Monthly Archives: June 2015

PlasCarb presented at EXPO Milan 2015

On 26th June 2015, the FP7 PlasCarb Project Coordinator Neville Slack was invited by the European Commission to give a presentation on the project’s scope, objectives and scientific achievements at the World Exhibition EXPO 2015 in Milan, Italy.

The presentation was part of the Conference “Sustainable Solutions for Energy, Climate and Food Security”, which took place at the EU Pavilion on the initiative of the European Commission’s DG Energy in three different sessions.

An introductory session, titled “The Energy, Climate, and Food Challenge”, hosted Miguel Arias Cañete (Commissioner for Energy and Climate Action) and Simon Coveney (Irish Minister for Agriculture, Food & the Marine and Minister for Defence).

Session I on Innovative Energy Solutions in the Agri-Food Supply Chain, showcased Biogas and PV in the Italian agricultural sector, Organic Biogas collectives in the French dairy sector and a Business case for energy efficiency and renewable by Mars Chocolate Europe and Eurasia.

Session II focused on Energy Best Practices in Food Retail and Use and welcomed, beyond the PlasCarb project, presentations on energy use and efficiency in the food retail (by Carrefour and Colruyt Group) and in the urban system (by Consorzio Risteco).

Finally, Session III on Renewables enabling access to energy and food, was moderated by Marie Donnelly, Director for Renewables, Research and Innovation, Energy Efficiency, DG Energy, and presented projects applying renewable energies to organic farming, micro irrigation and restorative growth in different parts of Africa.

Project Coordinator Neville Slack presented the scope and objectives of PlasCarb, showcasing one of the project’s latest products: a conductive ink that can be stored in a pen.

You can watch the video footage of the entire conference by clicking this link. For PlasCarb’s presentation, please skip to 5:00:31.

Europa Media launches the next generation training courses on EU Project Management

What is the best way of learning how to successfully manage your EU-funded research and innovation project?

There are several companies on the European market providing training programs on managing EU-funded projects. Some of them are “innovators” and “early adopters” and some of them – let’s say – “are playing safe”.

To describe Europa Media’s unique practice-based approach in delivering such training courses, we have been using terms such as “learning-by-doing”, “hands-on-approach”, and “based 100% on experience”, and emphasising that “the trainers are flash and bone project managers”.

Now, what our team has come up again can be called “the next generation of training courses”. We invite you to spend a week with us at our premises!

Europa Media is launching an all-new training format in autumn 2015: a five-day intensive training programme, which will be held in Budapest on 19-23 October 2015, covering all theoretical and practical aspects of coordinating and managing projects under the EU’s research and innovation programmes.

This new programme seeks to address a recurring demand of our past participants: to have more time to analyse in-depth all the details of project management and financial reporting under FP7 and Horizon 2020. Having this in mind, we will host a comprehensive five-day training admitting only ten participants, so that their learning experience will be really customised and focused.

The training course will be held at Europa Media’s premises, in Graphisoft Park, Budapest. This choice was made with a clear intention: first of all, participants will be better followed by our trainers, who are actual project managers and coordinators and will offer practical examples from real-life scenarios and projects; secondly, the Park is a real innovation and technology hub, offering networking opportunities with employees of prestigious companies – Microsoft, SAP, Samsung and Canon to name a few.

The programme will be implemented through our usual learning-by-doing approach, which consists of a number of applied teaching methodologies, including presentations, practical workshops, on-the-job exercises and personal consultations.

The training will cover issues in Project Management and Technical Reporting (Grant Agreement negotiations, Getting started with your project, Efficient project management systems in practice, Consortium Agreement, IPR issues in practice, Technical reporting, Technical reviews) and in Financial Management and Reporting (Financial rules of FP7 and Horizon 2020 projects, Eligible and non-eligible costs, cost statements, Different calculation methods of Personnel costs, Allocation of Travel costs, Equipment, Other costs, and Overheads, Subcontracting and third parties, Uploading of reports to the Participants portal).

Three different workshops will be conducted:

1. Financial Reporting: Putting together and submitting a financial statement working on dummy invoices, salary slips and time-sheets;

2. Technical and Legal Management: working on case studies and real-life scenarios to experience what can go wrong during a project;

3. EC Audits: you will walk in the EC auditors’ shoes for a day and experience “the other side”.

This new training programme has been designed to support all those who are competitively participating or intend to participate in FP7 and/or Horizon 2020 projects and want to master technical and financial project management skills.

