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Title: Sciencebased innovation:


1
Kharkiv Technologies International
WorkshopTechnology Transfer and Innovation
Support NetworksInternational Experience and
Prospects for Ukraine.
  • Science-based innovation
  • International experiences and EC projects for
    Ukraine
  • Prof Ivan Samson
  • Grenoble University
  • EC project Team Leader

Kharkov, September 3-4, 2008
2
Contents
  • 1-Science-based innovation
  • 2 - The EU experiences of Science Parks
    (Saxenian, Bengston Lind)
  • 3-The American experiences of Science cities
    (Etzkowitz)
  • 4 - Russian success story St. Petersburgs
    software cluster
  • 5 Local governments and the Triple Helix model
    of Etzkovitz and Leydesdorff
  • 6 The EU support to innovation in Ukraine

3
1-Science-based innovation
4
The three factors of innovation performance
  • According to experts, the key of innovation and
    competitiveness is in the combination of three
    factors (Peter Nijkamp)
  • Knowledge the macro-factors of education and RD
    policies, as well as the micro-factors of skill
    training and the ability to learn and accumulate
    collective know-how in organisations
  • Entrepreneurship linked to knowledge the point
    is not only to have good scientists, but good
    entrepreneurs able to take risks and became
    agents of change
  • Favorable environment as innovation-friendly
    culture and institutional arrangements and
    infrastructure
  • Ukraine has knowledge, but entrepreneurs and
    environment?

5
The two sources of innovation
  • The world practice shows two ways of generating
    innovations
  • Research/supply driven innovation originating in
    the laboratories of the academic institutions and
    large industry organisation, and then channelling
    into development departments and manufacturing
    activities, as well as small high-tech start-ups
    quite often born from spin-offs of large
    companies or research centres
  • Demand/consumer driven innovation originating
    both in marketing departments of large companies
    as well as in the day-to-day activity of SMEs.

6
  • The key problem of this way of generating
    high-tech production is transmission of
    innovations or technology transfer from science
    to production.
  • The technology transfer was administratively
    ensured in FSU within large complex merging
    Science centres and large industries.
  • Today these complex are no longer working because
    of cuts in budget spendings and industry
    privatisation and restructuring.
  • The challenge for Ukraine is to rebuild the chain
    from science to industry

7
Two main world trends in technology transfer
clusters and technology networks
  • These forms are both means of communication
    between Research and Production as well as
    interactions between firms.
  • Clusters are rather typical of EU and networks
    are well developed in the USA, but both forms are
    more or less developed everywhere.
  • The main difference is that clusters are
    geographical agglomerations of research and
    productive units, when networks rely mainly on
    distance connections between the units.

8
  • The clusters are competitive because of the
    externalities (product inputs, knowledge,
    economies of scales, cooperations in problem
    solving) they provide, and there are innovative
    thanks to the variety of the units and the
    density of interactions
  • they perform specially in the transfers of tacit
    knowledge (discoveries, know-how) that require
    face-to-face interactions, as well as in
    synergies, spin-offs and technology spill-overs
  • Technology networks are competitive because they
    are based on top up-to-date discoveries and
    innovations, they gather the best codified
    knowledge in the world and still some less
    codified knowledge, and they provide the
    participants the resources of several
    territories
  • The strength of the cluster is based on the
    agglomeration and concentration effects as well
    as in the community created by its long history
  • the strength of the network is its plasticity and
    flexibility enabling worldwide permanent updates.

9
  • 2 - The EU experiences of Science Parks
    (Saxenian, Bengston Lind)

10
  • In many European countries the setting up of
    science or technology parks is an important
    strategy in creating territorial attractiveness
    and advantage.
  • Generally these are seen as growth engines
    spurring economic growth not only in the park
    itself but also in the region where the science
    park is located.
  • Three of the most interesting cases of science
    and technology parks are the pioneering parks in
    Great Britain, Cambridge Science Park in France,
    ZIRST Grenoble and in Sweden, Ideon Science Park,
    Lund (ISD).
  • The three cases present striking similarities
    related to the start of science parks and
    subsequent growth of high-tech activity in the
    regional areas.
  • In the 1970s Cambridge was a typical British
    university town with virtually no industry,
    Grenoble was an industry town with strong applied
    research centres and Lund was a university town
    with some industry.
  • Grenoble had well developed relations between
    industry and academia, while in Cambridge and
    Lund the relations were few and weak. Despite
    these differences high-tech activity emerged at
    similar times in a unique local dynamic
    environment.

