Barcelona, Espoo, Grenoble,
Groningen, Malaga and Paris are the six cities shortlisted for the first
European Capital of Innovation award, or iCapital (IP/13/808).
An independent panel of experts has agreed on the six finalists for the
€500000 prize. The money will go to the city building the best
“innovation ecosystem” - connecting citizens, public organisations,
academia, and business - with a view to helping the city scale up its
efforts in this field. The winning city will be announced at the
Innovation Convention 2014, Europe’s premier innovation event which will
take place in Brussels on 10 and 11 March (#euic2014).
Máire Geoghegan-Quinn, European Commissioner for Research, Innovation and Science, said: "The
response to this competition was impressive, with 58 European cities
applying. This demonstrates that there is real interest among European
public administrations to boost innovation and modernise and improve
services for citizens. At the end of the day there can only be one
winner but we can all learn from each other by sharing our best ideas."
The iCapital Award was launched to
encourage cities to stimulate innovation and create a network of cities
which can share their best ideas for the future. Cities were judged on
the basis of initiatives they have already taken, as well as their
future ideas to enhance innovative capacity. Finalists are listed below
along with their main achievements:
- BARCELONA, Spain for introducing the use of new technologies to bring the city closer to citizens;
- ESPOO, Finland for the creation of strategic partnerships uniting science, business and creativity;
- GRENOBLE, France for investing in scientific and technological breakthroughs through synergies between research, education and industry;
- GRONINGEN, Netherlands for the use of new concepts, tools and processes to develop a user-centred smart energy ecosystem;
- MALAGA, Spain for a new urban regeneration model where people and creative industries cooperate and spur growth;
- PARIS, France for opening up municipally-owned property to experimental innovative solutions, driven by all types of businesses.
Background
Innovation is central to economic
growth and business competitiveness, and is at the heart of the EU's
Europe 2020 strategy. Two thirds of the EU population now lives in urban
areas. These areas therefore have a key role to play in making Europe
more innovative.
