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Euroscience Open Forum - Programme Dynamique V2.0 15/05/2018 10�28 Programme | EuroScience Open Forum - Programme dynamique v2.0 15/05/2018 1028 Legend : Scientific Programme Careers Programme Science to Business Programme 09/07/2018 14:00 - 18:00 OPENING CEREMONY Place : Palais des Sports 18:30 - 20:30 Opening of the exhibition in CCPB and networking Cocktail 21:15 - 23:00 Concert by Orchestre National du Capitole Place : Prairie des Filtres https://programme.esof.eu/index.php?langue=en&onglet=0&idUs…ramCallback=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.esof.eu%2Fen%2Fprogramme.html Page 1 sur 100 Programme | EuroScience Open Forum - Programme dynamique v2.0 15/05/2018 1028 10/07/2018 08:30 - 09:45 Plenary Panel Discussion: FP9: The future European framework for research and innovation beyond horizon 2020 Carlos MOEDAS - Commissioner for Research, Science and Innovation, European Commission ; Dr. Maria LEPTIN - EMBO Director ; Dr. Angela BELLIA - Marie Curie Researcher, National Research Council, Institute for Archaeological and Monumental Heritage National Research Council, Chair of the Events and Network Working Group Marie Curie Alumni Association Place : Palais des Sports 08:45 - 10:00 Parallel sessions Scientists and citizens unite to combat plastic pollution in the ocean Plastics are now considered a threat to the marine environment. Scientists are trying to understand what happens to these particles in order to predict their impacts on the oceans and on humans. Nevertheless, as total ocean clearance is not possible, upstream pollution reduction at the source should be achieved through integrated catchment management, water sanitation and improved waste management (collection and recycling). Controlling plastic pollution also involves promoting recycling and the circular economy. These measures must be accompanied simultaneously by a change in our consumption behaviour, through education and citizen awareness, because the health of the sea and the oceans depends on each of us. The accumulation of waste in the sea is a global problem that requires comprehensive and coordinated solutions. Submitted by Alexandra TER HALLE - laboratoire des IMRCP CNRS Speakers : BECERRA Sylviia - CNRS, SINKEL Carsel - BASF SE, VAN ROOST Herman - Total, DEIXONNE Patrick - Expedition 7th Continent Science-Flashmobs at Shoppingmalls? From Scientific Output towards Scientific Outreach: Re- Assessing Values of Career Logics in Science The panel addresses the efforts of scientific experts and organization to contribute to social utility of science through outreach activities. It opens the discussion whether the values inherent in scientific careers need re-assessment, if the mission of scientific communication - a key path to make the social utility of science intelligible for the public beyond academia - is to be pursued with a stronger dedication from scientists. Best-practices of scientific communication groups from France, Germany, Italy, and Spain will showcase current efforts in addressing non-academics. Scientific outreach often lags behind scientific output. Outreach of science beyond academia is less prioritized and valued in research careers than output inside academia. Yet it is precisely the complexity of issues which researchers deal with that requires efforts for scientific outreach. For a sustainable environment, public health, or digitization, insight from academia needs acceptance beyond academia. Scientific outreach also strengthens the stance of science itself. Scientists were not immune from backlashes of varying degrees, such as refusals to accept science-based facts, structural weakening though the cut of public funding, or even threats to scientists in some countries. An investment of energy in scientific https://programme.esof.eu/index.php?langue=en&onglet=0&idUs…ramCallback=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.esof.eu%2Fen%2Fprogramme.html Page 2 sur 100 Programme | EuroScience Open Forum - Programme dynamique v2.0 15/05/2018 1028 communication is therefore also an investment in science itself. The key debate of the panel will be a critical examination of the priorities prevailing scientific careers, where the social utility of science still seems secondary in contrast to the rule of academic reputation. Do scientific institutions have to change in order to assign recognition and active support for researchers who dedicate their resources for scientific communication activities? In practical ways, the panel will draw on the experience of the international speakers to discuss how outreach can become more effective to communicate science to a diversity of people beyond academia. Submitted by In-Sook CHOI - Baden-Württemberg International Speakers : ARMENGOU Sonia - Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB), Barcelona, AUBIN Jean-Baptiste - Maison des mathématiques et de l'informatique (MMI) Lyon, CHOI