Projects

HighTech Europe

project name: European Network for integrating novel technologies for food processing

initiating country: The European Union

Framework Programme: FP7       programme area: KBBE – Food, Agriculture and Biotechnology       contract type: NoE – Network of Excellence

contract/proposal/call number: 222824

status: active

start date: May 2009       duration: 48 months       projected finish date: May 2013

Project Budget

total budget: € 7,037,200

Participants

Note that the follow people may not represent the full extent of the consortium. FEAST has tried to identify the Australian participants, and their collaborators (or coordinator), within the project. Also note that Australian participation may not necessarily be on a formal level. Further details about the partners in this project can be found at the website listed below.

nameorganisationstate or country
Dr Anthos YannakouCSIRO NSW, Australia
Heinz VolkerDIL Germany
Dr Roman BuckowCSIRO Australia

Further information

WWW: www.hightecheurope.eu

summary:

CSIRO has become the only organisation outside Europe to be invited to join HighTech Europe – a consortium of research agencies, industrial federations, universities and equipment manufacturers established to facilitate the uptake of innovative and emerging food processing technologies.

Comprising 22 organisations and coordinated by the German Institute of Food Technologies (DIL), HighTech Europe is part of the European Union’s (EU) 7th Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development.

Its aim is to develop protocols that enhance the availability of innovative technological knowledge to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the food manufacturing industry to strengthen them for global competition.

“They see CSIRO Food and Nutritional Sciences (CFNS) as a valuable external collaborator,” says CSIRO’s HighTech Europe Project Leader, Dr Roman Buckow.

“CSIRO, and Food Science Australia before it, have gained wide international recognition for research on emerging food processing technologies such as ultra high pressure, cool plasma, pulsed electric field and ultrasonics.”

Over the next four years, CSIRO will contribute to the consortium’s work by undertaking an assessment of innovation transfer capabilities between research agencies and the Australian food industry.

“Seeking opportunities, tackling obstacles, assessing funding options and using lessons leant from industry in Europe as well as Australia will be the basis for establishing new routes to innovation implementation,” says Dr Buckow.

“Tools to be assessed and developed could include the ‘knowledge auction, implementation award and exhibition transfer’.”

Biotechnology, information processing and communication technologies are considered areas with high innovative power, and thus serve as promising adjuncts for future food processing technologies.

The relationships between these sources of innovation, basic food engineering operations (separations, structure formation, stabilisation, and packaging) and the underlying scientific principles (physical, chemical and biological) will be assessed by the program.

Special attention will be paid to ethical, legal and social aspects of innovation and their impact on consumer perceptions of high-tech food processing.

Source: CSIRO