BETA

41 Amendments of Henna VIRKKUNEN related to 2018/0225(COD)

Amendment 81 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 2 – point 2.2 – point 2.2.2 – paragraph 1
Cultural heritage is the fabric of our lives, meaningful to communities, groups and societies, giving a sense of belonging. It is the bridge between the past and the future of our societies. It is a driving force of local economies and a powerful source of inspiration for creative and cultural industries as well as the tourism sector. Accessing, conserving, safeguarding and restoring, interpreting and harnessing the full potential of our cultural heritage are crucial challenges now and for future generations. Cultural heritage is the major input and inspiration for the arts, traditional craftsmanship, the cultural, entrepreneurial and creative sectors that are drivers of sustainable economic growth, new job creation and external trade.
2018/09/18
Committee: TRAN
Amendment 84 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 2 – point 2.2 – point 2.2.2 – paragraph 2 – indent 3
– Connect cultural heritage with emerging creative sectors as well as tourism;
2018/09/18
Committee: TRAN
Amendment 99 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 3 – point 3.2 – point 3.2.5 – paragraph 2 – indent 2
– Next Generation Internet applications and services for consumers, industry and society building on trust, interoperability, better user control of data, transparent language access, new multi modal interaction concepts, inclusive and highly personalised access to objects, information and content, including immersive and trustworthy media, social media and social networking, e-commerce;
2018/09/18
Committee: TRAN
Amendment 146 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.2 – point 4.2.8 – paragraph 2 – indent 4 a (new)
– Smart shipping solutions for safer, more efficient waterborne operations.
2018/09/18
Committee: TRAN
Amendment 238 #
Proposal for a decision
Recital 5
(5) Reflecting the importance of tackling climate change in line with the Union's commitments to implement the Paris Agreement and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, this Specific Programme will contribute to mainstream climate actions and to the achievement of an overall target of 25 % of the EU budget expenditures supporting climate objectives. Actions under this Specific Programme are expected to contribute at least 35% of the overall financial envelope of the Specific Programme to climate objectives. Relevant actions will be identified during the Specific Programme's preparation and implementation, and reassessed in the context of the relevant evaluations and review processes.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 249 #
Proposal for a decision
Recital 6
(6) The Specific Programme's actions should be used to address market failures or sub-optimal investment situations, in a proportionate manner,boost investments without duplicating or crowding out private financing and have a clear European added value.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 271 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 2 – paragraph 2 – point a
(a) supporting science, research and innovations, reinforcing and spreading excellence;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 350 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 2 – paragraph 2 – point o
(o) stimulating the creation and scale- up of innovative companies, in particular start-ups and SMEs;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 418 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 4 – paragraph 1
1. In accordance with Article 9(1)of Regulation … FP/RfP Regulation, the financial envelope for the implementation of the Specific Programme for the period 2021 to 2027 shall be EUR 94 100131 749 000 000 in current prices.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 446 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 5 – paragraph 1 – point c
(c) selection of expert evaluators, briefing of expert evaluators and evaluation criteria and their weighting, avoid conflict of interest of expert evaluators;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 448 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 5 – paragraph 1 – point e a (new)
(e a) clear and measurable mission targets and outcome;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 449 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 5 – paragraph 1 – point e b (new)
(e b) evaluation of business potential of the mission;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 499 #
Proposal for a decision
Article 9 – paragraph 4 a (new)
4 a. The Commission shall ensure close cooperation between EIT KICs the wider Framework Programme.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 766 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 1 – point 1.1 – paragraph 4 a (new)
Digital health solutions has created many opportunities to solve the problems of care services and to address the other emerging issues of ageing society. Digital devices and software have been developed to diagnose and treat illness and chronic disease, facilitate the self-management of chronic diseases and help people monitor their bodily functions and activities. Digital technologies are increasingly used in medical training and education and for patients and other healthcare consumers to access, share and create health information.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 782 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 1 – point 1.2 – point 1.2.1 – paragraph 1 – subparagraph 1 (new)
