BRASILIAN DELEGATION JUNE 2011 FINNISH INNOVATION SYSTEM AND CENTER OF EXPERTISE PROGRAMME N Tapani Saarinen VP; Business Development Population: 5.3 Million Area: 391 000 km 2 GDP pc(2010): 34,401 USD THE WORLD CHANGES RAPIDLY

YOU WON´T BELIEVE, ´TILL YOU SEE

Mobira Talkman MD 50

1985 5266 € (as 2011 money)

NOKIA 6600

Feb. 2011 42 € Triple Helix

ACADEMIA INDUSTRY

Producers of New SCIENCE Uttilizers of New Knowledge PARK Knowledge

SOCIETY

Facilitators New economic growth model – sources of economic growth

Technical and non-technical innovations Immaterial capital Labour Creative individuals and communities Market orientation Economic growth Know-how Education Increase in exports Improvement in Research Knowledge employment

Technology Innovation Regional development Growth inproductivity Growth Growth in well-being

Capital Customer and user orientation Pioneering markets Open innovations

According to the new growth model, economic growth is rooted in education, research and technology. DM 789348 01-2010 R&D investments in some countries

Sources: OECD, Main Science and Technology Indicators and , TEKES Public sector’s share of total R&D funding in 2008

%

Source: Eurostat

DM 36109 and 36054 12-2010 Companies’ share of total R&D funding in 2008

%

Source: Eurostat

DM 36109 and 36054 12-2010 Ranking of EU countries

The Lisbon Review

Total rank

Sweden 1 1 2 1 2 1 4 3 1 Finland 2 5 1 7 8 3 2 2 3 Denmark 3 3 3 5 4 6 7 1 5 Netherlands 4 2 5 2 7 7 6 4 6 Luxembourg 5 7 12 6 5 2 1 5 7 Germany 6 9 4 4 1 9 17 9 2 Austria 7 6 8 3 6 4 10 8 4 France 8 10 9 11 3 5 12 13 9 Great Britain 9 4 7 10 9 14 11 14 10 Belgium 10 14 6 8 11 11 8 6 11 Ireland 11 13 10 9 18 17 5 11 8 Estonia 12 8 14 14 13 10 3 16 14 Cyprus 13 16 21 13 10 12 13 7 18 Slovenia 14 12 11 18 15 19 15 15 12 Czechia 15 17 13 12 20 15 19 10 16

Source: WEF, The Lisbon Review 2010 DM 36054 11-2010 Correlation between innovation and GDP

GDP per capita in 2008, EU 27 = 100 Norway

Ireland Switzerland Netherlands Austria Great Britain Iceland Belgium Denmark Finland Spain France Germany Italy EU 27 Greece Slovenia Czechia Portugal Slovakia Croatia Estonia Lithuania Hungary Latvia Poland Turkey Romania Bulgaria

0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 Summary Innovation Index 2008

Source: European Innovation Scoreboard 2008; EU Structural Indicators (GDP is preliminary) DM 36054 01-2010 INNOVATION UNION SCOREBOARD 2010 INNOVATION UNION SCOREBOARD 2010 INNOVATION UNION SCOREBOARD 2010 Differentations

The Nations are not similar, not even the member states in EU!

THE WAY OF THINKING IS DIFFERENT

THE WAY OF DOING IS DIFFERENT

THE WAY OF MAKING DECISSIONS IS DIFFERENT

THE WAY OF ACCEPTING IS DIFFERENT France Italy Germany R&D input in Finland

Total 6.8 billion euros, 4 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2009

Public sector 2 billion euros

Enterprises 4.8 billion euros

In 2009 Tekes allocated 579 million euros for R&D projects. Sources: Statistics Finland and Tekes Finnish Innovations

MIRENA ® Heart rate monitor

Xylitol

Benecol ® Long-acting intrauterine contraceptive system

ABLOY ®

Range of foods and drinks with a unique cholesterol lowering ingredient Utilization of Xylitol e.g. in chewing gums and pastilles to prevent caries Objectives / Science Park Concept

Providing Incubation Development of Infrastructure and developing and other premises, activities for Enterprises environment and tenants services SCIENCE PARK

Regional and national development projects and CoE programs Programme Cooperation Tools Centre of Expertise Programme