11
  • In terms of university industry interaction Lund
    resembled the Cambridge situation, with a lacking
    tradition of industry-university relationships.
    Instead, both places had strong traditional
    academic values. The relations between industry
    and higher education had long traditions in the
    area and were considered to be a part of the
    local identity in Grenoble.
  • In Cambridge influential scientists at key
    colleges, well acquainted with experiences at MIT
    and Stanford in the US, were the key drivers of
    the process.
  • In Grenoble, local government politicians with a
    background in science and research, a few local
    industry managers and research institute
    directors played key roles in establishing the
    first science park.
  • In both Grenoble and Cambridge the first
    businesses to localise in the parks were
    primarily spin-offs from established companies in
    computer and electronics.
  • In Lund it is very uncommon for researchers and
    scientists to be involved in local government as
    politicians. In Grenoble, local government
    politicians acted as relational entrepreneurs
    with good relations to academia, the political
    system and industry.

12
  • Thus the development of the process depends both
    on the available local resources and on
    initiatives of local actors.
  • The major challenge in Lund was to create a new
    vision of a high-tech innovation system (frame
    breaking) and to relate actors from the
    university, industry and the political system
    with each other.
  • These activities and roles could be related to
    the first step, creating a community of interest
    in Saxenians model of a new regional innovation
    system.
  • The science park experience has specifically
    highlighted the importance of certain individuals
    in this first part of the process that is the
    role of the relational entrepreneurs.
  • They all had prior experience or good contacts
    with all three types of actors the university,
    the industry and the political system.

13
3-The American experiences of Science cities
(Etzkowitz)
14
  • The two leading U.S. high-tech regions, Route 128
    and Silicon Valley, were built on Brownfield
    and Greenfield sites.
  • Drawing upon academic, business and government
    resources, a coalition of New England academic
    institutions and financial interests created a
    new model of regional economic development in the
    early post-war.
  • Follow-on regions typically identify successful
    models and adapt them to meet their needs.
  • Thus, the venture capital model was transferred
    from Boston to northern California to expand firm
    formation activity in the emerging semi-conductor
    industry.
  • Silicon Valley, based on a flat network
    structure, is currently being transformed into a
    planetary system of strong entities with
    satellites

15
  • How did these two strongly contrasting regions
    develop as the leading centres of science-based
    industry in the U.S. in subsequent decades?
  • A simple answer is the presence of MIT and
    Stanford. While these two universities played an
    important role in transforming their regions it
    was not the university by itself that made the
    difference.
  • The emergence of polyvalent research fields with
    simultaneous theoretical, technological and
    commercial potential provides a substrate for the
    growth of science based clusters.

16
  • The strategy that evolved was based on a
    synthesis of university-business-government
    elements into a venture capital instrument
    government changing investment rules the
    university providing technology, human resources
    and capital to form new firms and business
    providing capital and legitimation to the new
    venture entity.
  • Immediately after the war, Compton organized a
    consortium of universities, investment banks and
    insurance companies to found the first venture
    capital firm, American Research and Development
    (ARD) through sale of equity (stock) in the firm.

17
  • Basic component of American model is an
    entrepreneurial university that rests on four
    pillars
  • (1) legal control over academic resources,
    including physical property in university lands
    and buildings and intellectual property emanating
    from research
  • (2) organizational capacity to transfer
    technology through patenting, licensing and
    incubation
  • (3) an entrepreneurial ethos among
    administrators, faculty and students and
  • (4) academic leadership able to formulate and
    implement a strategic vision.

18
4 - Russian success story St. Petersburgs
software cluster
19
  • The growth rate of Russian software exports were
    about 40 and 30 in 2004 and 2005 respectively,
    in 2006 they increased by almost 54 and
    accounted for approximately 1.5 billion, which
    makes Russia the third largest player in the
    global outsourcing market, just after India and
    China.
  • Since 1991 many former scientific workers,
    university professors and graduates have founded
    the first enterprises specialized in the SaS
    (software as service).
  • At the time, the economic context characterized
    by the political and economic instability in
    Russia forced these pioneers to work exclusively
    for the Western clients. This openness with the
    regards to the global market enabled the constant
    knowledge flow between the worlds high tech
    centres, especially with the Silicon Valley.
    Moreover, this process was reinforced thank to
    the movement of the Russian diaspora.

20
  • In 1999 several St. Petersburgs software firms
    created the first Association FortRoss in order
    to promote St. Petersburgs software sector
    abroad and to construct an image of a country
    specialized in the high-end outsourcing. the
    foundation of Fort Ross (RUSSOFT) became the
    turning point in the development of the cluster
    and the whole Russian software sector.
  • Today there are about 150-200 software
    enterprises in St. Petersburg. Among these
    companies there are a dozen large firms employing
    approximately 400 programmers.
  • Since 2000 St. Petersburg has become a well known
    cluster not only thanks to its local companies
    (Arcadia, Digital Design, eVelopers, Lanit
    Tercom, Reksoft, SJ Labs), but also due to the
    research centers of multinational companies such
    as Siemens, LG, Alcatel, Motorola, Sun
    Microsystems, Intel, Google, HP.

