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A representative of the automotive industry summarized the common goals and
benefits of the regional platforming activities:
This means that the barriers…have to be highlighted and overcome by joint projects. At the
same time, you have to involve medium-sized businesses, which are extremely strong in
Baden–Wuerttemberg along this new path....And that is one of the central tasks of the forth-
coming Cluster Electromobility Southwest. (Interview S003; September 2011)
In April 2012 the Stuttgart region became a showroom of applied science and
technology, a “LivingLab BWe mobil,” which is also being coordinated by
e-mobilBW. More than 40 projects, encompassing an aggregate volume of some
€150 million, have been set up. The programs are intended to reinforce each other,
for R&D results can be tested immediately and practical insights taken into account
in R&D activities.
In the Berlin region a second FCE also took place early in the formation phase,
subsequent to the critical juncture, beginning in autumn 2010 with a high-level
meeting of representatives of regional firms, institutions, and research organizations
at the invitation of the city’s Governing Mayor. It functioned as the starting point for
creating the Berlin Agency for Electromobility (eMO), a regional coordinating
institution, whose organizational and financial structure was negotiated and pre-
sented to selected regional stakeholders. Only a few days later, the establishment of
eMO was publicly announced at a large venue to promote Berlin as a site for indus-
try. The Action Plan for Electromobility, published a few months later, was one of
the first results (eMO, 2011). At that time the NPE hinted at its expected recom-
mendations to mount large-scale regional demonstration projects as an apt way to
promote the development of electromobility. The action plan thus mainly supported
the region’s willingness to become a national showcase. The normative work done
at that time was stressed by an interviewee: “The hope is eminent that if Berlin posi-
tions itself within this thematic field, it will get the chance to secure a slice of the
new industrial value creation” (Interview B009; August 2011).
The third FCE occurred in summer 2011. Before the application process for the
national showcase program, eMO organized a closed multistakeholder workshop
with about 60 selected guests. As stated in the internal letter of invitation, the work-
shop was “to set the corresponding course” for the application. It did so by having
the participants slip into the role of other stakeholders in order to become aware of
further relevant perspectives and interests. Overall, this 2-day workshop marked the
origin of the region’s draft application. In the words of one participant,
Slowly but surely, core areas are being reinforced: Where do we want to go? What could the
added value be in comparison to Bavaria or Baden-Wuerttemberg? What is our unique sell-
ing point? Now this process is being moderated by the agency, and the workshop was an
important milestone. (Interview B007; August 2011)
The Berlin region was chosen as an international showcase in April 2012. About 35
key projects, accounting for a total volume of approximately €165 million (eMO,
2012) were set up. It is now commonly agreed that the upcoming projects of applied
science and technology will serve as catalysts to attract R&D capacities. This first
step may be the basis for future value creation in the long run. This new perception
10 Platforming for Path-Breaking
zurĂĽck zum
Buch Knowledge and Networks"
Knowledge and Networks
- Titel
- Knowledge and Networks
- Autoren
- Johannes GlĂĽckler
- Emmanuel Lazega
- Ingmar Hammer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-45023-0
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 390
- Schlagwörter
- Human Geography, Innovation/Technology Management, Economic Geography, Knowledge, Discourse
- Kategorie
- Technik