Transport continues to be a major source of air pollutants in urban environments and busy hotspots, such as ports and airports. Electrification in road transport will address part of the problem but non-exhaust and emissions from maritime and aviation are more difficult to tackle. Improved pollutants monitoring, regulatory enforcement and optimisation of operation patterns can be used to decrease pollutant emissions. This session will present the main experiences and results from projects AVIATOR, CARES, MODALES, SCIPPER, TUBE, and uCARe on new tools and methods that can be used to decrease emissions of the current fleet of vehicles, vessels and aircraft.
Ake Sjodin, IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute
Leonidas Ntziachristos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Jesus Javier Fernandez Orio, National Institute for Aerospace Technology
Andrew Winder, ERTICO
Salima Abu Jeriban, Project Manager CINEA, European Commission
Simon Christie, Metropolitan Manchester University
Ake Sjodin, IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute
Leonidas Ntziachristos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Andrew Winder, ERTICO
Urban public transport is a vital element to make mobility in cities and regions more sustainable. Offering people an alternative to private vehicles, public transport significantly reduces traffic congestion, air pollution and road injuries. Making public transport more attractive, more efficient and more sustainable is a top sustainable mobility priority for cities and regions. What innovative solutions can accelerate the necessary modal shift? How would the underlying transport system look? What lessons can we draw from the past to design the future?
Isabelle Vandoorne, DG MOVE
Torsten Klimke, Head of Unit DG MOVE B3
Lidia Signor, Combined Mobility Manager, UITP
Jonna Heikkinen, leader of Transit Partnerships EMEA, UBER
Stephane Feray Beaumont, PhD, Vice President Group Innovation & Smart Mobility, Alstom
Ivo Cré, Director, Polis
The session will present the results of the most recent research aimed at a fairer and more inclusive transport system, also considering the rapid transition to an increasingly digital lifestyle. The session will present in an intercative manner the results of a cluster of ongoing or recently completed EU-funded projects. They will reveal gaps in the provision of transport that meet the needs of all groups in society, in particular those most vulnerable to exclusion. Each project will present its own results in addressing barriers and propose potential solutions to reduce discrimination. A special emphasis will be placed on women as an intersectional group, as well as the importance of data for assessing and monitoring equity and inclusiveness.
Silvia Gaggi, ISINNOVA, Italy
Imre Keserü, VUB, Belgium
Kristina Andersen, TUE, The Netherlands
Maria Chiara Leva, TU Dublin, Ireland
Andree Woodcock, University of Coventry, United Kingdom
Heather Allen, Independent expert
Cristina Marolda, DIGNITY project
Imre Keserü, INDIMO project
Kristina Andersen, TRIPS project
Maria Chiara Leva, DIAMOND project
Andree Woodcock, TINNGO project
This session explores the benefits of collaborating worldwide during the research, development and test of Connected, Cooperative and Automated Mobility (CCAM). Despite the common goal of improving future mobility thanks to CCAM, countries have their own requirements on regulatory framework, citizens’ acceptability, and geographical circumstances – among others. Countries and regions are also interested to know the potential impacts of automation for them. This diversity of conditions will be at the core this session in which speakers form Europe, Australia, Japan and US will exchange on own experiences and present the bridges already established between the continents for collaborating.
Henriette Cornet, UITP
Satu Innamaa, VTT, Finland
Patrick Mercier-Handisyde, European Commission
Henriette Cornet, UITP, Belgium
Yvonne Barnard, University of Leeds, U.K.
William Riggs, University of San Francisco, U.S.
Yu Hasegawa, University of Tokyo, Japan
Simone Pettigrew, The George Institute for Global Heath, Australia
Satu Innamaa, VTT, Finland
Umeda Manabu, University of Tokyo, Japan
At the moment, the need to reduce the weight of electric vehicles (EVs) to achieve higher carbon neutrality is increasing. This session will present different lightweight solutions for EVs from 5 European projects focusing on the development of new materials, their integration in EV components, the design of these components, their efficient production, and recycling. This session will showcase the utilisation of advanced steels, novel aluminium composites, optimised recycled plastics and recyclable resins and carbon fibers for the reduction of the overall vehicles weight along with eco-design principles for advanced lightweight materials to be applied to different vehicle body parts.
Ilias Gkotsis, EXELISIS and FLAMINGo project
Andrea Martos, IDENER and REVOLUTION project
Jennifer Bilbao, STEINBEIS and LEVIS project
Raquel Ledo, CTAG and ALMA project
Miriam Vendrell, EURCAT and Fatigue4light project
Abu Jeriban Salima, Project Officer*
Eric Cerneaz, Project Officer*
Lamberto Salvan, ALKE and FLAMINGo project
Emre Emlas, Farplas and REVOLUTION
Clara Valero, ITAINNOVA and LEVIS
Vanessa Ventosinos, CTAG and ALMA
Sergio Jimenez, CIMNE and Fatigue4light
*to be confirmed
Transport is essential for people and the economy, but its emissions and noise affect the health of the whole population both directly and through environmental pollution. These negative impacts are particularly present in urban environments. Innovative solutions could help reducing this impact, e.g., technological solutions to allow better transport planning in cities.
