Release date: February, 2011
CCST released the preliminary
assessment of California's Science and Technology (S&T) Innovation 'Ecosystem' on January 20,
offering a specific list of recommendations for legislators to enhance the state's ability to foster
and benefit from innovation.
This document was produced in response to a request from a bi-partisan
group of California Legislators, which asked CCST to assess the state's innovation 'ecosystem' and offer a specific list of recommendations for legislators to enhance the state's ability to foster
and benefit from innovation.
To prepare its response to the Legislators'
request, CCST convened a series of roundtables with academic, industry and research leaders across
the state in late 2010 to seek their input on the challenges faced by California and possible
solutions that could be achieved by building from California's S&T capacity. From these meetings,
CCST identified two key strategies essential to achieve this task:
-
Developing and leveraging public-private partnerships linking California's assets in education,
research, technology, finance, and philanthropy to create social and technical innovations that
competitors with less complete infrastructure cannot match.
- Enlisting California's
international competitiveness by enlisting California's S&T community in finding solutions to two of
the State's major challenges, education and water.
The primary recommendation in the assessment is to bring together public and private leaders to
focus on California's innovation and competitiveness infrastructure. This 'Innovation Action Team
(IAT)', comprised of leaders from universities, industry, and government, will be charged to develop
an Innovation Roadmap that will include specific recommendations for improving California's critical
innovation infrastructure, according to the report.
This preliminary report and the roundtable summaries represent Phase I of a three phase project. More
detailed recommendations are to follow by the end of May 2011.