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Inside Switzerland's Silicon Valley

Inside Switzerland's Silicon Valley

By:  Vawn Himmelsbach  On: 10 Nov 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Lessons Canada's tech sector can learn from Europe's most creative economy

Switzerland is known for expensive watches, handy knives and decadent chocolate. But whether it’s Rolex or Lindt, they all have quality in common.

Switzerland -- which is the size of Vermont and New Hampshire combined -- has no natural resources, and it’s located on one of the most expensive continents in the world. Yet it’s built itself into one of the most competitive economies, ranking second in the 2007-2008 Global Competitiveness Report, and third in the 2007-2008 Global IT Report, both published by the World Economic Forum.

Switzerland follows Japan among the world’s most innovative nations, according to “Innovation: Transforming the way Business Creates,” a 2007 report from the Economist Intelligence Unit. It has 148 biotech companies, and ranks first in immunology, molecular biology, pharmacology and physics. And it’s among the world’s top five countries in research and development for biotech and nano-technology, with more than 300 research groups at universities and other public institutions focusing on biotechnology.

Switzerland also has its own Silicon Valley of sorts. Y-Parc was designed as a science and technology park in the region of Yverdon-les-Bains, located in the centre of Europe; so far, 800 companies operate out of this region. Y-Parc plays an active role in promoting new technological innovations by providing an environment where university laboratories can develop concepts and ideas.

Here in Canada, we’re rich in natural resources, but many believe we’re too dependent on things that will eventually dry up. Switzerland can teach us a few lessons about how to build a knowledge-based economy — and be successful at it.

Solar island

Switzerland doesn’t pump out oil, but it’s putting R&D dollars into other forms of energy, such as the large-scale production of electricity through solar thermal power generation — a concept being tested by the Centre Suisse d’Electronique et de Microtechnique in Neuchatel.

CSEM is a not-for-profit private company under contract by the Swiss government to perform R&D in the areas of micro- and nano-technologies, with a mission of industrializing these technologies. Logitech, Siemens, Philips and Bosch are among its shareholders; CSEM relies on public/private partnerships for research, production development, prototyping, small-scale production and technology consulting. To date, it has more than 500 patents.

One project includes a concept called “solar islands” for the large-scale production of electricity and hydrogen. The idea is to build large solar islands that float in the sea; these will be fitted with solar thermal panels that convert solar energy into electricity and hydrogen at very low cost. Nolaris, a CSEM startup, developed a new technology for solar thermal panels that will be used on a prototype currently under construction in the United Arab Emirates, which will be fully operational by the end of this year. The first island will have a circular shape measuring 87 metres in diameter; it will hover above the desert sands and turn in the direction of the sun (the platform will correspond conceptually to the solar islands designed to be on the surface of the sea).


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Vawn Himmelsbach Vawn Himmelsbach is a Toronto-based journalist and regular contributor to IT World Canada's publications. She also writes about travel and runs the Web site http://GlobalNomad.ca.

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Comments (1)

Program Manager
by Derek Read 11/27/2008 12:00:00 AMThis was an interesting article. I don't disagree that Canada can learn from this. The article does seem to suggest that Swiss institutions are better at encouraging innovation (particularly startups). I'm not sure about the rest of Canada, but UBC has an excellent reputation in this area (even to the point of being the envy of some US universities when it comes to its policies), and (depending on how university startups are defined or counted) might be compared very favourably with the example in this article (EPFL in Lausanne). I believe UBC is (possibly) averaging 20 to 50 a year (again, depending on how you count these things).
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