Innovation 2030

On 18 April 2013, the President of the French Republic launched the Innovation 2030 Commission, chaired by Anne Lauvergeon and under the aegis of the Minister for Industrial Renewal and the Minister Delegate with responsibility for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, Innovation and the Digital Economy.

In an effort to confront the major challenges of the world of 2030, the Commission singled out a select number of key opportunities with very significant implications for the French economy.

Following these efforts, the Commission identified seven goals based on pressing social concerns. These goals can be seen as seven critical pillars to put France on the road to long-term prosperity and employment. Company projects submitted to the Worldwide Innovation Challenge must correspond to one of the following seven goals:

1. Energy storage
Innovation projects dealing with energy storage, whether intermittent or not.

2. Recycling of metals
Projects offering viable, effective recycling of metals.

3. Development of marine resources
Projects for developing underwater metal resources. Projects offering desalination solutions that are less costly and/or less energy-intensive.

4. Plant proteins and plant chemistry
Projects for developing plant protein-based food products. Plant chemistry projects aimed at developing new materials.

5. Personalised medicine
Projects involving targeted therapeutic interventions based, for example, on genomics, medical devices and/or high-resolution imagery.

6. The silver economy - innovation in the service of longevity
Projects that address the loss of autonomy in older individuals connected with robotics and healthcare-related domotics.

7. Big Data
Projects involving the better use of data, as well as the definition and promotion of new uses and analytical models.

This is why the French government is launching a Worldwide Innovation Challenge. The goal is to foster talent and bring out future champions of the French economy. It will accomplish this by identifying and providing support for the growth of both French and foreign entrepreneurs whose innovation projects have significant implications for the French economy.

This Challenge will encourage the talents of today in order to create the collective wealth of tomorrow, whether these talents are in France or abroad. The French government thus hopes to attract the world's best talents, so they can complete their projects in France.

As part of the Invest for the Future Programme, and with support from the Public Investment Bank, the French government will allocate €300 million to co-finance innovative projects that comply with the seven goals defined by the Commission.

With this Challenge, the French government is introducing a genuinely forward-looking policy resolutely committed to supporting creators, innovators and risk-takers.