The Commission shall support a necessity for improving patient adherence model which is based on the most stable findings from meta-analyses and large-scale empirical studies, reflects the realities of medical practice and offers recommendations for assessing and enhancing patient adherence, particularly in chronic disease management. The adherence model is a key modern factor for measuring the efficiency and effectiveness of the healthcare systems
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 812 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 1 – point 1.2 – point 1.2.2 – paragraph 1 a (new)
Healthcare professionals and a patient- centric imperative have to be at the centre of all digital innovation, which contains: full implementation of all possible new technologies, well designed physicians preparation, improved organisational systems using new digital instruments, openness of all partners of healthcare for innovative solutions.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 867 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 1 – point 1.2 – point 1.2.5 – paragraph 1
Health technologies and tools are vital for public health and contributed to a large extent to the important improvements achieved in the quality of life, health and care of people, in the EU. It is thus a key strategic challenge to design, develop, deliver and implement suitable, trustable, safe, and cost-effective tools and technologies for health and care, taking due account of the needs of people with disabilities and the aging society. These include artificial intelligence, big data, quantum technology, cloud and other digital technologies, offering significant improvements over existing ones, as well as stimulating a competitive and sustainable health-related industry that creates high-value jobs. The European health-related industry is one of the critical economic sectors in the EU, accounting for 3% of GDP and 1.5 million employees.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 889 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 1 – point 1.2 – point 1.2.6 – paragraph 1
Health systems are a key asset of the EU social systems, accounting for 24 million employees in the health and social work sector in 2017. It is a main priority to render health systems accessible, cost- effective, resilient, sustainable and trusted as well as to reduce inequalities, including by unleashing the potential of data-driven and digital innovation for better health and person-centred care building on open European data infrastructures. This will advance the digital transformation of health and care. The future infrastructure should rely on secure storages, 5G deployment, conditions for IoT development, processing healthcare Big Data in High Performance Computing Centres.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 902 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 1 – point 1.2 – point 1.2.6 – paragraph 2 – indent 6
– Improving timely health information and use of health data, including electronic health records, with due attention to security, trust, privacy, interoperability, standards, comparability and integrity;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1107 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 3 – point 3.1 – paragraph 10
Bringing together activities on digital, key enabling and space technologies, as well as a sustainable supply of raw materials, will allow for a more systemic approach, and a faster and more profound digital and industrial transformation. It will ensure that research and innovation in these areas feed into, and contribute to the implementation of, the EU’s policies for industry, digitisation, environment, energy and climate, mobility, circular economy, raw and advanced materials and space.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1259 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 3 – point 3.2 – point 3.2.8 – paragraph 3 – indent 3
– Electrification and use of unconventional or renewables-based energy sources within industrial plants, and energy and resource exchanges between industrial plants (for instance via industrial symbiosis);
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1295 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.1 – paragraph 2
To meet the objectives of the Paris Agreement the EU will need to transition to low-carbon, resource-efficient and resilient economies and societies. This will be based on profound changes in technology and services, to the ways in which businesses and consumers behave, as well as involving new forms of governance. Limiting the increase of global average temperature to well below 2°C, and pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C, requires rapid progress in decarbonising the energy system and substantially reducing greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions from the transport sector17 . Currently, the transport sector represents almost a quarter of Union's GHG emissions. Transport sector is of key importance for reducing GHG emissions and decarbonising the Union economy. It will also need new impetus to accelerate the pace of developing next- generation breakthroughs as well as demonstrating and deploying innovative technologies and solutions, using also the opportunities provided by digital, automatisation and space technologies. This will be pursued through an integrated approach encompassing decarbonisation, resource efficiency, reduction of air pollution, access to raw materials and circular economy. _________________ 17 Substantial decarbonisation of other sectors is addressed in other areas of the Horizon Europe Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness pillar.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1313 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.1 – paragraph 7