To utilise top level knowledge and expertise as a resource for business operations, job creation and regional development

A fixed-term national programme pooling local, regional and national resources to utilise top expertise Centre of Expertise Programme

Bottom-up approach: local strategies meet national Innovation policy targets

Triple helix: interaction between academia and the private and public sectors

Based on regional strengths and specialization (bottom up) coordinated on national level by cross-sectoral committee represented by ministeries, research organisations an industry representatives (top down) Centre of Expertise Programme

• Internationality in R&D and business activities • Boosting the growth of knowledge-intensive companies • Activating knowledge intensive SME’s innovation actions • Linking the regional-driven innovation actions to national and transnational innovation framework Centre of Expertise Programme

• 13 national competence clusters in 21 regional centres of expertise (Regional technology centres and science parks work as operators) • Each competence cluster is comprised of network of 4-7 regional centre of expertise • Competence clusters can be • Technology-driven (e.g. Nanotechnology, HealthBio) • Application-driven (e.g. Living business) • Industry-driven (Forest cluster) • Service-oriented (Tourism and Experience Management) • Competitive tendering for basic funding – 20 million euros annually, Government 50%, Municipalities 50% – RDI projects are funded through EU structural funds, EU framework programmes, Tekes etc. Thematic fields of OSKE 13 competence clusters in 21 centres of expertise

HealthBio , ,, , Nanotechnology Living business , Jyväskylä , , , Oulu, Joensuu, Hämeenlinna, Helsinki, Tampere , Helsinki Health and Well-being Kuopio, Oulu, Helsinki, Tampere

Digital Content Energy Technology Hämeenlinna, Helsinki , Tampere, Joensuu, Jyväskylä, , ja Tampere Ubiquitous Computing Jyväskylä, Oulu , Pori, Food Development Helsinki, Tampere Cleantech Kuopio, Helsinki, Kuopio, Lahti , Oulu, Helsinki Seinäjoki , Turku Tourism and Experience Management Helsinki, , Savonlinna, Turku Forest Industry Future Intelligent Machines Joensuu, Jyväskylä, , Kokkola, Mikkeli, Hyvinkää, Hämeenlinna, , Lappeenranta , Turku Seinäjoki, Tampere Maritime Lappeenranta, Pori, Turku , Vaasa, 21 Centres of Expertise ROVANIEMI

OULU RAAHE

KAJAANI KOKKOLA

VAASA KUOPIO SEINÄJOKI JOENSUU

JYVÄSKYLÄ

SAVONLINNA MIKKELI TAMPERE PORI IN ONE COMPETENCE CLUSTER HÄMEENLINNA LAHTI LAPPEENRANTA IN NINE COMPETENCE CLUSTERS HYVINKÄÄ KOUVOLA TURKU HELSINKI HealthBIO – Biotech Competence Cluster 2007-2013

Oulu – Oulu InnovationLtd • Biomoleculars • Bioprocess • Biosensor research Kuopio – • Bio - electronics Kuopio Innovation Ltd • Pharmaceutical development • Molecular Science Tampere – • Biomaterials Finn-Medi Research Ltd • Biomaterials • Tissue Technology • Immunology • Bio -IT

Helsinki Region – Culminatum Ltd Turku – • Molecular Medicine Turku Science Park Ltd • Neuroscience Pharmaceutical development • Bioinformatics • Biomaterials • Industrial process development • Diagnostics • Molecular Biology Centre of Expertise Programme offers

• Networks and contacts to the best Finnish expertise in the selected fields • Business opportunities with Finnish companies • Co-operation in innovation activities • Research commercialisation Outcomes of OSKE

• Over 4 000 Finnish companies take part each year in the preparation and implementation of OSKE projects • The cluster approach increases the critical mass needed in research and development as well as internationalisation of businesses. Focus on Bio and ICT - broader applications

Regional BioTurku HealthBIO --clustercluster -co-operation Applied ICT Ubiquitouscomputing in Southwest Finland strongly connects with: Marine --clustercluster Internationalisation and partnering •Wellfare and health Tourism and exp industry sector Drug development •Marine- and metal Food industry Diagnostics industry Biomaterials •Bio- and pharma Functional foods industry Nanotechnology FINLAND- LIFE AND SCIENCES

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION www.turkusciencepark.com