The Scotsman

Fostering essential innovation

-

The Scottish public wants innovation to be used to help tackle the major social issues of the day. Scotland’s businesses are central to this and play a key role in creating a national culture that allows for more experiment­ation and creative approaches to solve critical social problems.

Nesta’s survey, Is Scotland Getting Innovation Right?, published earlier this month, shows that the people of Scotland prioritise new ideas being used to create social good, regardless of whether they bring economic gain. And dealing with the climate emergency is their number one priority.

These findings are encouragin­g but it will take all sections of Scottish society uniting to embrace bold approaches to create a future that is sustainabl­e and prosperous for all.

People, businesses and community groups must be involved to help inform and direct innovation towards the areas of greatest need and help ensure progress to a net-zero carbon economy is just and inclusive.

The public sector should build on this public support and work to better engage people across Scotland in shaping and informing the innovation we want to see to tackle social challenges. We also need greater transparen­cy on how public money is spent on innovation and should consider what a clearer and more missionled approach to research and developmen­t spending in Scotland could look like.

Businesses must also take a central role in this agenda if Scotland is to transition to a net-zero carbon economy without leaving people behind. Scotland’s private sector has the expertise and the experience – in engineerin­g, manufactur­ing and technology, in science, forestry and food production – to develop world-leading innovation­s ensuring a transition that is prosperous and fair. And innovation is not, and must not be, just about big businesses. Smaller and more agile enterprise­s are often more in touch with their local needs and are best placed to harness innovation in responding.

Innovation­s from businesses have already yielded cutting-edge developmen­ts in industries like renewables. The strong public showing in support for innovation in this survey is backed by an understand­ing of the necessary steps involved in achieving this, with 69 per cent of the Scottish public saying allowing people to take risks and fail is what progresses society.

The business sector, more than any other, is in a position to help Scotland adopt a less risk-averse culture in which experiment­ation is valued and mis-steps aren’t condemned as failures.

The people of Scotland want innovation to help solve our social problems, which means as a country we have the chance to embrace that appetite and help shape a positive future. But it must have the backing and engagement of everyone. Businesses should take a lead where their expertise can help. Adam Lang, head of Nesta in Scotland

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom