the roadmap and not implemented will automatically roll off after 10 years • Any project that wants to be considered again after 10 years must reapply, either in a different form or with bottlenecks resolved • Room for 8-10 new projects on the 2016 roadmap • Entry level projects will be at a more mature level • conceptual design and feasibility done • supported by at least three MS (1 + 2) • Every 2-3 years audit of the project by ESFRI Implementation WG • Opportunities to add more projects in 2018, 2020 as others roll off

  12. Evaluation of Projects • Proposals were screened for eligibility and assigned to one of ESFRI’s strategic working groups • Scientific merit and pan European relevance (based on ESFRI criteria) was assessed by the SWG, using the advice of independent peer reviewers • e-science aspects were coordinated with e-IRG • Project and governance maturity was assessed by the Implementation working group, again using advice from external experts, based on the approach used by the Assessment Expert group in 2012

  13. Proposing projects for new roadmap The proposal process was on-line (reserved to National Delegations) Key questions included: • What is the value for science? for innovation? • Cost and Schedule? • What is the strategy for siting? What is the governance model? What is the data management plan? • How it the RI planned to be financed? • Does it replace existing facilities? • Is the project included on one or more national roadmaps? • Which member states support? (3 required) • What is the intended user community? Will it be open access? • What preparatory work has been done? • Design Studies? Business case? Investment plan? • Is it intended to apply for H2020 preparatory phase?

  14. Legal Structure ERIC(European Research Infrastructure Consortium) • A new legal framework, at EU level, to facilitate the joint establishment and operation of Research Infrastructures of European interest among several countries • Legally recognised in all EU Member States • Some VAT advantages Use of an ERIC is not mandatory and does not confer any special status in ESFRI or H2020 • Use it when it makes sense!

  15. Key dates • 25 September 2014: Roadmap update launch (Trieste) • 31 March 2015: Deadline for new project proposals • September 2015: Project Hearings • December 2015: ESFRI Forum Decision on the Roadmap Active List • 10th March 2016: Launch of the New Roadmap (Amsterdam) • May 2016: Competitiveness Council (Ministerial approval)

  16. How has ESFRI helped shape the European RI landscape? • Top-down process complements national bottom-up processes • ESFRI members have undertaken their own road mapping exercises to work out where the ESFRI process fits

  17. How has ESFRI helped shape the European RI landscape? • Focus researchers and governments on what are the most important projects • Raise awareness with national and European funders and improve overall level of investment • Coordinate more effectively in Europe - less duplication of services and reduced fragmentation (e.g for Bioinformatics – ELIXIR)

  18. Lessons for the Canadian system? • Reflects good practice • Tougher and more transparent evaluation in 2014/15 compared to previous years has been welcomed by all • Evaluation of project maturity as well as science quality is the key innovation    

  19. How we’ve done it in the UK • CERN • HPC • Light Sources • National neutron source • SKA • Nuclear physics • X-ray free electron sources

  20. Questions and discussion

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