06.03.2012 Skolkovo. Monetizing Russian Science&Tech innovations
According to the CEO of Skolkovo Foundation Steve Geiger, 2011 will be remembered as a year when Russia seriously took upon monetization of its technological and intellectual potential.
06.02.2012 Russian Innovation Strategy 2020
New revised strategy for innovative development of Russian economy up to 2020 was published by the Ministry of Economic Development
10.01.2011 India and inclusive innovation
The big push on the importance of inclusive innovation in India is accelerated by the National Innovation Council.
29.11.2011 Explore FinNode seminar 22.11.2011
15.07.2010 Innovation and cooperation
The five countries where FinNode Network operates are all hugely important when thinking about innovation in the past, today and in the future.
30.06.2011 Japan rises again
In most parts of Sendai, it is hard to believe that one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded happened off-shore just three months ago.
31.05.2011 Educational solutions from Finland
The high quality of Finnish education has been duly noted around the word. Now the Future Learning Finland project led by Finpro is making the famous Finnish educational competence widely available on international markets. Chalkboards and pointers are things of the past: future learning tools consist of mobile terminals and virtual classrooms.
In most parts of Sendai, it is hard to believe that one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded happened off-shore just three months ago.
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In most parts of Sendai, it is hard to believe that one of the most powerful earthquakes
ever recorded happened off-shore just three months ago. For centuries, the city has
been known all over Japan for its greenery. In June, the parks are in impeccable
condition, and you hardly notice any damage in the buildings, either.
Of course, the picture is dramatically different in the easternmost part of this city of
one million inhabitants. The coastal strip, three to four kilometers wide, is a scenery
of almost total destruction. Whole communities have been washed away, and many
of the few buildings left have to be demolished, too. But here, too, the amount of
clean-up work already done is impressive. The endless, neatly organised piles
of car wrecks are one of the surreal scenes (in Miyagi prefecture alone,
150 000 cars were destroyed).
The human cost due to the disaster is still rising. People who have lost their close ones, or everything they own, and who have to live in temporary homes are susceptible to many threats. Research after the 1995 Kobe earthquake has shown that social and mental problems, including suicides, are taking their toll among the survived victims years after the disaster.
I feel privileged to work in Sendai in these times of hardship. The Sendai – Finland Wellbeing Center and its Research and Development Unit have existed for six years now. The core mission of the unit is to facilitate
creation of solutions for aging societies. By bringing together researchers, companies, policy makers and
citizens, it strives for innovations, be they technologies, services, policies – or combinations of them.
Right now, the unit is identifying ways in which it can best boost recovery, and help those in most acute need.
This is done together with the local administration. Having worked together with Sendai City for years, the unit
has the advantage of direct communication with those who are in charge of the recovery.
Although life in central Sendai looks perfectly normal when observed from the streets, there is one difference compared to the time before the disaster. This can be best seen by entering any major hotel. People from other parts of the world are missing. This is regrettable, since lack of business and research collaboration means worse economy and slower pace of recovery. Even if it is true that still a lot needs to be done in Fukushima Daichii power plant, no-one can claim that the work is not proceeding. And you might not know that the amount of radiation in Sendai has all the time been well below that of southern Finland. The foreign media is slowing down the recovery when it creates a picture of an uncontrollable crisis going on. Please, come over and look around by yourself!
Juha Teperi
(Juha Teperi was apppointed as director of Sendai-Finland Wellbeing Center Research and Development Unit earlier this spring, and he returned to Japan in May).
( Tohoku is the North Eastern Region of Japan.)

記者会見にてat Press conference
(左から;スターツケア引地専務、スターツCAM関戸社長、FWBCコルピネン会長、パヤリネン一等書記官、木村上席商務官)
(From left; Mr. Hikichi of STARTS care service, Mr. Sekido of STARTS CAM, Mr. Korpinen of FWBC, Mr. Pajarinen of Embassy, Mr. Kimura of Trade center)
By Mitsuru Niwano/Tekes Tokyo & FinNode Japan
BioJapan 2011World Business Forum is one of the largest biotechnology events in Asia held every year. The main organizers are Japan Bioindustry Association, Japan Health Sciences Foundation and Japan Biological Informatics Consortium. (http://expo.nikkeibp.co.jp/biojapan/2011/eng/)
This year, BioJapan 2011, the subtitle of which was "New Bio Growth Strategy by Japan, Boosting Open Innovation & Investment"
was held from 05.10 to 07. 10 in Pacifico Yokohama, facing to Yokohama harbor, approximately 40 min train ride from city center of Tokyo. There were approximately 320 exhibitors around the globe and
the exhibitors from Japan contained major pharmaceutical companies such as Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. and Astellas Phrma Inc. who were trying to find out potential alliance partners including from foreign countries.
For the seminar part, there were three sessions concerning regenerative medicine and iPS cell study. There also was an introductory presentation of Forum for Innovative Regenerative Medicine, FIRM. It consists of 26 members aiming to realize the industrialization of regenerative medicine. Professor Yamanaka of Kyot University also introduced the activity of CiRA, Center for iPS cell research and application University.
The number of visitors during the period was approximately 12,000 which is 15 % more comparing to the previous year.