Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Ministry of Industry and Trade and Labor Office of the Chief Scientist Dr. Shaul Freireich Deputy Chief Scientist July 2010.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Ministry of Industry and Trade and Labor Office of the Chief Scientist Dr. Shaul Freireich Deputy Chief Scientist July 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ministry of Industry and Trade and Labor Office of the Chief Scientist Dr. Shaul Freireich Deputy Chief Scientist July 2010

2 Source: OECD and Israel CBS Expenditure on Civilian R&D as a percent of the GDP in Israel and in OECD Countries 2008 4.5 3.6 3.4 3.2 2.7 2.5 2.3 2.2 2.1 2.02.0 1.9 1.8 1.61.61.6 1.41.4 1.4 1.1 1.0 1.0 0.90.9 0.7 0 1 2 3 4 5 Israel Sweden Finland Japan Switzerland Korea Germany Iceland USA Denmark France Belgium Netherlands Austria UK Norway Canada China Australia Brazil New Zealand Italy Russia Spain India Greece 3.2

3 EIS

4

5 Scientists & Technicians per 10,000 Workers

6 LEGAL BASIS R&D Law Directives of the Director General Regulations& Procedures International Cooperative Agreements O.C.S circulars

7 Encouragement of Industrial and Development Law 1984 - Objectives Development of Science Based Industries Based on Technological Infrastructure and Existing Human Resources. Enhance the Benefit of R&D to the Economy Beyond the Direct Benefit to the Developer. Improve Israel’s Balance of Payments Through the Manufacture and Export of High-Tech Products. Creation of Job Opportunities and Absorption of Scientific and Technical Manpower.

8 Office of the Chief Scientist (OCS) Policy – R&D Law, Directives, Procedures. Programs – R&D Fund, “Magnet”, “Incubators”, “Tnufa” etc’. Proposals –(Projects)- Proposal and Evaluation.

9 Bi-National Funds U.S, Canada, Singapore, South Korea Activities of the O.C.S. Chief Scientist International ActivitiesActivities in Israel European Union Programs Eureka,Eurostars FP -7. Bi-National Agreements India, Italy, China, Germany France and many more Support for Industrial R&D Magnet Magneton Nofar Technological Incubators Tenufa

10 International Cooperation(1) Bi-National Funds for Industrial R&D Existing Funds  BIRDFIsrael-United States  CIIRDFIsrael-Canada  SIIRDIsrael-Singapore  KORIL-RDFIsrael-South Korea  Essentials: A pair of companies from the two countries may make a joint application to the directorate of the fund for a R&D grant. Grants:Up to 50% of the approved budget. Obligation to pay royalties.

11 Objective: –Support Joint Programs –The approval process & grant payment is carried out by each governmental support agenciy. –Final approval is conditioned on approval by each country.  Existing Agreements :  India  France  Portugal  Holland  Spain  Sweden  Ireland  Germany  Italy  China  Finland  Hong-Kong Grants: Generally 50% of the approved budget. Obligation to pay royalties. International Cooperation(2) Agreement for Parallel Support for R&D

12 International Cooperation(3) Associated State in the FP 7. Member in Eureka & Eurostars. Member in AAL (Ambient Assistant Living), Galileo and other EU programs. Observer status in CERN.

13 International Cooperation(4) EUREKA PROGRAM European inter-governmental framework for 40 R&D national programs directed to support industrial innovation.European inter-governmental framework for 40 R&D national programs directed to support industrial innovation. Approves yearly 300 industrial R&D projects with total budget of €1.5 B.Approves yearly 300 industrial R&D projects with total budget of €1.5 B.  Israeli companies participate in 40 cooperation projects a year – more than 10% of total activity. Israel was elected to chairmanship in 2010- 2011.Israel was elected to chairmanship in 2010- 2011.

14 Examples Foreign Companies investing in Israel U.S.EuropeAsia MicrosoftSAPLG Group IntelPhillips MedicalSamsung IBMSiemensSun Pharma. GE HealthNestleJain Irrigation Johnson & JohnsonDanoneSony PerrigoFerrigAcer Computers Hewlett PackardVilmorinToyo Ink

15 Policy – Some Dilammas Should the Government take a more active role? (e.g.:providing preference to certain sectors?)Should the Government take a more active role? (e.g.:providing preference to certain sectors?) How to promote both foreign & local investments?How to promote both foreign & local investments? What about traditional industries & unemployment?What about traditional industries & unemployment?

16 OCS Grants by technological sectors 2009

17 OCS Annual Budget (million $) by funds

18 International cooperation in OCS(M$) 2009

19 R&D Indirect Support. Tax Relief All R&D expenses are tax deductible over a three year period. Under section 20a of Income Tax Ordinance, for OCS approved project, R&D expenses are fully deductible in the year in which they were incurred.

20 Technological Incubators Pre-Seed & Seed R&D  2009 Budget – NIS 186 M ( 50M$).  A framework for nascent companies to develop their innovative technological ideas into start-ups that can attract private investors.  Suitable facilities for R&D activity & administrative and logistic support to projects.  24 Incubators;8-10 projects in each: Grants up to 85%.

21 MAGNET Generic R&D  2009 Budget – NIS 225 M ( 61M$).  Supports consortia of industrial companies and academic institutions.  Target: jointly develop generic, pre competitive technologies or dissemination existing new technologies.  The technology cannot be acquired from commercial sources at competitive prices.  Grants of up to 66% - royalty free.

22 Principal steps in relation to project proposals Submission. Evaluation. Decision. Monitoring. Audit.

23 R&D GRANT Requirements Technological Innovation Export Potential Management Ability Grants are usually 30-50% In designated development areas, additional 10-25% R&D GRANTS Terms and Conditions: Obligation to Pay Royalties (up to 100% of grant)

24 Evaluation possibilities One or two-stage evaluation. A single or a group of evaluators.(Peer Review). Site visit or remote evaluation. A committee decision (considerations )or a priority list ( “automatic” process).

25 Formulating the evaluation

26 Procedures Working program for the Technical Evaluator Functions of the evaluator. Functions of the Section Head. Evaluation of the Proposal. Presentation of opinion to the Section Head. The Section Head’s presentation to the Research Committee. Decision. Auditing the project while in process and upon completion.

27 Extend of Evaluation work at OCS Approximately 2000 evaluations in all programs. Evaluators participate in ca.60 committee meetings. 70 evaluators, all on special contract.

28 Last remark Before I came here I was confused about this subject. Having listened to your lecture, I am still confused, but on a higher level. Enrico Fermi ( Nobel Prize 1938)

29


Download ppt "Ministry of Industry and Trade and Labor Office of the Chief Scientist Dr. Shaul Freireich Deputy Chief Scientist July 2010."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google