September 25
The enactment of the Data Act and the Data Governance Act, together with several major public initiatives aimed at supporting the development of dataspaces in Europe, often aligned with the formation of industry-wide consortia promoting technical development and experimentation, has been triggering the development of data-sharing initiatives across Europe. It is now time to take stock of these developments and try to draw lessons from this accumulation of experiences to inform public policies, firms’ strategies, and priorities for technical research.
Indeed, the realisation of the potential of data-sharing, both in terms of productivity gains and innovation at the industry level, request onboarding of the various stakeholders in a value chain. Given their skills, their digital maturity, their organisational constraints, and their degree of strategic independence, they face differing levels of costs, potential benefits and risk in sharing their data. Moreover, these costs-benefits-risks are also pretty much dependent upon the use cases that are implemented, the costs and difficulties associated to the reengineering of processes and organisations and the behaviours of partners and competitors, etc.
Lastly cost and benefits, as well as incentives to share data, or to derive value from their analysis and processing, are dependent upon governance arrangements and technological developments.
This conference will gather policy makers, practitioners and analysts who will join forces to discuss the dynamic of developing data-sharing ecosystems. The aim is to identify the main challenges and possible turning points to be addressed to promote a self-sustainable development of data-sharing in various contexts. This will be achieved through the design and management of virtuous processes of industrial transformation, based on sound business models, inclusive governance mechanisms, and facilitating technologies.
Agenda
Morning Sessions: Interlinking Strategy and Ecosystems’ Dynamics
9h -9h15: Introduction
Eric Brousseau, Paris Dauphine-PSL University
Jakob Rehof, TU Dortmund University, Fraunhofer Institute, and Lamarr Institute
9h15-10h30: From Promotion to Regulation: What are the next steps for policy makers?
Yvo Volman (EC)
Sarah Jacquier Pellisier (ARCEP)
Mario Campolargo, U. Aveiro
10h30-10h45 Coffee Break
10h45-12h00: DataSharing and Industrial Transformations
Lucas Eustache, University Paris-Dauphine|PSL
Catherine Jestin & Philippe Grosbois, Airbus
Veronique Lacour, EDF
12h00-13h15: Dynamics of Emergence and Development
Jurgen Vangeyte (TBC), ILVO: Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries Research Technology (Belgique)
Jacques Bea-Garcia, CNES
Xavier Drilhon (PDG Mytrust + Pt Assoc intermediaries de données)
13h15-14h15 Lunch
Afternoon Sessions: Remaining Challenges
14h15-14h30: The Governance Challenge
Catherine Mayenob, CDC
14h30-15h45: Scaling-up and Involving SMEs
Martine Gouriet, EDF
Anne Carrere, BoostAeroSpace,
Sébastien Picardat, Synevop
15h45-16h15 Coffee Break
16h15-17h30 Generative AI & Data interoperability:
Jakob Rehof, TU Dortmund, Fraunhofer Institute, and Lamarr Institute
Benoit Tiers, Geodis
TBA
17h30-18h00: What we learned
Éric Brousseau, University Paris-Dauphine|PSL
Jakob Rehof, GaiaX Institute
Hubert Tardieu, Gaia-X
Joelle Toledano, University Paris-Dauphine|PSL
18h – 19h00 : Cocktail reception