Isabelle Vandoorne, DG MOVE, EC
Pedro Barradas, Chief Strategy Officer, ARMIS ITS
Laura Babio, Project Manager, Polis
Bonnie Fenton, Senior Consultant, Sustainable Mobility, Rupprecht Consult
Javier Buhigas, Head of Operations and Consultancy, Opus Remote Sensing Europe
Isabelle Vandoorne, Deputy Head of Unit, DG MOVE B3, European Commission
The E-VOLVE Cluster of eight complementary H2020 Green Vehicle projects provides a wide set of solutions for the next generation of EVs. By making electric mobility more affordable, convenient and efficient, the E-VOLVE Projects will sustain the market take-up of battery electric vehicles beyond the end of governmental incentives that one day will be unavoidable. During this session, the E-VOLVE Projects will pitch their results and contributions towards the future EV, under five Working Groups: 1. Energy & Thermal Management, 2. Electric Powertrain, 3. Energy Efficiency & Performance, 4. Connectivity, 5. Control Architecture. Followed by a Q&A session and moderated discussion.
Eva Flora Varga, ACHILES, VUB
Alois Steiner, SYS2WHEEL, V2C2
Michele De Gennaro, FITGEN, AIT
Mariapia Martino, FITGEN, POLITO
Christof Schernus, CEVOLVER, FEV Europe
Theodoros Kalogiannis, SELFIE, VUB
Inès Boursot, SELFIE, VUB
Eric Armengaud, EVC1000, AVL/AT
Aldo Sorniotti, TELL & MULTI-MOBY, University of Surrey
Omar Hegazy, VUB
Christof Schernus, FEV Europe GmbH and EARPA
Aldo Sorniotti, University of Surrey
Omar Hegazy, ACHILESProject Coordinator, VUB
Alois Steiner, SYS2WHEEL Project Coordinator deputy, V2C2
Michele De Gennaro, FITGEN Project Coordinator, AIT
Patrick Manns, CEVOLVER Research Team, RWTH
Theodoros Kalogiannis, SELFIE Project Coordinator, VUB
Eric Armengaud, EVC1000 Project Coordinator, AVL/AT
Aldo Sorniotti, TELL & MULTI-MOBY Communication Manager, University of Surrey
Sending information to humans driving vehicles or vehicles being driven by software requires different approaches. Mixed traffic conditions add complexity and may yield a range of responses which depends on many factors, including how information is being interpreted and the level of context awareness. Topics that will be discussed, divided in both the (infrastructure) support requirements and the expected responsive behaviour of the vehicles: • ODD attribute awareness • Infrastructure Support for Automated Driving • Quality requirements for the supporting infrastructure information • Interpretation of traffic management signals and messages • Desired and expected responses of vehicles to TM signals and messages.
Jaap Vreeswijk, MAP traffic management
Risto Kulmala, Traficon Ltd
Jaap Vreeswijk, MAP traffic management
Aria Etemad, Volkswagen
Steven Shladover, UC Berkeley, USA
Jaap Vreeswijk, MAP traffic management
Risto Kulmala, Traficon Ltd
Kristof Rombaut, Agentschap Wegen en Verkeer Flanders
Hironao Kawashima, Keio University, Japan
The session will kick off with a short presentation on the policy perspective regarding the need to develop and deploy smart and sustainable mobility solutions for all (SSMS, HE, SDGs). Then, we will hear from two freshly completed H2020 projects about user acceptability, user behavior and about the impact assessment of innovative mobility solutions like CCAM (Drive2TheFuture and Levitate). We will then hear from the first batch of HE projects that are dealing with societal aspects and user needs in CCAM development and deployment (Sinfonica, Move2CCAM).
Suzanna Kraak, European Commission
Stephane Dreher, ERTICO
Andrea de Candido, DG RTD, European Commission
Evita Papazikou, H2020 Levitate representative
Lila Gaitanidou, H2020 Drive2TheFuture representative
Giulia Renzi, HE Sinfonica representative
Kathrin Raunig, AustriaTech
Matthieu Graindorge, Helmond and MOVE2CCAM representative
Electric Road System (ERS) consists of powering the road vehicles in motion on highways, both to drive them and to charge their batteries. It would decarbonize road transport by 85% compared to the diesel (batteries only: 60%) and would avoid two third of batteries. ERS would allow an unlimited mileage on the equipped road network. The session will report the recent and on-going studies and experiments on ERS, mainly in Sweden, Germany, France and Italy. The “ready-to-scale” technologies will be assessed, and the potential and deployment conditions of ERS will be presented by stakeholders, solution providers and end-users.