21
  • Moreover, today the city hosts the Special
    Innovative Economic Zones and several IT parks
    established by the local universities.
  • Thus, the city proved to be not only the
    attractive software outsourcing destination in
    terms of the cost reduction, but progressively
    evolved into developed software cluster highly
    integrated in the global value chain with a
    complex network articulating industry,
    universities and the State.

22
5 Local governments and the Triple Helix model
ofof Etzkovitz and Leydesdorff
23
  • Derived from the Boston regional organizing
    experience in the 1930s and 40s, the triple
    helix model University-Industry-Government
    comprises three basic elements
  • first, a more prominent role for the university
    in innovation
  • second, a movement toward collaborative
    relationships among the three major institutional
    spheres in which innovation policy is
    increasingly an outcome of interaction among
    university, industry and government
  • thirdly, in addition to fulfilling their
    traditional functions, each institutional sphere
    also takes the role of the other Thus, academia
    is a source of firm-formation in addition to its
    traditional role as a provider of trained persons
    and research. Government helps to support the new
    developments through changes in the regulatory
    environment, tax incentives and provision of
    public venture capital. Industry takes the role
    of the university in developing training and
    research, often at the same high level as
    universities.

24
  • In recent decades, government has played an
    entrepreneurial role, revising the rules for
    interaction among the institutional spheres. For
    example, in the U.S. in 1980, and more recently
    in Japan and Denmark, government has transferred
    the intellectual property rights, deriving from
    its research funding, to universities in order to
    incentivize entrepreneurial behaviour.
  • The model was expanded through analysis of areas
    where the role of one sphere in innovation,
    either predominated or was lacking, such as the
    State in Eastern Europe before and after the
    Berlin Wall. Too much, or too little, government
    impeded innovation.
  • As the economic implications of research arise
    ever closer in time to the making of a discovery,
    the location of research becomes a political
    issue with regional relevance. Regions with
    extensive research resources conflict with those
    that wish to develop similar strengths, creating
    pressures to expand research funding.

25
  • Academic advance and regional growth are mutually
    supportive goals. The need to periodically renew
    the technological capabilities of a region leads
    government, as well as companies and universities
    themselves, to explore ways for knowledge
    producing institutions to make a greater
    contribution to the economy and society.
  • This opens the way to a more elaborated view of
    the process creating a high-tech regional
    innovation system. There are also individuals and
    organisations that have showed institutional
    leadership in terms of envisioning a new
    innovation system in the region and have worked
    hard to create the right conditions for this
    process to unfold.
  • Local government as relational entrepreneurs make
    more than adapting the rules their proximity
    with actors make them unique actors capable to
    combine science an business. This opens the way
    to the decentralisation of innovation policy in
    creating regional or local innovation systems

26
6 The EU support to innovation in Ukraine
27
  • The Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine adopted the
    Resolution ? 447 of May 14, 2008 STATE PRINCIPAL
    ECONOMIC PROGRAMME Foundation of Innovative
    Infrastructure in Ukraine for 2009 2013
  • This means the relaunching of efforts started in
    1999
  • Current competitiveness of the economy rests on
    energy and material intensive sectors
  • This economic specialisation neither ensures a
    sustainable growth to the country
  • nor corresponds to its intellectual resources
    that represented almost 25 of FSU human capital

28
The EC supports projects to science and
innovation in Ukraine
  • The 2006 Tacis National Action Programme (NAP)
    included a large envelope for projects on
    research and innovation
  • Our team has to design, in coordination with
    major local stakeholders and EC, the concrete
    projects that will be put in tender process in
    2009 and implemented until end 2011
  • The wokshop of Kharkov is a key moment for
    identifying the main obstacles to innovation ,
    the ways to overcome them and the first outlines
    of possible projects
  • Direct beneficiaries and detailed project ToR
    will be identified in September and October

29
Four key issues
  • We have identified four major issues where
    precise projects are likely to bring concrete
    progress
  • The regulation and the legal environment for
    Research and Innovation in Ukraine
  • Science based innovation and technology transfers
  • The financial support to Research and Innovation
    in Ukraine
  • The support to innovative SME and transnational
    networks
  • and EDUCATION !

30
  • In each key issue, one project providing EU and
    local technical assistance will develop a new
    mechanism or institution on a pilot basis showing
    policy makers and other stakeholders what could
    be successful
  • The EU projects will bring concrete means such as
    expertise, networking, study tours, training,
    capacity building
  • The design of the projects to be implemented
    before end 2011, with definition of components
    and of concrete outputs, will come out from the
    mix of our know how and YOUR suggestions !!
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