Atlanpole Blue Cluster - Station de Concarneau
Transcription
Atlanpole Blue Cluster - Station de Concarneau
The rendez-vous de Concarneau « Where Industry meets Science» A worldwide connected blue biocluster Jean-François BALDUCCHI Managing Director of Atlanpole Vice-president of IASP 1 Atlanpole, land of innovation Dublin 1987 : Creation of Atlanpole as Nantes/ St-Nazaire technopole/science park London 1997 : Accredited as a « European Business Innovation Center » (BIC) Paris 1999 : Recognized as a « Business Incubator » Nantes 2001 : ISO 9001 certification 2005 : Setting up of « Atlanpole Biotherapies » biocluster Madrid 2008 : Creation of Atlanpole Blue Cluster” 2 Atlanpole today The network • 358 innovating companies • 71 research and higher education organizations (IFREMER, Universities…) Objectives • • • • • Innovation engineering Cross fertilization and networking Territorial marketing and business relocation Access to international markets Promotion of inward investments Results (during 2011) • 17 companies created • 30 collaborative research projects built 3 Fields of excellence - Biotechnology/Life Sciences - Food Industry - Environment - Electronics /Computer sciences - Mechanics /Material sciences - Information and Communication Technologies 4 Atlanpole Blue Cluster « Emerging from the Atlantic Ocean » • A dynamic network between academic and industrial skills (more than 100 members), in the field of marine bioresources • Pays de La Loire/PoitouCharentes Regions - Western France – • Close cooperation with the maritime competitivness cluster « Pole Mer Bretagne » 5 Atlanpole Blue Cluster : The biomarine resources Microalgae: (oils, sugars, functional bioactive compounds) Fishery by-products: (added value food ingredients :lipids, proteins) Marine micromycets 6 5 markets 7 The markets from the less to the more mature Energy • • • • biofuels hydrogen biogas electricity Environment • marker for environmental health • Devolution • green chemistry Healthcare •cell factories for producing recombinant proteins •Pigments •Antibacterials (marine micromycets •Tissue regeneration Agrifood Cosmetics Fish oils and •nutraceutical fats & Microalgae s market •More traditional market food colorings, texturing agents, preservative s, aromas, etc. •ingredients with hydrating properties •Ingredients (antioxidant/ antiradical activity) 8 The stakeholders • 33 research labs – 50% are core targets – 50% are expert service providers • 48 small and medium-sized companies – 12 are core targets – 23 are expert service providers – 13 equipment manufacturers • 6 higher education institutions • 18 technical facilities • 2 business support organizations The whole value chain: Experts who identify, screen, produce and transform biomass in order to yield high added value molecules. 9 AFE Algenics Algsources Technologies Alpha Biotech Atlantic Bone Screen Bio-Littoral Capsulae Cardiex Ceeram Ceris ingenierie Food development Glazeo In cell Art Innov’ia Néréis Phosphotec S3d Sovaltech SMEs examples Marine biotechnology society Specialized in recombining Proteins from microalgae for pharmaceutical, cosmetic and Nutraceutic needs. Exploitation of microalgae for cosmetic ingredients and nutraceutical substances: biomass production, processing, marketing, consultancy. 10 SMEs examples S3D is an expert in biomass to energy projects. S3d offers engineering and R&D services for the development innovation and added value solutions to turn waste into energy. Phosphotec is a cutting edge company focused on marine ingredients. The company is specialized in production, formulation and marketing of marine powders, enzymatic hydrolysates and polyunstarurated fatty acids. 11 Atlanpole Blue Cluster offers Access to a network of skills in the marine bioresources sector, Identify your future key partners for business / research, Develop your international connections with other clusters Help in setting up collaborative projects, (European projects) 12 A quick benchmark among several european blue bioclusters addressing µ-algae, fishery by products and aquaculture innovative technologies - 1 researchers/ cluster •The CETMAR Fundation (Spain) • Pôle Mer Bretagne (France) •Atlanpole Blue Cluster (55) >50 •Aquimer (France) •BioNord (Germany) •Plymouth Marine Science Partnership (UK) •Pôle Mer PACA (France) •The Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (Greece) •The European Centre for Marine Biotechnology (Scotland -UK) •Mabcent (Norway) 25-50 •Bergen Marine Research Cluster (Norway) •BioCon Valley (Germany) •Marine Institute (Ireland) •Marelife (Norway) •Scanbalt (Baltic countries) •The Future Ocean (Germany) 10-25 13 A quick benchmark among several european blue bioclusters addressing µAlgae, fishery by products and aquaculture innovative technologies - 2 companies /cluster •Mabcent (Norway) • Pôle Mer Bretagne (France) •Atlanpole Blue Cluster (15) >4 •Aquimer (France) •BioCon Valley (Germany) •Marelife Marelife (Norway) •The European Centre for Marine Biotechnology (Scotland -UK) 2-4 •Bergen Marine Research Cluster (Norway) •BioNord (Germany) •Marine Institute (Ireland) •Pôle Mer PACA (France) •Plymouth Marine Science Partnership (UK) •Scanbalt (Baltic countries) •The CETMAR Foundation (Spain) •The Future Ocean (Germany) •The Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (Greece) <2 14 IASP in a few slides 15 A high growth network, active since 1984 : 16 • • • • The worldwide network of Science/Technology Parks and innovation-based incubation projects with a genuine world-wide character, which has 381 members in 70 countries as well as contacts and associates in many more A non-profit organisation Independent, and financially self-supporting 128,000 companies 16 16 Our members 17 • Existing and developing Science and Technology Parks • Areas of innovation/innovative clusters • Smart cities • Innovation-based incubation projects • Universities and R&D institutions • Regional development agencies • Consultants, technology brokers, experts, etc. 17 17 Our main goals 18 • To assist the development of new Science/ Technology Parks and incubation projects • To promote worldwide networking amongst innovation actors and managers • To transfer to our members all our know-how and expertise, shortening their learning curve • To support our members’ resident companies • To be represented in relevant international forums and organizations 18 18 Our keywords 19 • International networking • Innovation and knowledge • New business opportunities • Adding value to our members 19 19 Where we are 20 Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Botswana, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, India, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Korea, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Namibia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Taiwan, Thailand, The Netherlands, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Uruguay, USA, Venezuela, Vietnam 20 20 IASP: a worldwide network 21 21 21 Upcoming IASP events 22 30th World Conference on Science & Technology Parks • Recife (Brazil) 13th-16th October 2013 www.iasp2013recife.com IASP Regional Conferences • IASP Asian Divisions Conference, Bangkok (Thailand) 26th-28th November 2012 IASP European Division Workshops • Vitoria (Spain), 16th-17th October 2012 • Poznan (Poland), 12th-13th November 2012 www.iasp.ws 22 22