Thierry Van der Pyl is the new Director of ‘Excellence in Science’ at
the European Commission, and with the plans for the next funding framework
Horizon2020 for 2014 to 2020 still in the works, he is someone who can command a lot of attention from
a room full of project leaders. Van der Pyl was at the e-Infrastructure
Reflection Group meeting in Amsterdam to give the policy maker view point. “Convincing
politicians means trying to get some budget,” said Thierry, an uncertain process
when the EU budget as a whole is yet to be agreed for 2014.
The free and fast circulation of knowledge is a strategic
challenge for the EU’s Research and Innovation Programme. They have seen
success in other fields for crowd sourcing and crowd funding initiatives and the Commission
feels these are also relevant for research. “Any public money going to research
has the supervision of the tax payers,” said Van der Pyl. “We need to clearly
show the benefits for citizens.”
Horizon2020 will put a strong emphasis on societal
challenges, innovation and excellence in science. All publications coming out
of public projects should be open access and increasingly this should also
apply to data. Data is a foundation for innovation in Europe and industry should not
only have access to scientific data but be part of the discussions about it. The
citizen should also form part of this debate, to make the science more
transparent and more participatory.
Under Horizon2020, the EC will pilot bringing open access to
data in the same way that OpenAIRE brought open publishing for EC funded projects.
Under the pilots, the idea is that any innovation can happen and no exploitation is
prevented. The EC policy on infrastructures has to ask, and satisfactorily answer, three questions
– what is the value of the e-infrastructure for science, citizens and
innovation? This means that the right
people need to be part of the discussions from the start, not as an add on at
the end. Politicians must be
convinced of all three elements before they will be persuaded to invest public money.
Van der Pyl urged the e-infrastructure group to be part of
the discussions on wider data, for example for predicting weather, traffic modelling, improving medicine. Citizens
clearly need to be involved in these sorts of discussions too because this type of data
affects the citizen directly. At the moment, data infrastructures are the new kid on the block, compared to the well established networking and grid infrastructures such as GÉANT and the European Grid Infrastructure.
According to Van der Pyl, the e-infrastructure landscape in Europe at the moment is fragmented into parts, divided up into individual
institutions and selfish interests, siloed into different disciplines and split by national borders. And this is
all at a time when the quantity of data generated by research is expanding
exponentially. “All the stakeholders have to be on board, including the member
states, or you won’t be able to deliver,“ warns Van der Pyl. “We are not lacking
in challenges.” E-infrastructures cannot afford
to develop discipline by discipline, the EC wants them to find the commonalities that
serve the interests of all, and not be driven by the selfish interests of one
discipline.
The challenges are well known - facing the volume of data,
defining metadata, semantic searching, finding
data, connecting data, curation and preservation as well as supporting open
access with the associated change in culture for scientists. “We cannot do this
by legislation, there need to be incentives,” said Van de Pyl. There are some
complex interdependencies to resolve, between standardisation and flexibility,
hard and soft standards and control versus freedom.
The EC believes the Research Data Alliance will be helpful,
bringing together those who know best, and this is where the RDA needs to find
the balance between top down and bottom up approaches for taking forward data
infrastructures. iCORDI, a project funded by the EC has been instrumental in
bringing people in to the discussions, including from the US and Australia as well as Europe. “We
don’t want a club or a talk show,” says Van der Pyl. “We want to see tangible
results so that we can justify it to our lords and masters.” The most important
thing is to develop a common vision, not to work in silos, and to serve
scientists, citizens and industry.
When questioned about the rules preventing commercial usage
of the e-infrastructures, such as the GÉANT network and EGI, Thierry was clear that the
EC does not make a distinction between academic and private research in terms of
their usage of the infrastructure. Both groups have free access to use the resources, and in fact must use them for the e-infrastructures to satisfy the politicians. However, they must also demonstrate that they do not
distort commercial competition, which in practice is going to be difficult. National rules can
also cause problems for commercial providers who might want to provide resources as
part of a European research infrastructure, as well as to use them.
However, even though there might still be a way to go in getting all the legislation joined up, for Horizon2020, the writing is clearly on the
wall. “Horizon2020 is about inventing the future,” asserted Van der Pyl. “It is
there to support good science, growth and jobs. It is not science for
science’s sake.”
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