21.05.2010
Singular vision
Reforms that could harmonize and enhance European research deserve support.
If the plan set out on 11 May by Máire Geoghegan-Quinn, Europe’s
research commissioner, comes to fruition, the continent may finally
realize its long-standing goal of a single market for science and technology.
Her proposals aim to break down barriers to the transfer
of knowledge and researchers, as well as to reform regulations that
hamper high-tech businesses.
The plan has three key elements. It would create a single patent
system that would grant companies protection for their inventions
across all the European Union (EU) member states at once, removing
the need to file separate patents in multiple countries. It would also
set up an EU-wide pension scheme to make it easier for researchers to
move around the continent. At present, pensions are not transferable
from one member state to the next, which discourages movement.
Finally, it would increase public procurement: directing the money
that EU agencies spend on areas such as telecommunications, energyefficient
buildings and computer software towards EU businesses,
thereby spurring home-grown innovation rather than going after
the cheapest price abroad.
None of these ideas is new, although in the past they have struggled
to gain traction. The EU patent, for example, has previously
proved too controversial in too many countries to make much headway,
and the others have never had a sufficiently vigorous political
champion.
This time things may be different. Geoghegan-Quinn was an
experienced politician in her native Ireland before assuming her
current post, and she has quickly earned a reputation for being nononsense,
hard-driving and determined. And, for the first time, she
is pushing an integrated plan. Instead of treating research (primarily
in academic institutions) and innovation (primarily in the business
world) in a piecemeal fashion, as the commission has done in the
past, her plan treats them as an organic whole. The goal is to create
a smooth flow from research discoveries to products and services
on the market.
Geoghegan-Quinn says that the plan will refocus Europe’s research
efforts on a series of grand challenges facing the continent as a whole,
such as climate change and an ageing population. New partnerships
would bring together the EU, member states and public and private
researchers to work on specific aspects
of these grand challenges. For example,
for the ageing-population challenge,
these partnerships could work on tackling
chronic diseases or on developing
technologies to allow older people to
stay in their homes for longer. Existing
initiatives, such as Europe’s multibillion-
euro Framework programme for research, and the Joint Technology
Initiative’s public–private research partnerships, will also be
integrated with the plan to avoid overlap.
Although there are some potential pitfalls in the plan — the pursuit
of direct societal benefits and high-tech industrial growth cannot
be allowed to undermine basic research, for example — it is on the
right track. Geoghegan-Quinn’s vision will come under scrutiny this
autumn, when EU heads of state meet to discuss it in detail. The task
now is to sustain political momentum, and to ensure that the necessary
decisions are taken at that autumn summit. European research
minsters should explicitly give their endorsement for moving this
agenda forward when they next meet on 25 May.
Geoghegan-Quinn’s reforms are especially important given Europe’s
current financial crisis. Budgetary pain is looming for every one, so
the kind of integration and coherence that Geoghegan-Quinn has
outlined is essential for making the most effective use of the research
money that scientists do have. ■
“The goal is to create
a smooth flow from
research discoveries
to products and
services on the
market.”
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EDITORIALS NATURE|Vol 465|20 May 2010
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