In-Sook - Baden-Württemberg International, CRESS Ulrike - Leibniz-Institut für Wissensmedien (IWM), Tübingen, GAD Gernot - German Research Foundation, L'ASTORINA Alba - Institute per il rilevamento elettromagnetico dell?ambiente (IREA), National Research Council of Italy How can Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) enable Blue Growth initiatives? A hands on approach and roadmap This highly interactive workshop will showcase lessons learned and best practices from 34 local and 8 international mobilisation and mutual learning European workshops from the EU-funded RRI-project MARINA. The MARINA workshops have actively engaged more than 1100 actors and stakeholders from policy, science, business, NGOs/ CSOs and society to debate and define actionable roadmaps of how to embed Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) in Blue Growth topics. The topics cover blue energy, sustainable tourism, coastal urban development, aquacutlure, fisheries, marine litter, re- invigorating old harbours, deep sea mining and nanotechnology. All these activities have resulted into a collection of lessons learned and best practices for applying RRI, participatory approach and stakeholder engagement. This collection has been boiled down into the RRI Roadmap for Blue Growth and beyond. The workshop will be highly participative testing the RRI Roadmap for Blue Growth and Nanotechnology. Participants in groups will test the RRI-Roadmap and compete or collaborate to achieve Blue Growth initiatives using RRI. Each group will be given limited RRI resources and it will be required to compete and/ or collaborate with other groups in achieving a concise RRI common approach. At the end of the participatory exercise, the workshop facilitator will collect experiences from the participant-groups and draw conclusions. The workshop will continue with short "fire" presentations from MARINA and other EU-funded RRI-related projects for discussing and consolidating how RRI can enable Blue Growth. The workshop will end by sharing a summary of policy-oriented RRI initiatives based on the MARINA European policy survey and experiences from engaging multi- disciplinary actors in blue growth and nanotechnology initiatives. The RRI Roadmap and its best practices do not only relate to marine fields but to any business-science-policy societal challenge field such as nanotechnology. Submitted by Xenia R THEODOTOU SCHNEIDE - XPRO Consulting Limited Speakers : GIN Iwona - Nausicaa, Centre National de la Mer, CIRA Manuel - World Ocean Network, RAICEVICH Sasa - Italian Institute of Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA), SANDERS Robert - EBN, THEODOTOU SCHNEIDER Xenia - XPRO Consulting Limited Environmental impact of transportation on Europe: view of science and industry https://programme.esof.eu/index.php?langue=en&onglet=0&idUs…ramCallback=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.esof.eu%2Fen%2Fprogramme.html Page 3 sur 100 Programme | EuroScience Open Forum - Programme dynamique v2.0 15/05/2018 1028 Environmental impact is a reality and an issue of increasing concern nowadays, especially in Europe. While this is an issue that affects all the population, governmental intervention is necessary, such as with projects embedded in European frameworks like "Horizon 2020" among others, in order to motivate the industry and accelerate positive changes towards greener solutions. A large part of the current research projects in European universities is strongly related to limit the environmental impact of current industry or to reduce the effect of the actions taken in the past. Transport accounts for 26% of global CO2 emissions. It is one of the few industrial sectors where emissions are still growing. European companies like Volvo and Airbus are determined to develop new ways to reduce the footprint of transportation, in means of climate impacts as well as pollutants and noise emissions. Some countries are implementing effective regulations to change the mobility sector towards the use of renewable resources. The Netherlands and Norway, for example, plan banning the introduction of road vehicles with fossil fuels by 2025; and Norway also aims to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions from local shipping by 40% in 2030 compared to 1990. Apart from technological solutions, there are approaches to lower the demand for emission intensive transportation. As an example, a Swiss retailer removed fresh green asparagus from overseas from its shelves, because due to air transport they have about 15 times higher climate impacts than local asparagus. In order to bring industry and academia together, this session aims at combining the views and opinions of experts of European companies (Airbus, e-GO, SBB) and universities and research institutes (TU Delft, ETH, Chalmers). Submitted by Pavlo BAZILINSKYY - Delft University of Technology Speakers
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