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Ambient Assisted Living Joint Programme Ambient Assisted Living Joint Programme objectives and participation rulesobjectives and participation rules
Peter Wintlev-JensenEuropean Commission
DG INFSO H3NCP Information Day 10/4/2008, Brussels
Brussels, April 10, 2008 2
Presentation contentsPresentation contents
• AAL Joint Programme description and objectives– General info– Overall and specific objectives– AAL Partner States– Thematic areas, needs and opportunities
• AAL Joint Programme in practice– Participation rules– 1st call for proposals – preliminary information
Brussels, April 10, 2008 3
ICT & Ageing: Social Necessity ICT & Ageing: Social Necessity and Economic Opportunityand Economic Opportunity
• 80+ population: doubles until 2050
• 60+ population: from 20% in 1995 to 25% in 2020
• 50+ population: 21% has severe vision/hearing/dexterity problems
• Today 4 working for 1 retired, in 2050 only 2 working for 1 retired
• Cost of pensions/health/long-term care: up by 4-8 % of GDP (2025)
• Shortfall of care staff
=== // ===
• Wealth and revenues in Europe of persons over 65 is over 3000 B€
• Smart homes market will triple between 2005 and 2020
• Early patient discharge by tele-health: reduced cost of 1,5 B€ p.a. (DE)
• Tele-care technology at home: Empowerment of elderly and efficiency gains of 25% (UK)
Brussels, April 10, 2008 4
ICT in support of ICT in support of older people…older people…
• At Work– Staying active and productive for longer
– Better quality of work and work-life balance • In the Community
– Overcoming isolation & loneliness– Keeping up social networks– Accessing public services
• At Home– Better quality of life for longer
– Independence, autonomy and dignity
Brussels, April 10, 2008 5
Why AAL Joint Programme ?Why AAL Joint Programme ?
• Mobilising critical mass of R&D for higher impact– Leveraging national, EC and industrial investments– Joining multiple national funding streams with multi-annual
commitments
• Complement FP7 longer-term R&D with applied R&D
– Promoting interoperable solutions– Innovation value chains across borders– International cooperation of SMEs using national rules of
participation– European knowledge linked to local innovation
• Improving Coordination of National Research– Demographic change facing most countries in Europe and
beyond– Removing fragmentation of existing National ICT and Ageing
R&D funding activities and strategies– Innovate with new strategic R&D approach across EC and
Member States
Brussels, April 10, 2008 6
Ambient Assisted Living Ambient Assisted Living Joint ProgrammeJoint Programme
• New European funding programme – 2008 – 2013, total scope ~600 M€ of which 50% public
funding, 50% private funding– Member state driven programme, 20 Member States, 3 States
Associated to FP7– EC participation based on article 169 of the EC treaty (25 M€ /
year), complements longer term research – 400 M€ in 7th Framework Programme
• Implementation by AAL Association and the national programme agencies– Organization of 1-2 calls for proposals per year– Common Workprogramme, Central evaluation process – National funding contract based on national rules– European and national activities; brokerage and partnering
events, results dissemination, conferences
Brussels, April 10, 2008 7
Positioning AAL in the Positioning AAL in the European ContextEuropean Context
Time to Market
Technology Risk
FP7
AAL JP
ICT PSP
Higher
Lower
Research and Development
Service/BusinessInnovation
•longer-term research (5-10 year time to market)•integration of new ICT & new ideas,•open platforms and interoperability;
•market oriented research and development (2-3 year time-to-market)•cost-effectiveness,•adaptation to specific demands, ….
•large scale trials (Using existing technology)•service and organisational re-engineering•business case development, ...
Brussels, April 10, 2008 8
Overall objective…Overall objective…
“The overall objective of the AAL joint programme is to enhance the quality of life of older people and strengthen the industrial base in Europe through the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT).”