Bernard Jacob, Université Gustave Eiffel
France Jan Pettersson, Trafikverket, Sweden
Britta Sommer, VDE/VDI
Patrik Akerman, Siemens
Alan Mc Kinnon, Kuehne Logistics University, KLU
Jan Pettersson, Trafikverket, PIARC TF2.2, Sweden
Alexander Thal, NOW Gmbh, Germany
Bernard Jacob, Université Gustave Eiffel, France
Patrik Akerman, Siemens
Patrick Duprat, Alstom
Valery Prunier, Elonroad
Håkan Sundelin, Electreon
Malika Seddi, ASECAP
ITF representative
OECD/ITF – TCO for Zero Emission Trucking – tbc*
Giverny Knezevic, IKEM – Business Models for European Electric Road Systems Elizabeth Connelly, IEA
Guido Sacchetto, Policy Officer for “Zero emission mobility”, EC/DG R&I
*to be confirmed
This session explores the benefits of enhanced collaboration between the EU and the US on transport research and innovation. The EU and the US differ in terms of regulatory framework, budget cycles, local/geographical conditions and citizen’s engagement process. Yet, they share a rich, evidence-based approach to R&I and the common goal for a safe, inclusive, secure, efficient, resilient and sustainable transportation system by 2030 and beyond. This diversity, but also commonalities of our collaborative framework conditions will be at the core of this session in which speakers from Europe and the USA will exchange with the audience on their experiences to date and present the bridges already established between the continents for collaborating. Engaging the audience to identify the priority areas but also the tools necessary for future collaboration and engagement will at the core of this session.
Maria Carbone, European Commission, DG MOVE.B3
Patrick Mercier-Handisyde, European Commission, DG RTD.C2
Alasdair Cain, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology, US Department of Transportation
Torsten Klimke, Head of Unit, Research and Innovation, DG MOVE/B3
Philippe Froissard, Head of Unit, Future Urban and Mobility Systems, DG RTD/C2
Philippe Froissard and Torsten Klimke, Heads of Unit, European Commission – Title of Presentation: EU R&I activities and transport priorities for EU-US international research collaboration
Firas Ibrahim, Director of the Office of Research, Development, and Technology, US DoT. – Title of presentation: US transport policies and research priorities
Neil Pedersen, Executive Director, US Transportation Research Boad (TRB) – Title of presentation: What opportunities and lessons learned from joint collaboration?
Caroline Almeras, ECTRI – Title of presentation: Enhancing EU-US collaboration: lessons and opportunities?
The objective of this session is to better understand the role that multimodal mobility and logistics hubs cover in the urban environment, as they provide a smart point in the transport network that seamlessly integrates different modes of transport with logistics flows. Last-mile delivery systems are facing challenges associated with the dawn of on-demand logistics, struggling to accommodate citizen expectations for responsive logistics systems, that deliver products at low or even zero-cost. The EU-funded projects MOVE21, ULaaDS and LEAD will show how they are working on that and provide potential solutions to improve and make more efficient city logistics.
POLIS and ALICE
Yanying Li, ETP-ALICE
Raffaele Vergnani, POLIS
Maria Schnurr & Cilli Sobiech, RISE
Geiske Bouma, TNO
Beatriz Rojo, ZLC
Natalia Sobrino, UPM
Michael Glotz-Richter, City of Bremen
This session invites eight CAS projects funded by Horizon 20220, BOOSTLOG, ENTRANCE, FastTrack, Reciprocity, LASTING, ASSURED-UAM, PLATINA3, and FUTURE-HORIZON, to present their efforts and cooperation on accelerating market uptake of innovation in all aspects of the transport sector, e.g. logistics, urban transport and mobility, air transport, and waterborne transport. This session aims to facilitate dialogues on how to advance innovation uptakes for all the transport sector, while further raising awareness of ongoing activities from various stakeholders to a wide range of stakeholders including high-level policy makers, thus creating cross-project, cross-organisational cooperation to facilitate innovation implementations and large-scale uptake.
