Nominations for the European Inventor Award 2010

Published: 8 March 2010 y., Monday

Rašymas
The nominees for the European Inventor Award 2010 include inventors of pioneering innovations in a wide range of fields, from the conservation of drinking water to the synthesis of football-shaped carbon molecules or "fullerenes", and from cancer treatments to digital data encryption. Other nominees are the Wii console, the civilian use of GPS, mobile use of fuel cells, "green" plastic and internet access straight from a wall socket. The award honours individual inventors, or teams of inventors, who, through their pioneering work, respond to the challenges of our time, thereby contributing to progress and prosperity. The four winners will be chosen by a high-ranking international jury and will be presented with their prizes by EPO President Alison Brimelow in Madrid on 28 April 2010.

Vice-President Antonio Tajani, Commissioner for Industry and Entrepreneurship, said: "The nominees underline the richness of the human imagination. Their inventions mean a lot for mankind and for shaping our modern world; yet their innovatory spirit also helps to create jobs in Europe and strengthen its competitiveness. The Europe 2020 strategy, just adopted by the European Commission, indeed stresses the need for a more innovative Europe. In this light I hope these inventors encourage others to follow their paths."

European Patent Office President Alison Brimelow said: "The core task of the patent system is to support innovation through the effective protection of inventions. We must seek to maintain and strengthen the performance of the system to ensure the patent-based diffusion of pioneering technologies into the future".

Twelve candidates from nine countries are competing this year. The prize, which is purely symbolic and involves no material recompense, is awarded in four categories: Lifetime achievement, Industry, SMEs/research and Non-European countries. In addition to countries with a tradition of innovation such as France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and the United States of America, this year’s contest also sees candidates from Belgium, Canada, Denmark and Spain.

Nominations for the European Inventor Award can be made by the inventors themselves or put forward by patent examiners from the national patent offices and the EPO. A panel of EPO experts checks all proposals received to ensure they satisfy all criteria with respect to form and content (link) before they are submitted to the jury. Previous winners include Adolf Goetzberger, the father of solar-power generation (2009), Peter Grünberg, Nobel Laureate in Physics (2006), AIDS researcher Erik De Clercq (2008) and Federico Faggin, the inventor of the microprocessor (2006).

The shortlist for the European Inventor Award 2010:

Industry

Inventor: Hermann Grether, Christoph Weis (DE):

Invention: The Perlator, a jet regulator for water taps, provides an effective means of saving precious drinking water.

Inventor: Albert Markendorf, Dr Raimund Loser (CH)

Invention: Three-dimensional laser- controlled measuring system for quality control in the automotive and aerospace industry with maximum-precision metrology.

Inventor: Benedetto Vigna (IT)

Invention: Three-dimensional motion sensor for use in wireless controllers like the motion control sensor of the Nintendo Wii.

SMEs/research

Inventor: Jürgen Pfizer, Helmut Nägele (DE)

Invention: Arboform, the " green" alternative to plastic; this natural polymer is currently used around the world in the manufacture of car parts, children’s toys, furniture and much more.

Inventor: Albert Ge let, Jean-Yves Chapelon, Dominique Cathignol, Emmanuel Blanc (FR)

Invention: Ultrasound treatment is now an integral part of a highly effective device for fighting prostate cancer.

Inventor: Jorge Blasco (ES)

Invention: Data transmission over power lines for fast internet access straight from the wall socket.

Lifetime achievement

Inventor: Peter Landrock (DK)

Lifetime achievement: Many of the encryption methods used today for the digital transmission of confidential data are based on Landrock’s pioneering work.

Inventor: Wolfgang Krätschmer (DE)

Lifetime achievement: Krätschmer’s procedure for synthesising C60 carbon

molecules (fullerenes) helps to develop new lubricants and fuels, electronic
superconductors and polymers designed for data storage.

Inventor: Desiré Collen (BE)

Lifetime achievement: Collen’s findings in the field of blood clots broke new ground in medication for strokes and heart attacks.

Non-European countries

Inventor: Sanjai Kohli and his team (US)

Invention: Thanks to their revolutionary receiver-chip design, GPS has successfully found its way onto the consumer market.

Inventor: Danny G. Epp, Ben Wiens (CA)

Invention: Hydrogen fuel cells for many mobile applications, utilised today in many buses around the world.

Inventor: Napoleone Ferrara and his team (US)

Invention: The cancer drug Avastin inhibits the growth of cancer cells and is the basis for a gentler, focused therapy.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

UK rocketman set for take off

A British airline pilot says he hopes to become the world's first rocketman by the end of the year. more »

Charting the future for Europe’s far-flung regions

Development plans to include exploiting local potential for environmental research and pharmaceuticals. more »

Scientists scent success

Sweet smell of success for researchers who've discovered how to enhance flower scent ten fold. more »

French writer wins Nobel prize

French writer Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio wins the 2008 Nobel prize for literature. more »

Nobel Prize for Chemistry awarded

Two Americans and a Japanese scientist have won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their research on a glowing green protein found in jellyfish. more »

AIDS and cancer pioneers win Nobel

Two French scientists who discovered the AIDS virus and a German who found the virus that causes cervical cancer are awarded the 2008 Nobel prize for medicine or physiology. more »

Phosphor Test Station

For rare earth and nano phosphors, luminescent materials for white LEDs, displays, general lighting and scintillator applications, McPherson delivers spectral test stations for deep ultraviolet (UV) excited, real-time measurements. more »

International seminar dedicated to the problem of chemical weapons dumped at sea started in Vilnius

On 30 September in Vilnius, a seminar, dedicated to the perspectives of international cooperation on solving the problem of chemical weapons dumped at sea, started. more »

8th rotation of PRT prepare for mission in Afghanistan

First stage of PRT-8 preparation for deployment to Afghanistan – refreshment of basic individual combat skills more »

Hi-tech boost for Germany's sluggish economy

Germany's government is to spend six billion euros developing the country's hi-tech industries. The initiative will concentrate on research and development, particularly regarding high speed internet access, or "Broadband", as it is known. more »