• Quality of life of elderly people• Strengthening the industrial base in Europe• Use of ICT
Brussels, April 10, 2008 9
Specific aims…Specific aims…
“Foster the emergence of innovative ICT-based products, services and systems for ageing well at home, in the community, and at work, thus increasing the quality of life, autonomy, participation in social life, skills and employability of elderly people, and reducing the costs of health and social care”
• New ICT-based products, systems and services for ageing well
• At home, in the community, at work
Brussels, April 10, 2008 10
Specific aims…Specific aims…
“Create critical mass of research, development and innovation at EU level in technologies and services for ageing well in the information society, including the establishment of a favourable environment for participation by small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs);”
• Boost R&D&I activities at EU level• Implementation that improves SME participation
Brussels, April 10, 2008 11
Specific aims…Specific aims…
“Improve conditions for industrial exploitation by providing a coherent European framework for developing common approaches and facilitating the localisation and adaptation of common solutions which are compatible with varying social preferences and regulatory aspects at national or regional level across Europe.”
• Improve industrial exploitation• Ensure compatibility with different European
regions, cultures and regulatory framework
Brussels, April 10, 2008 12
Participating Participating CountriesCountries
Brussels, April 10, 2008 13
Indicative Commitments Indicative Commitments April 2008April 2008
Founding Members Yearly indicative public funding amount in M€*
Austria 2.5
Belgium 1.0
Cyprus 0.5
Denmark 0.5
Finland 2.5
France 2.5
Germany 5.0
Hungary 2.5
Ireland 0.5
Israel 1.0
Italy 2.5
Luxemburg 0.3
Netherlands 1.9
Portugal 0.2
Spain 4.4
Founding Members Yearly indicative public funding amount in M€*
Sweden 0.8
Greece 1.5
Norway 1.0
Poland 0.5
Romania 0.2
Slovenia 0.2
Switzerland 2.0
UK 1.1
23 countries 35.1
European Commission
25
Total funding ~60
* Subject to final confirmation
Brussels, April 10, 2008 14
Needs and opportunitiesNeeds and opportunities
New concepts with evidence on effectiveness and
economical sustainability
Business concepts, value chains, value
capturing, standardisation
Personalized products and services,
empowered individualCustomer centric, accessible, effective and sustainable
services
Integration of user needs into the development
processes
Public-private partnerships, living labs, evidence
creation, best practices
NeedsMaintaining health & functional capability
Preserving independence & dignityParticipation into society & social networks
Feeling secure
ChallengesAgeing population
Increasing costs of social and health careReducing workforce
Improve quality of life for all
OpportunitiesIntelligent mass products
Customized servicesIntelligent processes
Brussels, April 10, 2008 15
AAL thematic areasAAL thematic areas
Brussels, April 10, 2008 16
AAL Joint Programme in AAL Joint Programme in practicepractice
• Description of the programme activities for 2008 will be published as a Work Programme and calls for proposals– Thematic scope and focus– Total budget and the detailed available funding in each AAL partner state
(by the national agencies or ministries)– Timing of the calls for proposals and detailed instructions on how to apply– European programme activities (conferences, workshops, partnering
events etc.)
• National activities in each AAL partner state are implemented by the national agencies – AAL National Contact Points (NCP)
• Centralized submission of proposals, evaluation and project selection– Programme funds collaborative projects and accompanying measures– Pre-commercial research, development and innovation activities with time
to market about 2-3 years– Solution driven programme: user needs, business opportunities, societal
challenges
Brussels, April 10, 2008 17
General participation rulesGeneral participation rules
• Centralized electronic submission of proposals, evaluation and project selection– Complete electronic submission in time, in English – Eligibility of an individual partner for funding depends on the
national eligibility rules – will be published in the Work Programme
– Evaluation by independent European experts– Evaluation criteria are published in the Work Programme
• Collaborative projects– At least 3 independent legal entities, from at least three different
AAL Partner States involved in a the specific call for proposals.– The partners form a project consortium, one partner acts as the
coordinator – Selected projects will need to make a consortium agreement
• Accompanying measures– At least 3 independent legal entities, from at least three different
AAL Partner States involved in a the specific call for proposals.
