NEWS: FAST (French Sci/Tech News) - Issue #124

Robert J. Bradbury (bradbury@ilr.genebee.msu.su)
Tue, 16 Nov 1999 14:33 EST

I got subscribed to this FAST newsletter after attending a conference in France. It is one of the few pieces of "UnsolicitiMail" I find useful. There are a number of topics of general interest in this issue, so I thought I would pass it along.

Robert



** FRENCH ADVANCES IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY **

FAST is a free review of mainstream French press on issues of science and technology. It appears twice weekly, on Tuesdays and Fridays.

FAST is published by the Science and Technology Office of the Embassy of France to the United States, and by its CNRS Washington office.


Paris, November 9, 11, 1999, Issue #124

> GENETIC FUTURE WILL BE CONSENSUAL, OR WON'T BE AT ALL
> MOBILE CELLS
> BIOMASS AND BIODIVERSITY: A POSITIVE SLOPE
> DON'T COUNT YOUR COMPLEX PROTEINS BEFORE THEY'RE HATCHED
> WHEN YOUR BANDAID BECOMES YOU
> BRIEFLY

EUROPE... 60 eminent European biologists and geneticists have registered their strong disapproval of the decision by certain member nations to cut their contribution to Union sponsored collaborative research infrastructure in biology and genetics. If the European Commission allows this to happen, the European Bioinformatics Institute in Cambridge will see its operating budget cut in half. Directors of the Max Planck Institute, the European Molecular Biology Lab (Heidelberg) and other leading researchers are raising their voices to point out that European genetic research is in danger of falling badly behind and that Europe needs a more coherent common research policy. (Le Figaro, November 4, p20)

START UP HERE... The research ministry's fervent desire to get research results onto shop floors has apparently outstripped its means. The first annual innovative firm prizes sponsored by the Ministry were handed out with much ado last month, but ministerial glee was matched by disappointment from many of the recipients as they read the fine print. The impressive prize sums will be handed out in monthly checks for 18-24 months to help defray the "research costs" of new firms Second surprise: the funds are awarded on a matching basis since they are meant to cover no more than 50% of the firm's research budget. Meanwhile the CNRS has announced the inauguration of 3 enterprise incubators, to be located in Grenoble, Toulouse, and Gif-sur-Yvette (near Orsay, outside of Paris), where the CNRS hopes to midwive 50 new researcher-parented firms per year.

LA HAGUE... Recognizing that in France the nuclear industry could use as much good press as it can get, the new PDG of the leading nuclear energy firm Cogema-she herself the subject of a lot of press-moved quickly to launch a bold full-page ad campaign pushing the message "we have nothing to hide from you." The ads publicize Cogema's new web site devoted to public information on nuclear plant functioning, including webcams placed within their La Hague plant and detailed data on all aspects of plant operation. Transparency becomes virtual invisibility, however, when search engines cannot find the Cogema site, and when its home page forgets to provide a link or an address for the plant info page. Don't misplace this address: www.cogemalahague.fr. (Le Figaro, November 4, p20)

RHONE-ALPES... Possessing the densest research population of any region other than Ile-de-France (Paris), Rhone-Alpes has taken further steps to capitalize on the presence of 600 publicly funded labs and 12,000 scientists within its borders, mostly clustered around rival research twins Grenoble and Lyons. The new multi-year spending strategy is to promote not competition but cooperation as the two cities taken on specialized roles. Grenoble will head a regional network focusing on microphysics, digitalization, and multimedia while Lyons will do the same for biotechnology. Labs in each city will of course contribute to both initiatives. Lyons hopes to acquire an international position quickly in "after genome" research. (Les Echos, October 14, p1, Marie-Annick= Depagneux)

BUDGET... Funding for public non-military research and development will increase for 2000 by 1.3%, according to a report prepared by the administration for the Parliament. Within that figure, university labs will get 3.1% more than in 1999, while operating budgets for public (including university) labs will grow by 3.5%. The recently created (1999) National Science Fund, whose vocation is to sponsor high priority research, will have $200 million to spend in 2000. High priority areas include biotechnology especially labs and firms working on "after genome" projects. National strategies in this area can now be facilitated by the existence of a network of bio-incubators (the FFBI). (Le Quotidien du M=E9decin, November 4, p23-24, S.H.)

FAST is produced and written by Timothy Carlson.



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