Comment Neelie (Kroes)

Making speeches talk

Comment Neelie

Recognition, rules and resources: a new partnership for Europe's web startups

Brussels, 22 May 2014

SPEECH/14/407 (see the source)
by Neelie KROES
Vice-President of the European Commission responsible for the Digital Agenda

Accessibility tools

Service tools

Language selector

Search

Navigation path

Left navigation

Additional tools

European Commissionrn -rn SPEECH/14/407rn  rn 22/05/2014sentence permalink

+

Other available languages:rn none

The President has outlined the great growth challenge we face. And how we can tackle it.sentence permalink

+

This is an issue we absolutely have to focus on .sentence permalink

+

And I want you to remember, as you discuss this, what this is ultimately about. Not about tables and tools and targets. Not about programmes and processes.sentence permalink

+

We need all those things. But let's remember what it's really about.sentence permalink

+

It's about people. People who do not have a job, do not have hope, do not have opportunity. Who cannot start to plan their lives, their homes, their families. Millions of young people who risk being part of a lost generation.sentence permalink

1

That's something that keeps me up at night. And all of us in the Commission. We need to give those young people back their chances and their opportunities.sentence permalink

+

I want to do something about this. We all do: desperately. And there isn't much time.sentence permalink

+

I don't just mean because the Commission's mandate is coming to an end.sentence permalink

+

Every week I Skype my granddaughter. Recently she asked me "how old are you?"sentence permalink

+

I said, "I'm 72"; and she asked – "grandma, how come you're still alive?"sentence permalink

+

So you'll forgive me if I'm in a rush.

But we have a solution: getting Europe's house in order isn't just about cutting deficits. It's about investing in tomorrow's growth. Supporting the ideas and innovations that can create jobs in the year and decades to come.sentence permalink

+

When I travel around Europe, when I go on social networks – one of the things that really gives me hope are Europe's army of web startups. The entrepreneurs using the power of technology to innovate.sentence permalink

+

Because their bright ideas can help everyone.sentence permalink

+

Already today the European app economy employs millions, generating billions in revenues. And that's growing sharply every year.sentence permalink

+

But it's not about the number of people directly employed.sentence permalink

+

It's the number of people it can support and empower, the range of sectors it can transform.sentence permalink

+

I've seen this technology help everyone: young and old, rich and poor, men and women.sentence permalink

+

With applications from education to energy, transport to television.sentence permalink

+

I've seen 13 year olds who aren't just playing games – they're creating them and selling them.sentence permalink

+

I've seen new kinds of healthcare, effective and empowering. In Italy there's one lady, Nonna Lea. She is trying out a new EU funded project, a robot that helps her stay active and independent at home. And she loves it. I know because she says so on her blog. She's 94 years old. Technology isn't just for the young!sentence permalink

+

And nor is it just a "toy" for the well-off. I'm just back from the UN where we've been discussing the role ICT plays in the developing world. How, even in the poorest places, these tools and this innovation can emancipate, educate, empower.sentence permalink

+

And it's for women as well as men. Today, too many women think digital careers "aren't for them". They're missing out – so is our economy. Europe needs digital human capital for the 21st century – and we simply cannot afford to ignore half our talent.sentence permalink

+

The fact is: the Internet is an incredible innovative platform.sentence permalink

+

Because you don't need permission to try things out online. You just go out there and do it. The technology doesn't have a barrier: the only limit is your imagination.sentence permalink

+

But there are many other barriers faced by those would-be innovators. Too many obstacles that stand in their way.sentence permalink

+

Those barriers can be internal. People might be put off by fear of failure, they might think this career is "not for them", they might not see the right role models.sentence permalink

+

Or it can be external – a lack of recognition, a lack of resources, or having to deal with a tangle of different digital rules across our single market.sentence permalink

+

Either way – we need to take those barriers away.sentence permalink

+

That is what these new organisations, the Startup Europe Partnership and the European Digital Forum are set up to deliver.sentence permalink

+

Giving a platform for startups to compete, raise funding, break through the glass ceiling to global success.sentence permalink

+

Showing the facts, highlighting the opportunities, giving a political voice to this essential economic sector.sentence permalink

+

Showing how well Europe is doing – and how we could do better.sentence permalink

+

So I am proud to formally launch those two new organisations today. And I wish you the best of luck.sentence permalink

+

This is really important work you will be doing. One of the "EU top jobs" really worth fighting for.sentence permalink

+

Of course: this is not the only way we are supporting startups.sentence permalink

+

We will also be investing more than ever before in this area. Our research programme Horizon 2020 will not just be the largest ever. It will be the most ever focused on innovation. The most ever focused on smaller businesses. With about one euro in five going straight to small and medium sized companies who deliver innovations to market. And, in its first year alone, we are making 15 million euros available specifically for ICT entrepreneurs and web startups.sentence permalink

+

We will be boosting Europe's digital skills. Cutting unemployment while boosting competitiveness. With a grand coalition for digital jobs. And with grassroots initiatives like Europe code week in October. So more Europeans have the skills they need to capture tomorrow's opportunities.sentence permalink

+

Plus, we are taking away the barriers innovators face online. Safeguarding the open innovative internet so new bright ideas don't get blocked by operators or slow networks. Removing roaming charges so you don't have to switch your phone off at the border, and lose all those apps.sentence permalink

+

And we are making it easier to share and spread bright ideas across the digital single market. I hope national governments can take that final step to agreeing those new rules soon—the rules we need for vibrant telecommunications in a connected continent.sentence permalink

+

And we are doing much much more as part of our Startup Europe programme.sentence permalink

+

But most of all I am going to keep championing this cause. I am going to keep fighting for this issue as long as I am digital agenda commissioner. These people are out there creating jobs and they deserve support – recognition, rules, resources.sentence permalink

1

Today is one big step further towards a Startup Europe.sentence permalink

+

Thank you.