Preparing Mannheim : discussion with Karel Vanderpoorten

This meeting was a dual initiative from Jeanne Bretécher, president of the association Social Good Accelerator and Karel Vanderpoorten, Policy Officer within the Social Economy Unit, DG Grow of European Commission, to bring people around the table on developments for the digital sector.

First, Dana Eleftheriadou (Advanced Technologies and Digital Transformation Team, European Commission) and Davor Meersman (CEO, OAS Cities) mentioned the role of smart cities in green and digital recoveries. Initially, their marketplace aims to make them known through a common sharing of good practices.

Mr Meersman highlighted what consists of today’s main issues. Indeed, he maintained that people look at the local level, which is very relevant, but they have troubles to find solutions and knowledge at that level. It explains why such initiatives like Tech4Good were launched. Then, the Social Good Accelerator added that the crisis also proved that most of those who suffer from the digital gap are small local organisations far from those tools. The main need on the social economy’s side is the upskilling one.

In a certain way, these topics are developed in the current opened consultation by the European Commission for the EU action plan for social economy.

Guillaume Jasson (Fantastique Bazar) continued by mentioning the issue of digital and cultural gaps (with scaling for instance). These are many reasons why the model of commons would be relevant to develop for the social economy, SOGA said. In France, examples on digital mediation already exist and promote the implementation of digital solutions for the territories. In that sense, it would be interesting to go in that direction, which could even consist as a key point for the action plan. To resolve such shortages, one of our following projects, the Social Good Atlas, would help many stakeholders to help implement local and social solutions. Community building seems to be a solution, in which the EU should invest more.

Beside, Denis Stokkink (Pour La Solidarité) maintained that there are many social economy stakeholders in the digital sector, but they don’t necessarily realise it. In a previous policy paper, Pour La Solidarité made a note on blockchain and social economy. The first reactions were skeptical, because many think that such tools are not for social economy. They are not necessarily aware of good practices related to such innovations.

Image credits © 2020 European Venture Philanthropy Association.
Fantastique Bazar. Pour La Solidarité

European Call for Projects by Cap Digital : DigiCirc (deadline January 14th 2021)

The European project DigiCirc launches the 1st call for projects dedicated to the CIRCULAR CITY.

 
Coordinated by Cap Digital, the European project DigiCirc brings together 10 partners from 9 countries. Its objective is to make our economy more circular by relying on digital technologies.
 
With €2.4 million of cascading funding, the project will support European SMEs in developing digital solutions to address the challenges identified in the following sectors: the circular city, blue growth and the bio-economy.
 
In this 1st call for projects, we are looking for innovative digital solutions that meet the challenges of the circular city, i.e. innovations that can increase the efficiency of cities, reduce their ecological footprint and the health costs of their inhabitants.
 
Proposals must be submitted by consortia of at least two SMEs/start-ups.
 
The selected consortia will be eligible to benefit from :
 
Up to 60K€ of funding per SME/start-up;
An intensive 12-week acceleration program;
Individual and personalized business and thematic coaching by experts;
Access to tools to test and develop their digital solutions.
 
>> Closing date for applications: January 14, 2021 at 5:00 pm CET <<
We invite you to subscribe to the newsletter to learn more and receive the latest news of the project.
 
Contact: julia.morawski (a) capdigital.com
 
The DigiCirc team
SOGA EU  : Social Economy Digital Road to Mannheim

SOGA EU : Social Economy Digital Road to Mannheim

The Road to EU Social Economy Summit, Mannheim, May 2021

Tallinn, Estonia, november 2020

In her letter of intent to David Maria Sassoli, President of the European Parliament, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is currently holding the EU Council Presidency, accompanying her State of the Union address, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen confirmed that the Action Plan for the Social Economy will be among the initiatives for 2021. The Commissioner for Jobs and Social Rights, Nicolas Schmit is currently preparing this plan and he should publish it during the European Social Economy Summit’ on 26 – 27 May 2021 in Mannheim and make it approved in the second half of 2021.

Why should this European Action Plan for the Social Economy be a key milestone for the European Commission and the SSE actors?

The document should provide with a new vision of the economic system and a key instrument to systematically integrate the social economy in the different socio-economic policies of the European Union, as well as in its actions to achieve the Sustainable Development Objectives (SDGs). The plan should highlight the fact third sector and social impact can play a transformative role and strengthen the capacity to react to crises. 

Indeed, there are currently 2 million social economy enterprises (cooperatives, mutual societies, non-profit associations, foundations and social enterprises) in Europe, representing 10% of all businesses in the EU. Approximately 6.3% of the working population is employed in this sector. During the coronavirus crisis the sector has become more visible and is seen by the European institutions as critical for Europe’s two priorities: the green and digital transitions. 

While the French Social Economy Month is beginning as every november since 11 years in France, and ESS France is lauching a Social Economy Republic platform, European institutions – 5 DG units including EU Commission DG Growth, Employment, Research & Innovation, EcFin and Connect – are working all together to prepare the plan along with European Economic and Social Comitee and Civil society partners, as our partners Social Economy Europe and Pour la Solidarité.

EU Commissioner for Jobs and Social Rights Nicolas Schmit, former Minister of Social Economy in Luxemburg, leading the Plan fo EU Commission, sees supporting social economy and social enterprises as a key part of building the sustainable future of Europe. In that prospect, he is well decided to move forward with the development of this plan. Therefore, he just appointed a new special advisor on social economy issues; Nicolas Hazard, a French entrepreneur and the founder and CEO of INCO, which invests and supports environmentally sustainable and socially responsible innovative companies.  In a meeting on 28th September with Finland’s Minister of Social Affais Aino-Kaisa Pekonen, he also indicated that the Action Plan would include the topic of social participation in order to support investment in the sector.

The work on the Plan will also go through the Digital Road to Mannheim 2021

Eight online events in preparation for the European Social Economy Summit. Each Roadmap event focuses on a specific topic and aims to connect different social economy actors in Europe in a highly interactive format, present best practices and use cases, and provide information in interactive sessions of changemakers across Europe. The first online event “New challenges, new innovations, new solidarities – Social Economy in the fight against COVID 19” has been held on September 24th and gathered close to 300 online participants. The next one ” Leaving no one behind Employment, upskilling and social inclusion in the changing world of work” will be organised on October 29th and will feature Manuela Geleng, Director – DG EMPL, Sebastien Darrigrand, General Director UDES – Union des employeurs de l’économie sociale et solidaire, and Trebor Scholz, Founding Director of the Institute for the Cooperative Digital Economy and the Platform Cooperativism Consortium, among speakers: https://www.euses2020.eu/exchange-events/october/.

We encourage everyone to attend and join as the monthly European Social Economy Exchange Events are an excellent opportunity to connect, learn and engage with a diverse audience representing the large variety of actors active in the field all over Europe. It is important for all actors of the SSE to help amplify their voices and stress the importance of significant economic rescue measures directed towards Social Economy actors and the role of SSE responses in fighting the pandemic and supporting post-Covid19 resilience.




Author
Arnaud Castaignet, Tech European expert and Administrator of SOGA EU
Tallinn, Estonia
november 2020