Yanying Li, Head of Programme & Knowledge Management, ALICE
Jeanett Bolther, PNO Consultants & Coordinator of the ENTRANCE project
Patrick Mercier-Handisyde, European Commission
Jeanett Bolther, PNO Consultants & Coordinator of the ENTRANCE project
Fernando Liesa, ALICE & Coordinator of the BOOSTLOG project
Joaquín Crespo Martín, Instituto Aragonés de Fomento & partner of the RECIPROCITY project
Jan Christiaens, Mobiel21 & partner of the FastTrack project
Oliver Lah, UEMI & partner of the Future Horizon & Solution Plus
Bartosz Dziugiel, Institute of Aviation Poland & Coordiantor the ASSURED project
Mihai Barcanescu, Waterborne & Coordinator of the Lasting Project & partner of Platina3
This session is about innovation deployment at Waterborne sector. Discoveries are made, innovations found, taken forward or rejected. New business is created at start-ups, SMEs or large companies. Co-operation is key for scaling up research innovations and businesses. The practical examples of co-operation, innovations, innovation creation processes and value-added co-operation behind the scenes as well as lessons learned are told.
Inkeri Huttu, ABB Marine & Ports, member of Partnership board, Zero Emission Waterborne Transport Partnership
Jaap Gebraad, Secretary General Waterborne Technology Platform
Inkeri Huttu, ZEWT partnership board member
Inkeri Huttu, ZEWT partnership board member, but also representing ABB Marine & Ports
Nikolaos Ventikos, Associate Professor, School of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, National Technical University of Athens (NTUA)
Teemu Manderbacka, Research Team Leader, Sustainable Shipping, VTT
The extent to which the EU’s energy and climate objectives are achieved for the transport sector depends significantly on the battery industry. A carbon neutral and electrified transport industry will not be possible without the development of battery technology. The European initiatives which are promoting battery R&I will show how battery R&I will be supported in the years to come and how the battery value chain can meet the challenges to support the mobility sector in the green transition. The key elements of the European Research and Innovation Agenda and the mobility roadmap will be presented as well as emphasising the key role of manufacturing to meet demand.
BATT4EU
Batteries Europe
Battery2030+
The two IPCEIs on batteries
Michele De Gennaro, Austrian Institute of Technology, Senior Scientist and Team Leader at AIT
Andrea Gentili, Clean Planet Partnerships Manager at DG RTD, European Commission
Franz Geyer, Head of R&D collaboration Zero emission mobility at BMW Group
Stefan Wolf, Senior Innovation Consultant at VDI/VDE Innovation + Technik
Edel Sheridan, Senior Business Developer at SINTEF Energy Research
Thilo Bein, Head of Knowledge Management at the Fraunhofer LBF
João Alves, R&D Projects Area Coordinator at ATEC
Supported by the European Commission’s Horizon Results Booster programme, the H2020-projects SHOW, AVENUE, HARMONY, SPROUT, FRONTIER, and PASCAL join forces in a Project Group called AutoMATE based on commonalities between their work in the field of Automated and Integrated Transport. In this session, the audience will learn about AutoMATE and how concertation between the projects helps tackle collective challenges at technological, business, societal and policy levels. With its disruptive format, the session will transversally address these challenges with the possibility for the audience to interact with the experts.
Henriette Cornet, UITP
Henriette Cornet, UITP and SHOW Project Coordinator
Marcello Bardellini, Senior Project Manager
Henriette Cornet, UITP
Dimitri Konstantas, Université de Genève
Vicent Pastor, ENIDE
Teresa de la Cruz, Zaragoza Logistics Center
Vivian Akrivi Kiousi, Intrasoft International
Patrick van Egmond, Lux Mobility
Joana Mendonça is an Associate Professor at the Department of Engineering and Management of the Instituto Superior Técnico, where she teaches Innovation Management and Design Thinking, Entrepreneurship, Economic Engineering as well as project units. She is an investigator at the Centre for Innovation, Technology and Policy Research IN+, where she managed the Technology Management and Policy Laboratory. Her research focuses on commercialization processes and on the adoption of new technologies, as well as on the role of human capital in those processes, and her work has been featured in publications such as Research Policy, Small Business Economics and Technological Forecasting and Social Change. She was a co-coordinator for the master’s in engineering and Management of Innovation and Entrepreneurship and for the PhD program in Engineering and Public Policy. She is a member of the scientific board of the Carnegie Mellon Portugal international partnership since 2014 and has been the scientific coordinator for CEiiA since 2018. She was an advisor for the Minister of Economics and Innovation in 2016. Between 2013 and 2015, she was a researcher at the IN+, taking part in the IRGC international network, as well as a visiting professor at IST. Between 2010 and 2012, she was a vicedirector at the Portuguese General Directorate for Statistics on Education and Science. In 2009 and 2010, she was an advisor for the Secretary of State of Science, Technology and Higher Education. She obtained her PhD in Engineering and Industrial Management from IST, University of Lisbon, in 2009. She has a master’s degree in Engineering Policy and Management of Technology from IST and a bachelor’s degree in Technological Chemistry from the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon.
Stephen manages a team of exceptional analysts providing economic analysis and policy advice to governments around the world on some of society’s most pressing issues:
• Cutting the number of deaths and serious injuries on the world’s roads.
• Mitigating air pollution and decarbonising transport.
