EurActiv Logo
EU news & policy debates
- across languages -
Bulgaria News
Turkey News
Germany News
Spain News
France News
United Kingdom News
Poland News
Czech Republic News
Slovakia News
Hungary News
Romania News
Serbia News
Greece News
Italy News
Bulgaria Turkey Germany Spain France United Kingdom Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Hungary Romania Serbia Greece Italy
EurActiv.com Network

BROWSE ALL SECTIONS

Chemicals industry moves ahead with R&D agenda

Published 29 August 2006 - Updated 04 May 2007
Printer-friendly versionSend to friend

While most of the attention in Brussels is focused on the REACH proposal, industry is moving on with a multi-million innovation plan aimed at taking it closer to environmental sustainability.

Industry participants at the European Technology Platform for Sustainable Chemistry (SusChem) have adopted a draft action plan to focus European R&D spending on the most promising areas with respect to future sustainability and profits.

The draft "maps out a programme of medium and long-term activity that will be constantly reviewed", said Alfred Oberholz, deputy Chairman of Degussa Management Board and SusChem chair at the closure of an implementation meeting in Budapest on 27 August.

Priorities focus around eight themes: bio-based economy; energy; health care; information and communication technologies; nanotechnology; sustainable quality of life; sustainable product and process design; and transport.

Funding estimations are "in the order of 1.4 billion euro annually in the coming years" around half of which is expected to come from public sources whether at European or national level.

Promising ideas and concepts include the construction of a "smart energy home", an "integrated biorefinery" pilot facility and a future chemicals factory that is faster and more flexible. A definitive list of projects will be drawn up at the end of 2006.

SusChem was launched jointly in 2004 by the European Chemical Industry Council (CEFIC) and biotech industry group EuropaBio to focus European research in chemistry. It adopted a Strategic Research Agenda (SRA) in November 2005.

Advertising