security – opportunities and challenges
TRANSCRIPT
FP7 Security
Michael Murphy
Presented at University of Limerick9th Oct 2008
Contents
• FP7 Security – Necessary Background
• How is Ireland doing ?
• How to Participate
FP7 Security – Necessary Background
What is the Scope of FP7 Security
• It deals with terrorist acts and organised crime up to the point of a crisis
• After a crisis has occurred be it natural or man-made, the response is covered by FP7 Security
• It does not fund projects that are concerned with safety
• It does not fund research into weapons
Security in FP7
COOPERATION 32.413Bn€
Health 6.100
Food, Agriculture & Biotechnology 1.935
Information and Communication Technologies 9.050
Nanosciences, Nanotechnologies, Materials and New Production Processes
3.475
Energy 2.350
Environment (including climate change) 1.890
Transport (including aeronautics) 4.160
Socio-Economic Sciences and the Humanities 0.623
Space 1.430
Security 1.400
Underlying Strategy – The ESRAB Report
• The European Security Research Advisory Board was facilitated by the EC to produce a strategic European Security Research Agenda called the ESRAB report
http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/security/doc/esrab_report_en.pdf
How the ESRAB Report Feeds Into the Final Work Programme
Advisory Board
20 individuals are drawn from 10
supplier companies & 10 end-users
List of Topics for the Work
Programme selected by the Advisory
Board is proposed to the Programme
Committee of National Delegates
by the EC
DRAFT 1
DRAFT 2
DRAFT …
FINAL WORK PROGRAMME
The Work Programme
• 26 Topics in the current Call for Proposals which will close on 4th December 2008
• http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/calls/
Topics in the Security Work Programme
• Logistic and supply chain security
• Sensors for detection of pathogens
• Sensors for detection of drug precursors
• Advanced digital and physical forensics
• Integrated protection of rail transportation
• Comprehensive approach to airport security
• Built infrastructure protection
• Main sea port security system
• Sea borders surveillance system
• Continuity, coverage, performance - secure data link for UAVs, etc
• Crisis Management – First responder of the future
• Neutralisation of CBRNE effects following a terrorist act
• Bio-dosimetric tools to manage radiological casualties
• Simulation tools for management of crises and complex emergencies
European Security Research Innovation Forum (ESRIF)
• The ESRAB report was well-received but it quickly became apparent that a deeper, broader and less supplier dominated strategy is required so the European Security Research Innovation Forum (ESRIF) was established in 2007 www.esrif.eu
• 64 core personnel, around 600 registered participants divided among 11 Working Groups
• Strong Irish participation and there is now an Irish ESRIF Forum which meets to define key messages for input into ESRIF
• Inputs are welcome
How is Ireland Doing?
Successful Participation by Irish Organisations in FP7 Security to date
Organisation Number of FP7 Security Wins
An Garda Síochána 2
Trinity College – Nick McDonald 1
Skytek Computing 1
Dublin Airport Authority 1
Univ. of Limerick – Elfed Lewis 1
European Biometrics Forum 1
Columba Global Systems 1
How do I participate ?
Irish Security Research Network
• Irish Security Research Network (serenity) established in March 2004
• It is an all-island network (Republic and Northern Ireland)
• Now has over 425 participants from industry, academia, end-users and others
• It distributes information on FP7 Security and promotes security R&D activities in Ireland generally
• It networks closely with leading European security organisations
Taking a Strategic View
• Contribute to ESRIF to have your ideas and capabilities included in future Work Programmes
Contribute to the Work ProgrammeOriginal Work Programme Text
Topic SEC-2007-3.3.3 Solutions for ensuring end-to-end communication availability, relying on physical and logical technologies, on diversity of hybrid systems
Technical content / scope: The task is to develop suitable novel broadband services which guarantee the required quality of service and data integrity making use of multimode communication solutions (mainly focused in wireless/mobile communication with security (end to end) features for voice, data information and access.
Revised Work Programme Text
Topic SEC-2007-3.3-03 Solutions for ensuring disruption-tolerant end-to-end communication availability, relying on physical and logical technologies, on diversity of hybrid systems
Technical content / scope: The task is to develop suitable novel communication services which guarantee the required quality of service and data integrity making use of multimode communication solutions, even in the face of disruptions that may occur due to security incidents. These will mainly be focused on wireless/mobile communication making use, where appropriate, of disruption-tolerant networking schemes. Solutions should include appropriate end-to-end and hop-by-hop security features for voice, data information and access.
Participation
• You can coordinate a proposal
• You can participate as a partner in a consortium
• In either case you need to identify capable partners but – (a) who are the main players in FP7 Security ?– (b) what Topics are they interested in ?
• And it’s an additional challenge if you have not taken a strategic view of FP7 Security….
Key Messages
• There are opportunities in FP7 Security across many academic domains from hard to soft sciences
• EI can assist you at the proposal stage to identify partners, by providing grant aid and with sound advice
• It’s not easy, you need a compelling proposition driven by genuine end-user requirements
• There is scope for opportunistic success but a strategic approach is far better
Contact Details
• Michael Murphy, Enterprise Ireland, East Point Business Park, Dublin 3
• Email: [email protected]
• Phone: +353 1 727 2516
• Mobile: +353 86 816 2588 (any time)