The issues faced by the transport and energy sectors go however beyond the need for emission reduction. There are several challenges to be tackled, including the increasing penetration of digital, automated and space-based technologies, changes in user behaviour and mobility patterns, new market entrants and disruptive business models, globalisation, increasing international competition and an older, more urban and increasingly diverse, population.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1317 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.1 – paragraph 9
Finding new ways to accelerate the deployment of clean technologies and solutions for the decarbonisation of the European economy requires also increased demand for innovation. This can be stimulated through the empowerment of citizens as well as socio-economic and public sector innovation and will lead to approaches broader than technology-driven innovation. Socio-economic research covering inter alia user needs and patterns, foresight activities, environmental, economic, social and behavioural aspects, business cases and models and pre- normative research for standard setting, will also facilitate actions fostering regulatory, financing and social innovation, skills, as well as engagement and empowerment of market players and consumers. In the transport sector, the role of applied research and trials aiming at market deployment of innovations is crucial.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1322 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.1 – paragraph 10
Activities under this Cluster contribute in particular to the goals of the Energy Union, as well as to those of the Digital Single Market, the Jobs, Growth and Investment agenda, the strengthening of the EU as a global actor, the new EU Industrial Policy Strategy, the Circular Economy, the Raw Materials Initiative, the Security Union and the Urban Agenda, as well as the Common Agricultural Policy of the EU as well as EU legal provisions to reduce noise and air pollution and help Member States to achieve the national emission reduction targets.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1359 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.2 – point 4.2.2 – paragraph 2 – indent 1
– Renewable energy technologies and solutions for power generation, hydrogen production, heating and cooling, sustainable transport fuels and intermediate carriers, at various scales and development stages, adapted to geographic conditions and markets, both within the EU and worldwide;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1478 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.2 – point 4.2.7 – paragraph 2 – indent 2
– Sustainable new fuels and new smart vehicles/vessels/aircraft for existing and future mobility patterns and supporting infrastructure; technologies and user-based solutions for interoperability and seamless services provision; quieter and more environmentally friendly aircraft (Clean Sky 2);
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1495 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.2 – point 4.2.8 – paragraph 2 – indent 4 a (new)
- Smart shipping solutions for safer, more efficient waterborne operations.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1497 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.2 – point 4.2.9 – paragraph 1
Massive, concentrated and decentralised storage solutions (comprising chemical, electrochemical, electrical, mechanical and thermal) for the energy system will increase efficiency, flexibility, technology independence and accessibility as well as the security of supply. Low-emission, decarbonised transport will require a growing share of electrical and/or other alternatively fuelled vehicles, with better- performing and cheaper, sustainably manufactured, recyclable and reusable batteries, as well as local provision of synthetic/renewable fuels such as hydrogen and innovative solutions for on-site storage.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1507 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 4 – point 4.2 – point 4.2.9 – paragraph 2 – indent 3
Low zero-carbon hydrogen includingStorage and related infrastructure of low carbon hydrogen and other substances and materials enabling the storage of energy including but not limited to the technology of fuel cells, and the EU value chain from design to end use across various applications.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1560 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.2 – paragraph 2 – indent 1
– The state and value of biodiversity, terrestrial and marineaquatic ecosystems, natural capital and ecosystem services;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1609 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – introductory part
5.2.4. Sea and Ocean, Oceans and Fresh waters
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1616 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – paragraph 1