Further information and registration is available at:

Mixing work and leisure Down Under – Participating the World Geothermal Congress in Melbourne

The World Geothermal Congress, the largest event for geothermal professionals, organised in every 5 years had been hosted this year in Melbourne, Australia. The 5 days conference revealed the latest tendencies, achievements and future trends of all aspects of geothermal energy, including power generation, geology, resource assessment, direct use, environmental and societal aspects, reservoir engineering and enhanced geothermal systems among many others. This very recent line-up of the results in the various fields of geothermal energy brought forward not only the success stories of the past years but also exposed those aspects that have been struggling either due to financial, technological or scientific/conceptual shortcomings.

There is a general consensus about the economics of deep geothermal drilling. Until the very same and very expensive drilling technology is used to create multi-km wells but at the end it is not oil or gas that is pumped but hot water it cannot be hoped that deep geothermal projects will take the share from the energy mix in the near future that would represent its global potential.

During the networking events I had the chance to discuss with a number of internationally acknowledged experts of geothermal energy and what I have learned from them did not really paint a bright picture about the future prospects of this field. There are a number of factors that jointly contribute to the rather grim situation deep geothermal energy is at right now. One of the most prominent of them was/is the global financial crisis which has caused a massive reduction in availability of capital, especially for high risk ventures such as deep geothermal exploration and development.

It tells a lot that the hosting country, Australia when earned the right to host this event in 2010 and up until the very recent few years used to be one of the best places to be if you wanted to invest your money in significant deep geothermal projects and 10+ private companies were dealing with such ventures, today there isn’t a single company that has solely geothermal in its portfolio and new geothermal ventures are at an all-time low. There was another interesting comparison drawn between this year’s WGC event and the latest one which took place in Bali, Indonesia.

Since I did not have the privilege to participate that conference I can rely only on a number of accounts from the members of my newly acquired professional network who did participate. They said that the decline of geothermal on a global scale reflects very well in the interest towards this years’ occasion.

Even though in 2010 a volcano in Iceland, which was previously unheard of and which name still remains equal-to-impossible to remember (Eyjafjallajökull) filled most of Europe’s airspace with a massive cloud of fine ash, grounding air-traffic for days and disabling most of the registered European delegates of the WGC 2010 to reach their destination in Bali, the total number of participants at that event were told to be roughly twice as many as the 1300+ delegates attending this year’s congress. In addition I was briefed that the concurrent exhibition area in 2015, where the most important industry players of the geothermal field registered themselves to offer their various solutions and to secure new contracts was a mere shadow of the busy and teaming fair ground of its 2010 counterpart.

Despite there is a tremendous amount of new knowledge is being generated every year on a wide array of disciplines in relation to a number of key issues linked to deep geothermal energy the two major challenges are still to be come over without which deep geothermal energy cannot be hoped to become a global player. One of them is advanced drilling technologies and brand new concepts to significantly reduce drilling costs when targeting multi km deep water! bearing reservoirs. The other one is unlocking the technological challenges of delivering enhanced geothermal systems within the frame of routine and standard operations.

The next world geothermal congress in 2020 will be hosted by Iceland, which is the ultimate destination for everyone in the geothermal business. Even though there is still a long way to go till then the global geothermal community have to work even harder to bring forward those novel ideas that will help this energy source to take its rightfully earned place as the most reliable and available among all the renewables.

Fortunately the tight schedule of the congress did not prevent us from doing a bit of must-see tourism in and out Melbourne.

The city offers a lot to visit. The botanical garden has been one of the largest parks of Melbourne since its foundation in the mid-1800s; Albert Park gives you the opportunity to jog on an active Formula-1 track, and you also get the chance to visit the cottage where Captain James Cook had been brought up, and which was transported to Australia in the 1930s brick by brick, to be re-assembled in the Fitzroy Gardens. The list could go on and on and on…

The crown jewel of these small trips was the full-day excursion to the Twelve Apostles along the Great Oceanic Way, supposedly one of the best, and most scenic coastal routes in the world. Estimations say that there are 1.6 million visitors every year who seek to witness the grandeur of these magnificent rock formations, which is about 4000 tourists each and every day all year round. We tried to improve our chances for a more personalised trip and went for the mini-van trip with only 9 other people rather than enrolling to one of the commercial size coaches with 50 people aboard. Our guide did a great job explaining the history of the area, the geology of the Twelve Apostles and gave us a whole bunch of random but quite interesting stories and facts that are tied to the great Oceanic Way. For example: did you know that the rock formations were initially called the “sow and the piglets” and just got renamed in the mid 20th century to the more catchy and attracting Twelve Apostles. Or despite the name there are only 9 rock formations that still stand.

 

If your bucket list hasn’t included the Great Oceanic Way and the Twelve Apostles till now, grab a pen and add it to your list because it is really an experience of a lifetime. No matter how many pictures or documentaries you have seen about it, experiencing them in person is the real deal.

By: Istvan Pari