Tag: R&D

  • Gul: Turkey needs to work hard to meet 2023 goals

    Gul: Turkey needs to work hard to meet 2023 goals

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    Turkish President Abdullah Gul delivers a speech during the opening session of the 4th World Policy Conference in Vienna, Austria, 9 December 2011. Gul said recently that the country needs to expedite efforts in order to boost research and development investments. |EPA/HERBERT PFARRHOFER

    Speaking at the opening of the Turkish Innovation Conference in Istanbul, Turkish President Abdullah Gul said the country needs to expedite efforts in order to boost research and development (R&D) investments, to realise the goals in innovation stipulated in the government’s 2023 vision, Zaman reported.

    The conference being held for the first time this year was attended by some leading foreign and local figures from the technology industry. The President said that as part of long-term plans, Turkey has set a target to increase the share of R&D investments to 3% of GDP by 2023, the centennial of the founding of the Republic of Turkey. Last year the share of funds allocated from Turkey’s gross domestic product (GDP) to R&D investments went up to 0.85% from 0.4% in 2003.

    According to observers, the “psychological barrier” is the level of 1 % allocation from the GDP to R&D before growth in Turkey’s R&D would accelerate. In the medium run, Turkey is trying to earmark 2% of its GDP for R&D, as seen in many developed countries. Gul stressed that the country is bound to develop its innovation capacity, a major step before the country could minimize its current account deficit (CAD) and increase the competitive power of its entrepreneurs in global markets. He noted that Turkey is lagging behind a desired level of development in R&D but he was pleased to see involvement of more entrepreneurs, scientists and NGOs engaged in R&D studies in Turkey than in the past.

    via Gul: Turkey needs to work hard to meet 2023 goals | New Europe.

  • Licensing Executives Society International to Host a Delegation from Turkey at the Upcoming LESI Global Technology Impact Forum

    Licensing Executives Society International to Host a Delegation from Turkey at the Upcoming LESI Global Technology Impact Forum

    Licensing Executives Society International to Host a Delegation from Turkey at the Upcoming LESI Global Technology Impact Forum

    The Licensing Executives Society International, Inc. (LESI; www.LESI.org) announced today that it will host a delegation from Turkey, the ARTEV Platform that is funded by the Istanbul Development Agency at the upcoming LESI Global Technology Impact Forum (GTIF; www.GTIForum.org), taking place on January 23-25, 2012 in Geneva, Switzerland. This delegation will present on recent activities in Turkey to promote the management of intellectual property (IP) and technology transfer to further economic growth as well as next generation IP market development.

    Alexandria, VA (PRWEB) December 15, 2011

    The Licensing Executives Society International, Inc. (LESI; www.LESI.org) announced today that it will host a delegation from Turkey, the ARTEV Platform that is funded by the Istanbul Development Agency at the upcoming LESI Global Technology Impact Forum (GTIF; www.GTIForum.org), taking place on January 23-25, 2012 in Geneva, Switzerland. This delegation will present on recent activities in Turkey to promote the management of intellectual property (IP) and technology transfer to further economic growth as well as next generation IP market development.

    “GTIF has become a focal point of discussion for policy makers and practitioners seeking to develop a global marketplace for technology and the IP which protects it. We expect Turkey to be the first of many countries to present the local work being done to build an innovation economy,” explained LESI President James E. Malackowski. “Effectively, Turkey will present its case to the world that they are best prepared to be a regional trading center and focal point for IP driven growth.”

    The Turkish Delegation comprises nine individuals including the President of the Turkish Patent Institute, the General Secretary of TTGV (Technology Development Foundation Turkey), and the Research and Graduate Policies Director of Sabanci University

    “The LESI GTIF is a unique opportunity for Turkey to share with global IP business and NGO leadership the many opportunities that exist in our country,” explained Prof. Hasan Mandal, the Research and Graduate Policies Director of Sabanci University. “We are working to establish a cooperative platform and an infrastructure that supports and sustains knowledge and experience transfer, internal talent development and training of a qualified workforce that leads research, and technology-based institutions and companies to efficiently manage their intellectual assets, technology transfer activities and commercialization processes.”

    Platform Partners to the Delegation include a consortium of 5 universities (Sabanc?, Koç, Özye?in, Bo?aziçi, and Istanbul Technical) and LES Turkey. Their work is part of the Information-Based Economic Development Program announced by the Istanbul Development Agency for the 2010-2011 term. The Platform aims to generate means and process by which information and technologies are developed, managed, commercialized and maximized as way to foster further R&D and innovative activities thus effectively contribute transition into information based economy.

    LESI GTIF will include two days of discussion related to IP valuation standards, developing IP markets and the transfer of IP from developed to developing countries. GTIF is open to the public with registration found at www.GTIForum.org.

    via Licensing Executives Society International to Host a Delegation from Turkey at the Upcoming LESI Global Technology Impact Forum.