Brussels, April 10, 2008 18
Funding decisions for the Funding decisions for the selected AAL projectsselected AAL projects
• Partners in successful project proposals will have the grant agreement with their national Programme Management Agency– Funding levels, conditions, reporting, eligible costs, audit
etc. according to the national rules– Required complementary information to be submitted to
the national agency (e.g. financial information) – Financial viability check by the national agency– No evaluation of the contents of the proposal at the
national agency– Common project description/consortium agreement– Streamlined process ensuring a common start date
Brussels, April 10, 2008 19
AAL Calls for proposalsAAL Calls for proposals
2008
2009
Brussels, April 10, 2008 20PREL
IMIN
ARY1st AAL call for proposals – 1st AAL call for proposals –
opens April / 2008opens April / 2008
• Prevention and management of chronic conditions for Elderly People– ICT Solutions for elderly persons with identified risk factors
and/or chronic conditions– Aiming at ICT solutions centred on the elderly person (not
the professional or an organization), including citizen empowerment and peer support
– Focused but not restricted to home environment, also solutions within the community and when travelling can be proposed
– Focusing on ICT solutions that keep the individual out of the long-term care institutions and hospitals.
– Objective is to enhance the individual’s autonomy, independence and quality of life, while increasing cost-efficiency of care
• Collaborative projects
Brussels, April 10, 2008 21PREL
IMIN
ARYConsiderations for Considerations for
proposersproposers
• Where is the focus of AAL Joint Programme?– Prevention and management of chronic conditions is 20% medicine,
80% other– Barriers for deployment are in practicality, cost, acceptance and
suitability into real-life environment– There are lacking business models and value chains– Integration of services from different providers, technologies and
information systems is incomplete– The European societies need evidence on the effectiveness to health
and impact on sustainability of services
• How will time-to-market of 2-3 years be reflected in the proposal?– Consortium composition– Type of activities– Market existence– Adaptation of ICT solutions
Brussels, April 10, 2008 22PREL
IMIN
ARYWhat makes a good What makes a good
AAL project?AAL project?
• Close to market approach – activities with a “centre of gravity” on development
• Integrates users and user needs in the development• Includes value chain and business analysis• Results in products, solutions or service concepts
that can be applied widely in Europe• Uses ICT to solve real life challenges and to enable
new and innovative applications or service concepts• Indicative upper limit for funding / project
– Up to 3 M€ in collaborative projects
Brussels, April 10, 2008 23PREL
IMIN
ARYEvaluation CriteriaEvaluation Criteria
• Relevance (3/4)– Addressing objectives and scope of the call
• Project quality (3/4)– Innovation beyond state of the art (Time to market 2-3 years) – Methodology and organization of activities– Proactive user involvement throughout the project
• Consortium quality (3/4)– European added value of cooperation– Actors of the value chain involved– Proactive role of small and medium sized enterprises– Necessary resources to achieve the goals
• Impact (3/4) (weight 2)– New and innovative solutions to specific end user needs– Responding to attractive and high potential market at EU level– Scientific & technical impact beyond state of the art
• Scores from 1 to 4
Brussels, April 10, 2008 24
AAL Joint Programme – Status AAL Joint Programme – Status and Next Stepsand Next Steps
• Strong support, 23 countries committed, >200 M€ + 150 M€ (EU) until 2013
• Launch of first call for proposals expected for April 2008– Partnering events already ongoing
• Formal adoption by Council and Parliament in June 2008– Commissions contribution to first call budget
• Presentation of AAL WP 2009 at ICT 2008 event November 2008 in Lyon
• Launch of first projects – end of 2008
More InformationMore Information
http://www.aal-europe.eu
Background Info http://ec.europa.eu/einclusion