Indo-Pacific economies are in the global spotlight as the region marks an impressive post-pandemic bounce-back. The main bottlenecks for EU innovation performance are the lack of innovation cohesion, the lack of finance and business environment”, Commissioner Mariya Gabriel “It is by joining forces that we can unlock the innovation potential in EU to support the green and digital transition. Europe is leading in creating new science, new technologies and new pan-European champions”, Gaetan Bonhomme “Europe is making clean tech not only imaginable by the scientists of science, but reachable to everyone. “Europe can lead in creating a homogenous market, setting standards that exclude the most pollution-needing processes that will make them uncompetitive in term of carbon pricing.” Investing in clean tech is not only about funding but creating jobs and prosperity”, Jacob Ruiter “Europe already takes leadership role in setting high standards to meet the carbon neutrality Europe.
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At AB InBev we are in full support of exploring different new technologies and comparing for the best alternatives”, Cybelle Buyck (…) Europe is creating the right environment to incentivise investments on clean technology to get to the ambitious goal EU has set. We have our global innovation centre, GITEC, here in Belgium working on breakthrough tech needed. “We have more than 600 years of brewing heritage and we want to go on doing it for a lot longer. How can the research, entrepreneur, investors, and policy communities work together to anticipate technology trends and develop adequate policy frameworks? Strategic foresight is vital to identify technology trends early on and develop timely and coherent policies along the technology maturation cycle. Innovation in cleantech normally takes decades, but the world does not have that much time. Almost half the necessary reductions by 2050 involve technologies that are currently in the demonstration or prototype phase according to the International Energy Agency. Indeed, with a net-zero emissions objective by mid-century, Europe, as the rest of the world, need to scale up research and development of new clean technologies.Īchieving global net zero emissions will require huge leaps in innovation. “To keep our climate goals within reach the next ten years must be a decade of delivery, not deliberation” said COP26 President Alok Sharma. We will need new resources for alternative energies”, Professor Harald Sverdrup “With the supply and demand mechanism, the transition of clean energy will rise but it will get to the point where we cannot afford it anymore. The Elite has to get together and steer the way to get people on board”, Dr Wouter van Dieren, Club of Rome. “All great changes are the changes from the Elites. “The youth are not being heard”, Aniek Moonen These are the way to save our Arctic regions”, Sir David King “Reduce deep and rapid emissions, remove excess CO2 from the atmosphere, Repair our planet. “The Green Deal is a breakthrough document proving that economy and environment are not contradictory”, Janez Potocnik “Now that you have the privilege to know, you have the duty to act”, Hans van der Loo The scientific community calls for more immediate actions to reach negative emissions and avoid the Arctic ice melting. The Green Deal and Paris agreement’s objective of net zero emissions by 2050, while stopping further CO2 emissions, will not allow to reduce the carbon already present in the atmosphere. This unprecedented melting of ice in the Atlantic may stop the Gulf stream and would lead to a much colder climate and increase Europe’s energy consumption. 10 million litres of ice per second melt in the height of summer in Greenland record temperatures of 38☌ have been recorded In the Arctic.