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Supported by Public-Private Partnerships for the Bioeconomy: The Bio-Based Industries Joint Initiative: Connecting Biobased Value Chains and Networks in.

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Presentation on theme: "Supported by Public-Private Partnerships for the Bioeconomy: The Bio-Based Industries Joint Initiative: Connecting Biobased Value Chains and Networks in."— Presentation transcript:

1 Supported by Public-Private Partnerships for the Bioeconomy: The Bio-Based Industries Joint Initiative: Connecting Biobased Value Chains and Networks in Europe Marcel Wubbolts Chair BIC, Vice-Chair BBI CTO Royal DSM

2 WHY A PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP?

3 To ‘de-risk’ an emerging industry A clear framework that brings clarity for activities & investments Long term stability and predictability A joint approach, across sectors, across nations Joint financial commitment and a jointly defined programme, that will unite parties that would otherwise find these activities to be too risky for an individual sector/company to carry out on its own Leverage further investments (e.g. regions funding) Industry driven and therefore result and market-oriented

4 THE BIO-BASED INDUSTRIES CONSORTIUM

5 About BIC Established in 2012/2013 to represent the private sector in the Public-Private Partnership on Bio-based Industries (BBI) Main tasks to date: Define the BBI’s Strategic Innovation and Research Agenda (SIRA) Lead the development and drafting of the annual BBI Work Plans and Call for Proposals topics Mobilise industry (large, SMEs, SME Clusters), research organisations, universities, regions and all relevant stakeholders across Europe that are active or interested in the field of bio- based. A multi-sector organisation, and still growing: Agriculture Agro-food Forestry / Pulp and Paper Biotechnology / Technology providers / End users Chemicals Energy

6 Strategic Innovation & Research Agenda Value Chain 1: From lignocellulosic feedstock to advanced biofuels, bio-based chemicals & biomaterials realising the feedstock and technology base for the next generation of fuels, chemicals and materials Value Chain 2: Next generation forest-based value chains utilisation of the full potential of forestry biomass by improved mobilisation and realisation of new added value products and markets Value Chain 3: Next generation agro-based value chains realising the highest sustainability and added value by improved agricultural production, and new added value products and markets Value Chain 4: New value chains from (organic) waste from waste problems to economic opportunities by realising sustainable technologies to convert waste into valuable products Value Chain 5: Integrated energy, pulp and chemicals biorefineries realising sustainable bio-energy production, by backwards integration with biorefinery operations isolating higher added value components

7 ■ 74 Full members 42 Large industries 18 SMEs 14 Clusters ■ 147 Associate members 50 Universities 73 RTOs 10 European Associations 7 Associations 5 Technology platforms 1 Public institution 1 Bank Our members More than 200, and still growing

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12 Bio-based Industries Consortium Bio-based Industries Joint Undertaking Governing Board (10 seats) Executive Director Programme Office staff States Representative Group (28 MS + 10 AC) Scientific Committee (15 seats) European Commission BBI Joint Undertaking

13 TOTAL € 3705 M (about 75% from BIC) € 975 M Call for Proposals (in cash and in kind) € 975 M Additional Activities € 1755 M + = Budget

14 Focus Fostering a sustainable biomass supply and building new value chains Feedstock Optimising efficient processing through R&D and upscaling in large-scale demo/flagship biorefineries Biorefineries Developing markets for bio-based products and optimising policy frameworks Markets, products and policies

15 Different types of projects R&D projects Demonstration projects Flagship projects Supporting projects More information: http://bbi-europe.eu/http://bbi-europe.eu/

16 Access to additional finance Combining EU funds to maximise impact Guidelines on BBI-ESIF synergies developed by BIC WHAT can be co-funded in a given project HOW to approach these synergies Juncker Investment Plan €315 billion over 2015-2017 Bioeconomy Investment Summit organised by the European Commission 9-10 NOVEMBER 9-10 NOVEMBER

17 Join Us www.biconsortium.eu Follow us: @biconsortium

18 As in Horizon 2020 evaluation and selection are made on the basis of excellence, impact and quality and efficiency of the implementation. Annual call for proposals  2014 Call: signing of final grant agreements: 15 June 2015  2015 Call: 19 May 2015: launch of €100 million Flagship Call (1 of 2) July or September 2015: launch of Research & Innovation, Demonstration and Coordinated and Support Actions Call (2 of 2) 26 June: BBI Info Day The calls are published on the Research Participant Portal and follow the standard Horizon 2020 rules. Implementation through calls for proposals 2014-2020


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