The SPARTA project is one of the laureates of the SU-ICT-03-2018 call, tasked with helping the EU scale up its investments in cybersecurity, with the specific goal of developing innovative technologies and skills to support the European industry, and contribute to the objective of European strategic autonomy. In doing so, these networks would support through first-hand experiences the legislative and political processes that frame discussion around the EU Proposed Regulation 2018/0328.
SPARTA chose to directly and reflexively experiment with governance choices, implementing them across its internal scientific, technical, and support actions. The SPARTA proposal stated an ambitious demonstration objective:
The project’s consortium is committed to demonstrate that a research governance based on expertise, coopetition, and diversity can out-innovate Europe’s competition.
To this aim, SPARTA aims to demonstrate the setup and assessment of the European Cybersecurity Competence Network. SPARTA is equipped with three powerful instruments: a diligent roadmap committee, mission-oriented research programs, and a partnership instrument. It is further supported by key enablers: a governance based on leadership and diversity, as well as transversal activities spanning training and awareness, sustainable exploitation, certification and dissemination and communication.
SPARTA is developing an ambitious research and innovation roadmap to leverage Europe’s strengths and opportunities, across multiple disciplines, maturity levels, and geographical locations.
In collaboration with the Roadmap, SPARTA launches four Programs that will validate the operation of the network and to perform ground-breaking advances in key areas for Europe’s strategic autonomy (T-SHARK in supervision, CAPE in evaluation, HAII-T in digital infrastructures, and SAFAIR in AI)
SPARTA is supported by an Associates and Friends Council aiming to establish unparalleled traction with European, national, and regional ecosystems, relaying concrete requirements, disruptive ideas, and novel results. SPARTA builds on this council and on new mechanisms to step up cybersecurity outreach, harmonize training curricula, and significantly strengthen European capacities.