Skip to Content

Roinn Post, Fiontar agus Nuálaíochta

  Home ·  About Us ·  Site Map ·  Press ·  Publications ·  FAQs ·  Contacts ·  Advanced Search ·  Help

 Quick Links:  Employment ·  Enterprise ·  Consumer ·  International Workers ·  EU/International ·  Legislation ·  A-Z Index

Minister O’Keeffe announces ¤37m boost for industry-led research centres

Government links businesses and academics under six-year plan for ‘smart’ jobs - Minister

9 August 2010

More college researchers are set to team up with businesses to produce products that have market potential and can create high-quality jobs following a ¤37 million investment boost announced today [Monday] by the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Innovation, Batt O’Keeffe TD.

Minister O’Keeffe has set aside ¤37 million in extra funding over the next six years for investment in new research centres which will bring industry and academics together to work on market-focused innovative products.

The extra funding will boost investment in the Government’s Competence Centres Programme to ¤90 million over the next six years.

Collaborative company-led research will get under way in the research centres which will rise from six this year to 15 in 2016.

The programme is a joint initiative between the Government’s job creation agencies, Enterprise Ireland and IDA Ireland, aimed at building competitive advantage for industry and creating jobs.

Announcing the extra funding, Minister O’Keeffe said: ‘If we want to produce next generation high-tech products, we must get academic researchers working more closely with industry so that their expertise can be pooled and tailored for the market.

‘The competence centres are industry-led to carry out market-focused strategic research and development which can be translated into commercialisable high-tech products.

‘The Competence Centres Programme was developed to involve the industry more centrally in identifying publicly funded research.

‘Clusters of firms will work together to overcome common research challenges and drive opportunities for innovation, growth and jobs.

‘Firms that might ordinarily be competitors agree to share knowledge, risk and the rewards of pooling their research resources.

‘The groups of firms are funded to access the expertise of Ireland’s top universities and, at the same time, partner with small and medium-sized enterprises in developing new products and services.’

Minister O’Keeffe said the ¤37 million six-year investment boost will underpin the development of an environment that allows academics and business people to work together in producing market-friendly products that meet consumer demand and create jobs.

At the start of this year, five competence centres were added to the initial pilot centre, Food for Health.

These are the Centre in Nanotechnology (Tyndall Institute, UCC); Centre in Composite Materials (UL); Centre on IT Innovation (NUIM); Centre in-Bioenergy (NUIG); and Centre in Microelectronics (Tyndall Institute, UCC).

Each centre will receive up to ¤5 million over five years.

Enterprise Ireland and IDA Ireland are working to develop a number of other centres in the pipeline.

ENDS/ETI2267

Bernard Mallee, Press Adviser to Minister Batt O'Keeffe, Department of Enterprise, Trade and Innovation, on Tel: +353 1 631 3944, Mobile: +353 87 9173022, Email: bernard.mallee@deti.ie

Bookmark and Share

Last modified: 09/08/2010

Level Double-A conformance icon, W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 ,  Valid HTML 4.01 icon

Latest News RSS Feed