Gifted guardians of life and the environment: Europe honours the inventors of the year

04-May-2009 - Czechia

Health and the environment were the big winners when the European Commission and the European Patent Office presented the 2009 European Inventor of the Year awards. In the presence of the Head of the Czech Parliament Miloslav Vlcek and over 400 guests in Prague Castle, EPO President Alison Brimelow and Heinz Zourek, Director General in DG Enterprise and Industry, honoured inventors in four different categories:

Lifetime achievement: Adolf Goetzberger (Germany) for his work on the commercial use of solar energy, helping to make solar cells a viable alternative to fossil fuels.

Industry: Jürg Zimmermann (Switzerland) and Brian Druker (USA) for the invention of an effective drug to combat chronic myelogenous leukaemia, providing unprecedented rates of recovery.

SMEs/research: Joseph Le Mer (France) for inventing a heat exchanger of such a brilliantly simple design that it makes heating systems both inexpensive and energy-efficient.

Non-European countries: Zhou Yiqing (China) for his anti-malaria drug based on a herbal agent, which has been instrumental in saving hundreds of thousands of lives.

The four prizewinners were chosen by an independent international jury, which this year included Jonathan Liebenau of the London School of Economics; Jürgen Dormann, former CEO of ABB; Emma Marcegaglia, entrepreneur and head of Confindustria, the Confederation of Italian Industry; and Ernst-Ludwig Winnacker, Secretary General of the European Research Council.

The European Inventor of the Year stands out among the many prizes for innovation on account of its geographical scope and unique selection procedure. In its nominations the jury considered candidates from an open competition and was also able to call upon the expertise of examiners at the national patent offices and the EPO. It chose from among commercially successful inventions patented by the EPO before 1 January 2004. The awards are purely symbolic and do not include a cash prize or other material reward.

The awards are a joint initiative of the European Commission and the European Patent Office, launched in 2006. They honour inventors and inventions that have made a significant and lasting contribution to technological progress in Europe and so to strengthening the European economy. They are presented once a year in four categories: Lifetime achievement, Industry, SMEs/research and Non-European countries.

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