  • Turkey to become one of world’s leading solar energy hubs

    Turkey to become one of world’s leading solar energy hubs

    Having long had problems with harnessing its huge solar energy potential at a desired level, Turkey can become one of the leading countries in solar power in the world if new investments are put in place, observers argued at a symposium on renewable energy in Antalya on Sunday.

     

    Representatives of Turkish renewable energy firms gathered on Sunday in Antalya at a symposium to discuss future projects. Speaking at the meeting, Ahmet Lokurlu, the inventor of a solar cooling system and also CEO of SOLITEM GmbH, said improvement in solar energy production facilities would make Turkey one of the prominent players in this field. Underlining that Turkey is home to an ideal climate for solar energy investments, Lokurlu said new research and development (R&D) investments should be encouraged to this end.

     

    Making mention of an average of more than seven hours of sunshine a day and bordering the Aegean, Black and Mediterranean seas, Lokurlu said hotels should intensify efforts to switch to renewable energy. “Around 15 percent of hotels’ expenditures go to energy consumption … they could ease this burden with renewable energy, particularly solar power,” he explained.

    Lokurlu also introduced a new Güneş Park (Solar Park) project — Turkey’s first solar energy power techno-park — to be established in Antalya. While its demand for electricity is increasing steadily, Turkey obtains more than half of all its electricity needs from natural gas plants. The government has plans to diversify energy supply options with investment in the field of renewable energy.

    via Turkey to become one of world’s leading solar energy hubs.

  • Electric car batteries to be produced in Turkey thanks to R&D investments

    Electric car batteries to be produced in Turkey thanks to R&D investments

    Research and development (R&D) investments in the auto sector seem to have gained momentum in Turkey with the private operators in its support sector recently announcing new investment plans.

    electric car

    Yiğit Akü, one of the leading battery companies in Turkey, on Friday announced that the company is investing $1 million in R&D to develop electric car batteries, which it is planning to produce in coming years.

    This is news for Turkey as the battery company is set to produce lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries used in the electric cars and Yiğit Akü is planning to take leadership in Europe in the production of such batteries in the coming years.

    Just as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been promoting during his election campaign, Turkey is planning to produce its own domestic car brand soon. R&D activities are seen as being at the heart of such an ambitious goal as they will provide the necessary technology to make it possible to produce all required parts domestically and also have a competitive advantage in the sector in order to compete globally.

    The most important aspects of producing a domestic car brand should be one that it can compete internationally. Taking into consideration unstable energy prices in the world market, concerns about the scarcity of oil reserves and global warming, the idea of producing alternative-energy cars has gained importance. The electric car emerged among other types as a candidate to satisfactorily address all of those concerns.

    With such R&D investment plans coming from the private sector in the industry, producing a domestic car brand now seems more possible than before.

    According to a statement released by Yiğit Akü, following a one-year feasibility study, a R&D laboratory configuration has been completed where studies on Li-ion batteries are ready to be launched. The statement also notes that the laboratory that, which will be home to 66 scientists, is a first in its field in Turkey.

    Yiğit Akü General Manager Hulki Büyükkalender states that the company has raised the bar in the automotive sector with this investment as R&D activities are crucial for the industry. He also emphasizes that for years in Turkey, the share of R&D activities were less than a percentage of the national income, adding, “Yiğit Akü has increased the resources allocated to R&D activities from our budget each year. The portion of our turnover that went to R&D in 2008 was 2 percent, while the same figure was only 0.5 percent in 2002. In 2011 we will fund R&D at 4 percent of our turnover.”

    This is good news for the auto sector because ever since Erdoğan made public his wish to see firms in Turkey produce a domestic car brand the debates has intensified around whether Turkey has the necessary technology, especially when it comes to producing an electric car.

    Foreign Trade Minister Zafer Çağlayan informed the media when those debates were still fresh that the due to a lack of required technology, each battery necessary to produce an electric car would cost 10,000 euros to import. “This is almost the cost of buying a new car, and what interests me is the share of domestic contribution in producing such a car,” Çağlayan noted at the time.

    According to an earlier study reported in Today’s Zaman, R&D investments are at the heart of the action plan to produce a national auto brand in Turkey, which was announced by Industry and Trade Minister Nihat Ergün in April.

    On Friday, Association of Automotive Parts and Components Manufacturers (TAYSAD) President Celal Kaya said that they will intensify their quest to increase the number of R&D centers in the sector and aim to have 50 such centers by 2012.

    Mentioning the rapidly growing Turkish automotive industry, the TAYSAD head underlined that the supply industry plays a critical role in this growth and that they will need the support of the government to expand further. Kaya said there are 5,000 engineers working in R&D centers in Turkey to develop better technologies for the auto industry and that this number should be increased.

    The government in Turkey and the private sector in the automotive field both have been increasingly engaging in R&D debates emphasizing the importance of the latter for the sector. This, in turn, seems to be providing moral support to the sector as Büyükkalender notes that his company aims to take electric car battery production to another level in Turkey, as their goal is to be the leader in Li-ion battery production in Europe.

    via Electric car batteries to be produced in Turkey thanks to R&D investments.