Periodic Reporting for period 1 - Water Smart Connect (Water Smart Connect)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2024-06-01 do 2025-06-30
The first phase objectives are:
• Mapping the key challenges and capabilities per regional innovation ecosystem (focus on cross-sectoral challenges, gaps and capabilities)
• Defining the priority areas for interregional collaboration opportunities in the context of water smart society between regional innovation ecosystems
• Identifying financing and ecosystem support initiatives, regionally, nationally and EU
Based on the outcomes of the first phase of the project, the subsequent objectives are to:
• Develop the cross regional blueprint for addressing the identified societal water challenges in preparation of the cross-regional action plans
• Identify the required stakeholders to deliver the cross-regional action plans and assign roles and responsibilities
• Define joint multi-annual programmes and actions plan in the short, medium and long term.
• Ensure the long-term sustainability of collaboration between regional innovation ecosystems through effective stakeholder commitment.
• Facilitate the implementation of concrete actions by organising the first interregional networking event
• Actively disseminate an online platform for connecting innovation stakeholders in order to ease implementation of the planned actions. The specific objective of this platform is to: (1) Connect innovators with public and private buyers; (2) Provide innovators with visibility to potential investors and partners; (3) Connect startups and SMEs with universities and research & technology organizations (RTOs).
In WP2, regional partners analysed their water innovation ecosystems using data, interviews, and Entrepreneurial Discovery Workshops (EDWs). Each region reassessed its Smart Specialisation Strategy (S3) priorities, identifying Transformative Activities (TAs) and validating strengths and challenges with stakeholders. Using the S3 Synergy Diamond, regions pinpointed high-potential niches for collaboration. Results were compiled into a Smart Water Regional Ecosystems report, providing the analytical foundation for subsequent action planning.
WP3 translated this analysis into cross-regional collaboration by identifying 57 relevant funding instruments (regional, national, and EU) and six common innovation themes: water reuse and circularity, water quality, climate adaptation, digitalisation, food-water nexus, and cross-sectoral governance. Two cross-regional EDWs (cEDWs) involving over 50 participants refined these priorities and linked them with concrete EU funding calls.
WP4 produced a Joint Action Plan (2025–2028), co-developed by the seven regions, outlining 23 actions across three priority areas: pollution prevention and water quality, climate adaptation, and food-water nexus. The plan includes an implementation roadmap and strategic vision for long-term cooperation, formalised through signed Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) among partners.
WP5 supported dissemination within the water innovation ecosystem through digital collaboration tools and visual materials, ensuring that the project’s results—particularly the joint action plan—can continue guiding regional and European water innovation beyond the project’s lifetime.
The project identified 69 TAs and six thematic areas—water reuse and circularity, water quality, climate adaptation, digitalisation, food-water nexus, and governance—forming the scientific and strategic foundation for a joint cross-regional action plan. The plan, developed through co-creation with over 200 stakeholders, defines 23 actions that align with the European Water Resilience Strategy (EWRS) objectives: restoring the water cycle, building a water-smart economy, and ensuring access to clean water.
A key breakthrough is the structured integration of S3-based foresight tools (Synergy Diamond) and participatory methods (EDWs, cEDWs) into water innovation governance, establishing a replicable framework for other EU sectors. The approach advances ecosystem-level coordination beyond individual projects, bridging regional RIS frameworks and EU policy implementation.
Maintaining the three working groups (Water-Food Nexus, Water Quality, Climate Adaptation) is essential to continue project impact. Strengthening access to dedicated water-related funding, promoting internationalisation through networks such as Water4All and ECCP, and ensuring policy alignment with EWRS and Green Deal objectives are critical next steps.
Overall, Water Smart Connect produced a validated and improved model for collaborative regional innovation governance, a comprehensive map of EU water-smart capacities, and a joint action plan that lays the foundation for future R&I, investment, and policy coordination across Europe.