Seas and, oceans' and fresh water' natural capital and ecosystem services offer significant socio- economic and welfare benefits. This potential is at risk because of the severe pressure from human and natural stressors such as pollution, overfishing, climate change, sea-level rise and extreme weather events. To prevent seas and ocean, oceans and fresh waters from reaching a point of no return, it is necessary to strengthen our knowledge and understanding in order to sustainably manage, protect and restore marine and coastal ecosystems and prevent marine pollution, in a context of an improved and responsible ocean governance framework. This will also include research to sustainably unlock the vast and unexploited economic potential of seas and ocean, oceans and fresh waters aiming at producing more food without increasing pressures on them, and also contribute to alleviate pressure on land, freshwater and ocean resources. There is a need for partnering approaches, including sea basin and macro-regional strategies, extending beyond the EU (e.g. in the Mediterranean, the Baltic, the Black Sea, the Atlantic, the Caribbean Sea and in the Indian Ocean); and for contributing to International Ocean Governance commitments, initiatives like the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and commitments linked to the conservation of marineaquatic biological diversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1618 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – paragraph 2 – indent 1
– Sustainable sea and ocean, ocean and fresh water farming, fisheries and mariaquatic culture for food, including aquatic environments as alternative sources of protein with increased food security, food sovereignty and climate resilience;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1625 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – paragraph 2 – indent 2
– Strengthened resilience of marineaquatic ecosystems thereby ensuring seas and ocean, oceans and fresh water health, combating and mitigating the effects of natural and human pressures like pollution and plastics, eutrophication, acidification, seas and oceans warming, sea level rise, considering the intersection between land and seaaquatic environment and fostering a circular approach;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1631 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – paragraph 2 – indent 6
– Blue value-chains, the multiple-use of marineaquatic space and growth of the renewable energy sector from seas and ocean, oceans and fresh waters, including sustainable micro- and macro- algae; modern aquatic production systems on land offering tools to environmentally neutral biomass production;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1636 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – paragraph 2 – indent 7
– Nature-based solutions based on marineaquatic and coastal ecosystem dynamics, biodiversity and multiple ecosystem services, which will enable systemic approaches to sustainably use the resources of seas and oceans,, oceans and fresh waters contribute to environmental protection, coastal management, and adaptation to climate change;
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1641 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.4 – paragraph 2 – indent 9
– Better understanding of the role of oceans and other aquatic environments for climate change mitigation and adaptation.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1644 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.5 – paragraph 1
The combined effects of population growth, resource scarcity and overexploitation, environmental degradation, climate change and migration create unprecedented challenges which require food system transformation (FOOD 2030).20 Current food production and consumption are largely unsustainable while we are confronted with the double burden of malnutrition, characterised by the coexistence of undernutrition and obesity. Future food systems need to deliver sufficient safe, healthy and quality food for all, underpinned by resource efficiency, sustainability (including the reduction of GHG emissions, pollution and waste production), linking land and seaaquatic environments, reducing food waste, enhancing food production from the seas and oceanaquatic environments and encompassing the entire 'food value chain' from producers to consumers – and back again. This needs to go hand in hand with development of the food safety system of the future and the design, development and delivery of tools, technologies and digital solutions that provide significant benefits for consumers and improve the competitiveness and sustainability of the food value chain. Furthermore, there is a need to foster behavioural changes in food consumption and production patterns as well as to engage primary producers, industry (including SMEs), retailers, food service sectors, consumers, and public services. _________________ 20 SWD(2016) 319 final: European Research and Innovation for Food and Nutrition Security
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1677 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part II – point 5 – point 5.2 – point 5.2.6 – paragraph 2 – indent 7 a (new)
- Design-driven solid wood products (interior, wood construction, hybrid materials) being efficient carbon sinks should be developed.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE
Amendment 1850 #
Proposal for a decision
Annex I – part III – point 1 – point 1.1 – point 1.1.3 – paragraph 1 – indent 3
– EIC Challenges, i.e. inducement prizes, to help develop novel solutions to global challenges, bring in new actors and develop new communities. EIC recognition prizes will include iCapital, the EU Challenge Prize, the Social Innovation Inducement Prize, and the Women Innovators' Prize.29 The design of its prizes will be linked to EIC to other parts of the Framework programme, including missions and other funding bodies. Opportunities for cooperation with organisations (such as enterprises, universities, research organisations, business accelerators, charities and foundations) will be explored. _________________ 29 The EIC prizes will take over the management of prizes launched under Horizon 2020 and provide for the design and implementation of new inducement prizes and recognition awards.
2018/09/12
Committee: ITRE