The EPIC initiative was created in response to an EU call for projects to support dialogues between the EU/EC and its strategic partner countries to foster cooperation in ICT R&D. The aim of the call was to organise events, support policy dialogue meetings, strengthen cooperative research links and reinforce industrial collaboration as well as coordination with other EU level initiatives.
EPIC, therefore, aimed to improve the research and innovation collaboration between the EU and its strategic partner countries Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore in the area of information and communication technologies. It targeted both the strategic, more policy-oriented level and the direct cooperation of researchers/innovators in academia and industry. The aim was to exploit mutually beneficial opportunities and to prepare new grounds for future collaborations.
EPIC aimed to help overcome the current lack of dedicated cooperation support actions and improve the low visibility of Europe’s ICT RDI capabilities in the target countries. The project followed a topical methodology: the focus was on specific areas of ICT research of high strategic importance. Topics included artificial intelligence, Internet of Things (IoT) including wearables, cybersecurity, ICT in transport, digital economy, next generation internet and spatial intelligence.
The specific objectives of the project were to:
• Identify priority research topics for collaboration and identify synergies between the Digital Single Market and 3rd countries/regions' ICT strategies
• Organise and support events targeting research, industry, and policy makers and an event demonstrating impact and highlighting recommendations for future cooperation
• Identify common policy opportunities and the potential for joint activities
• Create a series of policy briefs to foster stronger cooperation building on researcher exchanges and joint projects for lasting cooperation
• Deliver a handbook for EU researchers on opportunities in Australia, New Zealand and Singapore and information material to disseminate the objectives and results of the project among relevant stakeholders
EPIC was able to create and maintain a sustained dialogue between EU researchers and their peers in Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore. These conversations focused on priority topics which EPIC had identified at project onset and refined during project lifetime. EPIC contributed to these topics with expert discussions about novel research directions (e.g. privacy preserving technologies, AI for security). Often, these research topics and novel directions were closely linked with the needs of research and other policy makers who are facing similar challenges in all participating regions. EPIC also supported a series of expert trips to identify the concrete collaboration potential in narrower fields of research. From a more practical output and impact perspective, EPIC provided information and links about research programmes, high-quality groups and policy directions relevant for Europeans wishing to collaborate with the target countries. Such information was provided in the EPIC handbook, in online articles, personal communication and in response to requests for information. Finally, EPIC created networks of ICT researchers and research policy makers using the webpage and social media such as Twitter, YouTube and LinkedIn. EPIC event videos, articles, newsletters and short updates created a densely knit information network that was frequently assessed and referenced by the new EPIC community.