SETU enters €1.34 million European partnership project 

The project is a transformative initiative aimed at fostering entrepreneurial talent and strengthening innovation capacity across Europe
SETU enters €1.34 million European partnership project 

Prof. Marie Claire Van hout, Vice President for Research, Innovation, and Impact at SETU is pictured with Prof. Helen Hughes, Dr James O'Sullivan, Dr Ultan McCarthy, Rachel O'Dowd, and Prof. William O'Gorman. Pic: George Goulding (SETU)

South East Technological University (SETU) has been awarded funding as part of a prestigious European consortium delivering the BECEE project – Balanced and Enhanced Collaboration for an Entrepreneurship Ecosystem.

The project is a transformative initiative aimed at fostering entrepreneurial talent and strengthening innovation capacity across Europe.

Led by Rachel O'Dowd, Prof. Helen Hughes, and Dr Ultan Mc Carthy, from SETU’s Department of Land Sciences, with Dr James O'Sullivan, Head of Innovation and Commercialisation at SETU, the project is delivered in close collaboration with Professor Bill O'Gorman of Dungarvan Enterprise Centre. 

BECEE is supported by the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT), with cross-funding and endorsement from EIT Digital, EIT Climate, EIT Food, and EIT Health.

The €1.34 million project brings together four forward-looking higher education institutions - Hanze University of Applied Sciences (Netherlands), Zurich University of Applied Sciences (Switzerland), South East Technological University (Ireland) and Universiteti 'Aleksandër Moisiu' Durrës (Albania). They will work in tandem with four innovation-driven enterprises: KPN (Eindhoven, Netherlands), Innofuse (Zurich, Switzerland), Dungarvan Enterprise Centre (Ireland), and Linda Laboratory (Durrës, Albania).

Speaking about SETU’s role, Professor Helen Hughes said: “We are hugely excited by the opportunity to be part of this excellent European consortium furthering innovative solutions, strengthening and supporting our entrepreneurial talent in the region in conjunction with our industrial partner Dungarvan Enterprise Centre."

"It further strengthens the focus and expertise available within the Department of Land Sciences for entrepreneurship that has been developing across the last decade," she said.

A spokesperson for SETU said the project will have a tangible impact on regional and national entrepreneurship by developing practical, scalable models to support innovators, start-ups and SMEs. 

Activities will include training, mentorship, policy development and new pathways for academic-industry engagement.

Dr James O'Sullivan noted: “This initiative reflects SETU’s deepening commitment to delivering innovation and knowledge exchange across our region, working hand in hand with our enterprise partners to create a more resilient, sustainable, and inclusive entrepreneurial ecosystem.” 

Meanwhile the SETU spokesperson said the project is already underway and will roll out activities over the next two years across the partner regions and that it aligns strongly with the university's focus on collaboration, regional development and addressing key societal challenges through innovation.

For more information on the project go to https://eit-hei.eu/projects/becee/

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