VivaTech: “The CNRS Plays a Key Role in Innovation”
The CNRS will be present from 14-17 June for the fourth consecutive year at VivaTech, Europe’s largest innovation gathering.
Over 1,800 exhibitors will be present from 14-17 June at VivaTech in Paris (Paris Expo Porte de Versailles). Four days in which over 90,000 visitors are expected to meet start-ups, tech leaders, major groups, public actors, and investors from across the globe. The CNRS will be present for the fourth consecutive year. “VivaTech is a major event that serves as a reminder of the CNRS’s key role in innovation,” indicates Jean-Luc Moullet, the Chief Innovation Officer of the CNRS.
The CNRS will offer talks and discussions regarding four major topics: quantum technology, sustainable development, health, and energy, all symbols of major scientific challenges. “We chose four topics that illustrate the challenges and issues faced by our society. These four topics will be led by ten start-ups (see text box) that grew out of research conducted in laboratories under CNRS supervisory authority,” Moullet adds.
At the heart of industrial decarbonization
Among these 10 start-ups, the company Spark Cleantech aims to accelerate the decarbonization of industry by producing hydrogen directly on site, with zero CO2 emissions and very little electricity. The start-up is developing a decarbonized hydrogen production process
AI for new precision medicine
Also represented at the CNRS stand will be the start-up One Biosciences, which was created in 2020, and grew out of the research conducted by Dr. Céline Vallot, the winner of the 2022 CNRS Innovation Medal and a researcher at the Dynamics of Genetic Information: Fundamental Bases and Cancer Laboratory
Alain Aspect, Winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize for Physics, among the CNRS’s Invitees
The CNRS has also organized a series of round-tables, talks, and discussions at its stand—“Innovation & Prospective Talks”—to be held from 14-16 June at VivaTech. The scientific topics that will be showcased include quantum technology, recyclability, the circular economy, and the decarbonization of industry. There will also be institutional subjects, such as market oriented support strategies, with Mehdi Gmar, the Director of CNRS Innovation, as speaker, as well as the launch of a new offer, dedicated to companies that grow out of laboratories under CNRS supervisory authority. “The CNRS has planned programming with a wealth of contributions in order to highlight the link between research and innovation. To this effect, we have invited major figures in research, as well as CEOs of start-ups and leaders of Priority Research Programmes and Equipments (PEPRs), major research programmes that are the upstream portion of national acceleration strategies, and that were developed as part of the France 2030 Plan,” Moullet explains.
The major research topics being pursued by the CNRS will be presented at the various round-tables, and will include the expertise of CNRS research staff, examples of public-private research, and representatives from start-ups that grew out of laboratories under CNRS supervisory authority. For instance, the organization will offer a talk on the topic of “Recyclability and the Circular Economy” with Jean-François Gérard, the leader of the Recyclability, Recycling, and Reincorporation of Recycled Materials PEPR, along with three cutting-edge start-ups in the field
The CNRS and SATTs: Consolidating a Full-Fledged Professional Sector
The SATT Network of technology transfer companies, a major CNRS partner
Vivatech 2023 promises to be a must-see gathering for discovering the major innovations that will shape the society of the future, in addition to key trends in research today.
Focus on the 10 start-ups at the CNRS stand
Ten start-ups will be presented at the CNRS stand at VivaTech:
- Cilkoa, created in 2022, is pursuing new avenues for manufacturing hybrid bio-based materials by combining expertise (in nanocellulose-based materials and ceramic materials), and then evaluating their functionalities. With its patented technology, the company replaces the plastics that usually protect the inside of cellulose packaging with an alumina film chemically grafted onto the fibres. Cilkoa’s solution promises a percentage of cellulose approaching 100%.
- Mablink Bioscience, created in 2018, is contributing to the fight against cancer thanks to an innovative technology that makes Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADCs)—anticancer medicine that targets cancerous cells without affecting healthy ones—“stealthy,” and hence more effective and better tolerated.
- Exail Systèmes Quantiques, created in 2011, is a pioneering company in the field of quantum technologies. A transfer of know-how and the use of a CNRS-Observatoire de Paris-PSL patent helped it become the first company to bring to market an absolute quantum gravimeter for measuring the acceleration of gravity, with applications in the field of geophysics.
- One Biosciences, created in 2020, aims to become a world leader in precision medicine for complex diseases. It combines “single-cell” technologies and artificial intelligence to discover and develop new therapeutic approaches for precision medicine.
- Recyc’Elit, created in 2019, provides solutions in the field of recycling. The start-up has developed a process that can recycle all types of waste made of a plastic called PET, as well as single or mixed polyester textiles.
- Resolve Stroke, created in 2022, has conceived the first high-definition 3D digital ultrasound scanner. Its technology is the fruit of more than a decade of research in fundamental physics and ultrasound. It can “image” macro and micro-vessels in 3D within a few minutes, doing so safely for the patient, all while allowing its use by numerous health professionals.
- Siquance, created in 2022, uses the physical properties of silicon to produce quantum bits of excellent quality, as well as technological know-how in microelectronics to produce chips containing billions of transistors for everyday computers and smartphones. Combined, these two assets pave the way for universal quantum accelerators that, by 2030, will be faster and more precise than computers with very high computing power.
- Spark Cleantech, created in 2021, aims to accelerate the decarbonization of industry through the production of hydrogen directly on site, with zero CO2 emissions and very little electricity. The start-up is developing a decarbonized hydrogen production process that uses 5 times less electricity than electrolysis (process of exchange in which electric energy is transformed into chemical energy).
- VH Quatrevingtreize design water current turbines to convert the energy of moving water into electricity via patented technology and a 100% recyclable bio-based material, thereby enabling safe and predictable energy production.
- WelinQ, created in 2022, addresses the major challenge of scaling up quantum processors, which currently limits their computing capacity. The company is developing and bringing to market the world’s most effective solution for connecting quantum computers to one another, thereby drastically increasing their computing capacity.
Vivatech 2023: The Major Challenges of the Future at the CNRS Stand
To find out more about the CNRS at VivaTech, read the press release "Vivatech 2023: The Major Challenges of the Future at the CNRS Stand"