• Creating more livable cities and managing congestion.
• Improving the efficiency of public transport, railways and aviation.
• Achieving more sustainable shipping and freight distribution systems.
• Getting the best out of new mobility services.
He aims to improve the evidence base for public policy making. His work involves reviewing economic analysis and experience in the implementation of reforms to make transport services safer, more sustainable, more equitable and more efficient. I draft policy reports on a broad range of transport issues – most recently on road safety, road pricing, congestion management, regulating micro-mobility, access, equity and decarbonisation.
Stephen has worked on transport policies for 25 years and has always been engaged in sustainable development and improving regulation, starting out in the energy sector. He spent five years at the International Energy Agency following spells in consultancy, at Tokyo Gas and in Yokogawa Electric Corporation.
The Director of HIT and Vice-President of CERTH, Evangelos Bekiaris, is a PhD Mechanical Engineer of the National Technical University of Athens, former Research Director (Grade A Researcher) and former Head of the sector “Driver & Vehicle”, since HIT establishment (first elected Institute Researcher in 2001). His field of expertise covers issues of transport safety, automated and clean vehicles, smart city applications, specialized telematics applications for vehicles and public transport, accessible transportation and personalized services for people with reduced mobility.
He has been/is:
Peter Lehnert is Vice President of Technology and Innovation at the BMW Group. Before that he was Vice President Technology and Innovation – E and E Architecture and Digital Car Experience and Vice President Integration Elektrik and Elektronik Und Software Logistik, always at BMW Group. He studied at Nanyang Technological University(Leadership) in 2017 and before that completed the Management School St.Gallen and Technische Universität Darmstadt.
François-Régis Le Tourneau is of French and German nationality. He has a strong track record in executive positions in Controlling & Finance as well as Supply Chain Management. During the last 30+ years at L’Oréal, François-Régis has managed organizational and transformational projects on selective and consumer channels with impacts on large teams. His leadership role is always to anticipate, innovate and obtain results in complex organizations.
He is now in charge of the international coordination of the Sustainability Program “L’Oréal For The Future”. François-Régis manages a world-wide Sustainability Leaders community in order to ensure, with the General Managers of each country, that sustainability is at the heart of the business transformation. L’Oréal For The Future aims at transforming L’Oréal’s activities to respect planetary boundaries (climate, water, resources), at empowering the company’s ecosystems and at contributing to solving the challenges of the world.
Francois Regis is the Chairman of ALICE, Alliance for Logistics Innovation through Collaboration in Europe, member of the board of France Supply Chain, and advisory at the Bunder Vereinigung Logistik (the German Logistic Association).
During the past 38 years René Berkvens has been an executive in the shipbuilding industry. He holds a degree in Naval Architecture.
At Damen Shipyards, René Berkvens spent 15 years in the Commercial Division. From 1998 onwards René Berkvens was in charge of the Workboat Division and in 2000 took charge of the newly acquired Naval group previously known as Royal Schelde. In the period 2004 – 2006 René served as vice president of the Damen Group, he was responsible for the Naval division and the mega yacht building activity (Amels brand). From 2006 to 2021 Berkvens was the Chief Executive Officer of the Damen Group and overall responsible for its operation. During this period Damen doubled its turnover and acquired 15 companies in shiprepair, newbuilding and engineering. Damen employs more than 10.000 people in 35 companies on 6 continents.
Today René Berkvens is VP at Damen, maintains several board functions and is Chairman of Sea Europe in Brussels representing practically all shipyards and maritime equipment suppliers in the EU.
Working in the public transport sector for 40 years, Francisco Cardoso dos Reis was Chairman of the Board of Directors of Lisbon’s Underground Company, from June 2010 to August 2012, having previously chaired CP, from 2006 to 2010, where he began his professional career in 1982, as a company engineer. He chaired REFER, from 2000 to 2002, having been Member of the Board of that company, between 2007 and 2010. Among many other positions of responsibility, he was Chairman of EMEF, Fernave, Ferbritas, RAVE, AVEP. In addition, he was also Vice-Chairman of the GNFL (Lisbon’s Railway Node Office), from 1992 to 1997. In terms of the sector’s international institutions, he was a member of the CER Management Committee, between 2001 and 2002, and again from 2007 to 2010, and of the UIC Europe Management Committee, also from 2007 to 2010. From 2010 to 2012, he was a member of the UITP Policy Board and member of the UITP European Union Committee, on behalf of Portugal. At the end of 2013, he was again elected member of the Management Committee of UIC Europe. He also held the positions of Vice-Chairman of EIM, between 2015 and 2018, Vice-Chairman of UIC Europe, between 2016 and 2018, and is currently Chairman of UIC Europe and Chairman of UIC Rail System Forum. Member of the Higher Council of Public Works, from 2002 to 2006.
