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UNESCO SCIENCE REPORT

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<strong>UNESCO</strong> <strong>SCIENCE</strong> <strong>REPORT</strong><br />

comprises a package of 40 measures to foster innovative<br />

public procurement, entrepreneurship and venture capital<br />

availability.<br />

In April 2015, the government announced its Industry of the<br />

Future project. This project launches the second phase of the<br />

government’s New Industrial France initiative, which aims to<br />

modernize industrial infrastructure and embrace the digital<br />

economy to tear down the barriers between services and<br />

industry. The Industry of the Future project focuses on nine<br />

priority markets: New Resources; Sustainable Cities; Ecological<br />

Mobility; Transportation of Tomorrow; Medicine of the Future;<br />

The Data Economy; Intelligent Objects; Digital Confidence;<br />

and Intelligent Food.<br />

A first call for project proposals in future-oriented fields<br />

(3D printing, augmented reality, connected objects, etc.) is<br />

due to be launched in September 2015. Companies which<br />

modernize will be entitled to tax cuts and advantageous<br />

loans. The Industry of the Future project has been designed<br />

in partnership with Germany’s Industry 4.0 project (Box 9.3).<br />

Germany will thus be a key partner, with both countries<br />

planning to develop joint projects.<br />

GERMANY<br />

Digitalizing industry: a priority<br />

Germany is the EU’s most populous member<br />

state and biggest economy. Manufacturing is one of the<br />

economy’s strengths, particularly in medium-to-high-tech<br />

sectors such as automotive, machinery and chemicals,<br />

but its dominance of high-tech manufacturing, such as in<br />

pharmaceuticals and optical industries, has eroded over<br />

time. The Federal Ministry for Education and Research has<br />

developed a High-tech Strategy to improve co-operation<br />

between science and industry, in order to maintain<br />

Germany’s international competitiveness. Launched in 2006,<br />

the strategy was updated in 2010, with a focus on public–<br />

private partnerships in forward-looking projects, including<br />

some oriented towards tackling the following societal<br />

challenges: health, nutrition, climate and energy security,<br />

communication and mobility. One key focus of the High-tech<br />

Strategy since 2011 has been the digitalization of industry<br />

(Box 9.3).<br />

In 2005, the Pact for Research and Innovation was introduced.<br />

Within this pact, the federal government and the regions<br />

Box 9.3: Germany’s strategy for the fourth industrial revolution<br />

The German government has taken a<br />

distinctly forward-looking approach<br />

to what Germans call Industry 4.0 or,<br />

in other words, the fourth industrial<br />

revolution; this entails bringing the<br />

internet of things and the internet<br />

of services to industry, estimated by<br />

Accenture to add € 700 billion to the<br />

German economy by 2030.<br />

Germany’s high-tech strategy since<br />

2011 has had a strong focus on<br />

Industry 4.0. The German government<br />

has a dual plan. If Germany can<br />

manage to become a leading supplier<br />

of smart manufacturing technologies,<br />

such as cyber-physical systems, this<br />

should give a huge boost to German<br />

machinery and plant manufacturing, as<br />

well as to the automation engineering<br />

and software sectors. The hope is<br />

that a successful Industry 4.0 strategy<br />

will help Germany’s manufacturing<br />

industry retain its dominant position in<br />

global markets.<br />

Based on a literature review, Hermann<br />

et al. (2015) define six design principles<br />

of Industry 4.0, namely, interoperability<br />

(between cyber-physical systems<br />

and humans), virtualization (through<br />

which cyber-physical systems monitor<br />

production), decentralization (with<br />

cyber-physical systems making<br />

independent decisions), real-time<br />

capability (to analyse production data),<br />

service orientation (internally but also<br />

by offering individualized products)<br />

and modularity (adapting to changing<br />

requirements).<br />

In addition to modernizing industry,<br />

customizing production and generating<br />

smart products, Industry 4.0 will address<br />

issues such as resource and energy<br />

efficiency and demographic change,<br />

while promoting a better work–life<br />

balance, according to Kagermann et al.<br />

(2013). Some trade unions, however,<br />

fear an increase in job insecurity, such<br />

as via cloud workers, and job losses.<br />

A new Industry 4.0 platform called Made<br />

in Germany was launched in April 2015.<br />

It is operated by the federal government<br />

(economic affairs and research ministries),<br />

firms, business associations, research<br />

institutes (in particular, the Fraunhofer<br />

institutes) and trade unions.<br />

Although some Industry 4.0 technologies<br />

are already becoming a reality, with<br />

some smart factories like that of Siemens<br />

already in existence, a lot of research<br />

remains to be done.<br />

According to the 2013 recommendations<br />

from the Industry 4.0 working group, the<br />

main research focus areas in the German<br />

strategy are (Kagermann et al., 2013):<br />

n Standardization and reference<br />

architecture;<br />

n Managing complex systems;<br />

n A comprehensive broadband<br />

infrastructure for industry;<br />

264

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