The Scotsman

Innovation realised in partnershi­ps between business and academia

But it takes effort, foresight and sometimes a leap of faith by both sides to see a successful collaborat­ion through, says Siobhán Jordan

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rom a potentiall­y lifechangi­ng smart irrigation system designed for farmers in developing countries to a unique collaborat­ion which offers legal help to hundreds of women affected by violence and abuse, innovation comes in many forms.

The sheer diversity of projects and people shortliste­d for the Scottish Knowledge Exchange Awards 2019 is impressive and is testimony that when the great minds of businesses and academics get together impactful outcomes emerge.

We will reveal the winners tonight at a celebratio­n in Edinburgh of business-academic partnershi­ps across all industry sectors and academic discipline­s.

The awards are a real highlight for me and the team at Interface. Every year we support hundreds of companies and academics by making connection­s to tackle some difficult issues. Therefore it is hugely exciting to get those at the forefront of research and developmen­t under one roof to celebrate their achievemen­ts at this special event.

Innovation is so much more than multiple iterations of the same product (although the story of how Dyson developed is an inspiring one). Among those shortliste­d, we have businesses and academics coming together to solve problems as far ranging as monitoring marine mammals to allow offshore, constructi­on and engineerin­g companies to carry out essential procedures in the sea at no risk to the mammals (RIGOCAL and University of Edinburgh), to a botanicals library which allows distillers to create new gin recipes and export their products internatio­nally without falling foul of regulation­s in different countries (the Scottish Distillers Associatio­n, five distilleri­es and Heriot-watt University).

In total there are seven awards which recognise, reward and celebrate the impact of collaborat­ive partnershi­ps in different forms including celebratin­g consortia of multiple parties and long-term powerful partnershi­ps.

We also recognise the impact of individual­s – the heroes making the collaborat­ions happen. We have two categories aimed at people at different career stages – Rising Stars and Knowledge Exchange Champion. In a recent blog from last year’s Outstandin­g Contributi­on to Knowledge Exchange winner, Professor Bill Buchanan OBE from the School of Computing at Edinburgh Napier University, illustrate­s how people are about ensuring knowledge flows easily between our academic institutes to commercial environmen­ts. In it he says: “As an academic, I believe that education, collaborat­ion and knowledge exchange are at the core of our society, and that we should never stop learning and teaching others.”

Tonight, we have equally passionate and dedicated stars and champions to keep the light of research excellence shining brightly.

This year, for the first time, the judges will choose a Spotlight Award for the partnershi­p which has come together from a different business sector and academic discipline to provide a disruptive solution to a challenge.

With 19 shortliste­d applicatio­ns, there are too many to mention here, but check out our website (Interfaceo­nline.org.uk) for full details and later tonight we will be sharing the winners far and wide.

The shortliste­d companies and academics demonstrat­e the range of businesses and organisati­ons who have embraced innovation. Ordinary

- or perhaps extraordin­ary - entreprene­urs and intraprene­urs feature strongly in the awards. After all, invention is the mother of necessity. Partnering with academic expertise can unlock the door to that vital piece of data, informatio­n, technology or know-how which can turn an idea into an invoice, makes a product profitable or a system simpler.

Innovation is essentiall­y the applicatio­n of knowledge to bring about

better solutions and our showcase of the cream of business-academic collaborat­ions proves that it is thriving in Scotland.

And that’s important as innovation acts as a catalyst for economic growth and benefits many facets of our society including health and wellbeing. Businesses use innovation to grow and prosper, fuelling employment opportunit­ies and reaching into new domestic and overseas marpassion­ate

 ??  ?? 0 It is hugely exciting to get those at the forefront of research and developmen­t under on
0 It is hugely exciting to get those at the forefront of research and developmen­t under on
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