He carried out teaching activity at the Portuguese Catholic University in the academic years of 2004/2005 and 2005/2006, in the Post-Graduation in Railway Engineering, being Responsible for the subject of Renovation and Upgrading of Railway Infrastructure. He has given various talks and speeches about railways, as a guest lecturer at various national universities and international institutions.
He is a National Defence Auditor.
Mário Campolargo was born in Gafanha de Aquém, Ílhavo in 1956.
He graduated in Electrotechnical engineering from the University of Coimbra (1978), has a master’s degree in Computer Science from Imperial College of London (1983), a postgrad degree in Management from École Solvay of Brussels Free University (1992) and a diploma in European Studies from Católica University in Lovaina-a-Nova (1995).
He was a researcher at the Telecommunication Studies Centre (Aveiro) for 12 years and headed the Software Engineering division. He was the Portuguese representative at the International Telecommunication Unite and led several European projects.
In 1990, he joined the senior staff at the European Commission and was manager and scientific lead of the RACE research into telecommunication programme.
In 1999, he took on the role of Head of Unit of “GÉANT and e-Infrastructure” at the DG Information Society, and was charged with several R&D portfolios, focusing especially on implementing global e-Science infrastructures.
In 2008, as Director of “Emerging Technologies and Infrastructures at DG CONNECT, he was in charge of the Future and Emerging Technologies area, ICT-based Infrastructures for Science, Cybersecurity, and experimental research for the Internet of the Future.
In 2012, he headed the “Net Futures” department at DG CONNECT, focusing especially on the field of the Internet of the Future, including 5G, Cloud computing, the Internet of Things (IOT), Smart Cities and corporate innovation insitiaties, such as Startup Europe.
From 2016 to 2022 he was Deputy Director General and Director General of DIGIT (European Commission), in charge of the global strategic and operational coordination of the directorate-general, for the definition and implementation of the European Commission’s Digital Strategy, and the transition of the Commission’s services to working from home during the pandemic, focusing particularly on creating a digital culture and cybersecurity issues.
He also led European initiatives in the field of Interoperability (including the COVID digital certificate) and the Modernisation of European Public Administration.
Walter Goetz is the Head of Cabinet of Transport Commissioner Adina Vălean since December 2019. Before joining the European Commission, he was a civil servant in the Secretary General of the European Parliament in Brussels. From April to November 2019, he was Head of the Secretariat of the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy (ITRE), and from April 2012 to March 2019 he was the Head of the Secretariat of the Committee on Transport and Tourism (TRAN). From October 2009 to July 2011 he was the Head of the Secretariat of the Special Committee on the Financial, Economic and Social Crisis (CRIS). Walter Goetz joined the European Parliament`s administration as an Administrator in the ITRE Secretariat in 2006 and later served in the Transatlantic Relations Unit of the European Parliament. From April 2003 to December 2005 he worked as an Administrator in the European Commission, where he was in charge of financial services in the Securities Market and Investment Services Provides Unit of DG MARKT. His career began in the German Federal Ministry of Finance in Bonn and Berlin in the years 1998 to 2003, where he held various positions as a desk officer in customs, fiscal policy and legal departments. He studied Law and Administrative Science in Konstanz and Speyer, Germany, and holds a PhD from the Faculty of Law of the University of Konstanz, Germany.
Luca Bedon is an executive engineering manager with more than 20 years’ experience in the aerospace business in the field of advanced technology and new product introduction. Currently, as Avio Aero’s Research and Technology leader, he coordinates the company’s advanced technology development activities in Europe and serves on the governing board of Clean Aviation. Avio Aero is a business of GE Aerospace, a world- leading provider of jet and turboprop engines. In his previous role he contributed to develop the current generation of aircraft engines like the GE90-115B and the GEnx-1B from their initial design up to their certification. Before focusing on innovation he also led the systems engineering military engine department of AvioAero contributing to certification of last generation of turboshaft and managing the engine fleets in service for the Italian Air Force and Army.
Antonella Trombetta is an Electronic Engineer. She has experience in Innovation & Satellite; previously she worked inside the company in ERTMS and CCS Wayside Application; in Metro, CBTC, CBI; HS, Conventional and Freight lines; PTC. Shift2Rail IP2 Coordinator, member of S2R/Europe’s Rail Governing Board, RSI Expert Group on Competitiveness, UNIFE Strategy Committee and member of 3 Italian Competence Centres. Secretary of the Italian CTN Trasporti 2020 and member of Italian National Center on Sustainable Mobility.
Patrick Chld is currently Deputy Director-General in DG Environment at the European Commission with particular responsibility for the EU’s zero pollution strategy, chemicals legislation, research and innovation for environment and communication.
From 2016-2021, he was Deputy Director-General in DG Research and Innovation (R&I) at the European Commission. As member of the Board of DG R&I, he followed in particular research and innovation in clean energy and climate technologies as well as the R&I dimension of the post-COVID recovery and resilience strategy and Horizon Europe mission on Cancer. His international roles included Commission representative and chair of the steering committee of Mission Innovation (a coalition of 24 countries and the EC working to accelerate global clean energy innovation) and lead co-chair of the Group of Earth Observations (GEO).
Until April 2016, Patrick Child was Managing Director of the European External Service with responsibility for administration and finance, covering human resources policy, security and the budget. Before he took up this post in 2011, he was director in the EC External Relations Directorate-General in the responsible for managing the network of Commission delegations.
He has previously served as head of cabinet for External Relations Commissioners Benita Ferrero-Waldner and Chris Patten.
With a background in the UK Finance Ministry, he joined the European Commission in 1994, where he started in the Economic and Monetary affairs Directorate General before becoming Commission press spokesman for economic and monetary union from 1995-1999. Mr Child studied mathematics at Cambridge University. He is married with two children
Pietro is currently responsible for Logistics Operations and Strategic Planning in Europe across all P&G Categories of Products. He has more than 30 years of experience in numerous global businesses including laundry detergents, paper, pet care, and beauty products in a variety of manufacturing and supply chain roles. He possesses significant expertise in strategic sourcing, production planning, logistics, manufacturing and Supply Chain M&A. He has broad international experience including living and working in Italy, Belgium, the UK, Ireland, Switzerland and the United States. He is known for transforming the supply chain, leveraging innovative Automation & Digitalization solutions while accelerating business value creation. He has led the renewal of P&G’s Integrated Work Systems (IWS) methodology to build and sustain world class manufacturing results. He is currently leading the P&G Sustainability Logistics Strategy for Europe to achieve “Net Zero Emissions” by 2040.
Dirk Beckers is the Director of the European Commission’s European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA). CINEA has a key role in supporting the European Green Deal, with a budget of around € 58 billion for the period 2021-2027 and 500+ staff. He is responsible for the overall management of financial and human resources and for coordinating the Agency’s funding activities, to ensure the successful implementation of the European Commission’s European Green Deal policies.
Bo is Chief Strategist at Trafikverket. He is also Program Director for the Swedish part of the European Joint Undertaking on rail research, Europe´s Rail. Bo joined Trafikverket from Banverket, the former Swedish Rail infrastructure manager where he was Head of R&D Coordination. He has over 30 years’ experience in railway, having had positions as regional Director of infrastructure in the southern region of Sweden and technical director in the same area. He has worked on numerous major Swedish and international rail projects in leading positions, e.g. the Oresund bridge, providing expertise in technical as well as mobility aspects. He also has extensive experience in shaping and delivering major rail research projects and to deliver their most challenging programs. Bo holds a MSc in Civil Engineering and a Licentiate of Technology in Transport Technologies, both from Lund Technical University.
Jan holds PhD in applied mechanics. He spent 10 years in automotive industry within engineering organization of TRW Automotive (now part of ZF). In 2014, Jan joined Honeywell where he currently leads the Advanced Technology Europe – the European research and technology development organization of Honeywell Aerospace.
Charlotte Huebner joined A.P. Møller – Maersk in 2022 as Director for ESG Public and Regulatory affairs. She is responsible for Maersk’s positioning and outreach on key regulatory topics relating to Maersk’s energy transition including green fuels, renewables, and Power-to-X.
Before joining Maersk, Charlotte worked at Ørsted on global offshore wind auctions & regulations. Charlotte has over 10 years of experience of working in the global energy sector in variety of commercial and business development roles including at Maersk Drilling and World Energy Council.
Charlotte has a PhD in International Development Economics from SOAS University of London, where she also worked as a Senior Teaching Fellow and Researcher.
João Jesus Caetano is acting as Chairperson of the Portuguese Institute for Mobility and Transport (IMT) since September 2022. He has a 12-years’ experience in the sector, having worked as Head of Innovation Policy and Research at CEiiA – Center for Engineering and Product Development, and served both as a Policy Advisor to the Portuguese Minister of Infrastructure and as a Senior Attaché to the Portuguese Permanent Representation to the European Union. During the Portuguese presidency of the EU Council, he served as co-Chair of the Council’s Working Party on Land Transport. João has a background in Physics, having obtained a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and worked as a Research Associate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, in the United States. Currently, he is also a professor of mathematical sciences at ISTEC-Lisboa and a member, in representation of Portugal, of the management board of the European Union Agency for Railways.
Professor Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla has been Chair of the Executive Board at the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) since 1 October 2020. She completed her doctorate and habilitation at Ruhr-Universität Bochum. Following research activities at the Hahn-Meitner-Institut (HMI) and at the Technische Universität Berlin, she taught and conducted research as a professor at the Technische Universität Wien (Vienna University of Technology) from 2003 to 2005. In 2005, she joined the management team at the Max Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung GmbH (Max Planck Institute for Iron Research) in Düsseldorf as a Scientific Member, Director and member of the Executive Board. In 2008, she was appointed the Scientific Director of the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie GmbH (Helmholtz Centre for Materials and Energy), which was created under her leadership through the merger of HMI and the Berlin Electron Storage Ring Company for Synchrotron Radiation (Berliner Elektronenspeicherring-Gesellschaft für Synchrotronstrahlung mbH; BESSY). From May 2017 until taking up her post at DLR, Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla served as President of the Technische Universität Braunschweig.
Pedro Nuno Santos was born in São João da Madeira, Aveiro in 1977.
He has a degree in Economics from ISEG-UTL, the institution for which he chaired the board of the General Meeting and he is a member of the Lisbon Technical University’s senate.
In 2001 he worked at CISEP – Centre for Studies on the Portuguese Economy in the field of health economics, under Professor Gouveia Pinto.
Once he completed his Economics degree, he joined the family corporate group Tecmacal, SA., a group of companies offering services and trade and development of industrial machinery based in S. João da Madeira.
He was Secretary General of the Socialist Youth between 2004 and 2008.
He was President of the Socialist Party Aveiro Federation from 2010 to 2018.
He was a Member of Parliament in the 10th and 11th legislatures. He was Vice-President of the Socialist Party Parliamentary Group and coordinator of the Socialist Party members of parliament in the Parliamentary Investigation Committee on the BES affair.
He was Secretary of State for Parliamentary Affairs in António Costa’s 1st Government from November 2015 to February 2019. In this post, in addition to bridging the Government and Parliament, he ensured the connection between the Executive and the Parliamentary Groups that ensured the majority on which the Government was based.
He was Minister of Infrastructure and Housing in Prime Minister António Costa’s 1st and 2nd Governments, where he monitored infrastructure policy in construction, property, transports and communications, including regulating public procurement, as well as housing and urban rehabilitation policies.
Opening, Monday 14 November
Professor Phil Blythe CEng, FIET is Chief Scientific Adviser (CSA) for the Department of Transport and Professor of Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) at Newcastle University. Phil has been researching in the field of intelligent Transport Systems since the late 1980s and in the early days was regarded a pioneer in the fields of road pricing and electronic tolling technology. In his role at the DfT he provides a challenge function to the Department on the use of science and engineering evidence in policy making and also ensuring the Department is best informed on new innovations and technologies that may impact on the delivery of transport schemes. Through the CSA network he also ensures that there is significant cross-government cooperation on science, engineering and technology issues in strategic areas such intelligent transport, connected and autonomous vehicles, electromobility and smart cities/big data/IoT agendas as well as the cross-government initiative around the four industrial Grand Challenges. Phil was recently appointed Vice President of the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET).
Plenary, Tuesday 28 April:
Data-driven mobility
Research Director
ICCS
Dr. Angelos J. Amditis is Research Director in the Institute of Communication and Computer Systems, and member of ITS Board of Directors. He is the Vice President and one of the founding members of ITS Hellas. He was one of the initiators of the EuroVR Association and has also served as President from September 2010 till March 2016. In June 2018 he became the ERTICO Chairman, while he has been a member of the ERTICO Supervisory Board since 2013. He is participating or has participated to the CCAM, C-ITS Platform, INATBA, eMI³, MaaS Alliance DTLF, GEAR2030, TM2.0 Platform (Steering Body member), Trilateral WG on Automation, euRobotics, SENSORIS, WssTP, ALICE (Steering Committee Member), UITP, AIOTI and many other EC Groups and Platforms.
Dr. Amditis is the writer of several peer-reviewed journal articles, book chapters and more than 220 conference papers. His current research interests in the fields of ITS include Automated Transport Systems, Cooperative Systems, Electromobility, Smart Mobility both for people and cargo (ITS for Logistics), co-operative systems, sensor and information fusion, data management/aggregation, communication technologies, highly and fully automated driving and embedded systems, vehicle to grid connectivity and charging optimisation strategies, control algorithms, human machine interaction, and FOTs. He is also quite active on Internet related research (IoT, Cloud services etc.) and in the fields of Sensors for monitoring purposes, Telematics, Telecommunications Systems, EMC/EMI, Electromagnetic sensors, etc. He has participated in a large number of research projects, being the scientific responsible of more than 150 projects in the last 20 years. Currently he is the co-ordinator of the following projects: DIONE (newly accepted), HYPERION, Cyber-MAR, COREALIS, ICT4CART, RESIST, and ELVITEN.
Plenary, Tuesday 28 April:
Data-driven mobility