Entries Tagged as 'business'

COM.BR (Brazil) register Domains changes

By decision of the CGI.br, the domain COM.BR, to activities Generic trade on the Internet, can also be registered under a CPF. That is, people with natural and related business activities Could register domains COM.BR.

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Building an innovation nation: unlocking UK talent, raising productivity, boosting our economy

John Denham launches White Paper to make the UK the best place in the world for innovation The power of Government spending must be harnessed to create demand for new innovative products and services, concludes a White Paper published today.

Innovation Nation sets out the Government’s aim to make the UK the best place in the world to run an innovative business or public service. It argues that innovation is essential to the UK’s future prosperity and the ability to tackle major challenges like climate change.

Today’s announcement comes after yesterday’s budget in which the Chancellor said he would look into the practicality of setting a goal for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to win 30 per cent of all public sector business in the next five years.

The paper spells out how the Government creates demand and new markets through £150 billion in public spending on goods and services each year alongside its regulatory responses to global challenges such as global warming.

The White Paper sets out a number of practical measures to ensure that businesses and people in the UK are best placed to benefit from the new opportunities and prosperity created by the demand for innovation. Immediate steps include a commitment for each Government department to publish an Innovation Procurement Plan as part of its commercial strategy. This will set out how departments will embed innovation at the heart of procurement practices encouraging them to engage with businesses at an early stage. The White Paper also initiates work to review the role regulation can play in promoting innovation by the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS), the Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR) and the Business Council for Britain.

The paper considers how Government and society respond to changes in innovation across the public, private and third sectors. Other key themes are further supporting innovative businesses and research; increasing exchanges of knowledge; boosting the supply of skilled people; supporting innovative towns and regions and promoting innovation in the public sector.

Headline commitments include:

* Supporting businesses in tapping into the demands of new markets in the UK by bringing forward five new ‘innovation platforms’ to co-ordinate Government support and funding to firms and organisations involved in developing new products and solutions to global challenges – this builds on the innovative approach developed by the Technology Strategy Board (TSB) to successfully co-ordinate Government support for the development of low carbon cars, for example;

* A new initiative to provide at least 1,000 ‘innovation vouchers’ every year by 2011, helping support and fund small and medium-sized businesses to work with a university, further education college or research organisation of their choice to develop a new product or service;

* Doubling the number of Knowledge Transfer Partnerships between businesses, universities and colleges to boost competitiveness and productivity alongside a greater exchange of innovation expertise between the private sector and Government led by DIUS and the TSB;

* Piloting of a new Specialisation and Innovation Fund to boost the capacity of further education colleges to unlock workforce talent and to support businesses in raising innovation potential;

* Expanding the network of National Skills Academies with one academy for every major sector of the economy;

* Piloting a new Innovation Index in 2009 to measure UK innovation managed by the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts (NESTA) in partnership with the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Design Council, the CBI and others. A fuller system will be in place by 2010;

* Sponsoring new Partnerships for Innovation bringing together venture capital with universities, business and other local partners to jointly develop innovative solutions to local and regional challenges. DIUS will publish a prospectus in the autumn;

* Establishing an Innovation Research Centre in partnership with the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), NESTA and the TSB;

* Boosting the ability of small firms to exploit their intellectual property by training Business Link advisors in IP management by the summer of 2009;

* A new Annual Innovation Review to provide a comprehensive annual assessment of promoting innovation in the public and private sectors. The first of these will be published this autumn.

Launching the White Paper, John Denham, Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills, said:

“We must make the UK the best place in the world to run an innovative business or public service, where innovation can flourish across every area of the economy.

“It is the British people who will create a world beating innovation nation and that is why we must unlock talent at all levels by investing in skills, research and the exploitation of knowledge. But we can achieve much more if we harness the power of Government as the UK economy’s biggest customer to create new markets and demand to benefit innovative businesses and people in Britain.

“Innovation will be the key to some of the biggest challenges facing our society, like global warming and sustainable development. We need to ensure that Britain contributes to the innovative solutions and that British business and the British people benefit from the new opportunities and prosperity they create.”

The paper outlines how the nature of innovation, defined as the successful exploitation of new ideas, is changing. Traditionally, the UK’s innovation policy has been concentrated on high-tech manufacturing. While this will remain vitally important, it is argued that increasingly innovation applies to a wider range of products, services, business processes, models, marketing and enabling technologies used by companies, organisations, industries and sectors.

Innovation Nation makes an assessment of the UK innovation system highlighting the UK’s many strengths such as its research base, open economy, excellent universities and good levels of business innovation. However, it also outlines areas in which improvement is needed, for example in increasing business demand for skills, boosting skills to successfully innovate and increasing business investment in Research and Development and in non-technological innovation.

Iain Gray, Chief Executive of the Technology Strategy Board, said:

“This White Paper presents a huge opportunity to address challenges through innovation, and for Government to be an exemplar of innovation across all Departments, in turn stimulating innovation and R&D investment throughout business.

“The Technology Strategy Board has a key role to play in addressing these opportunities and accelerating innovation. Working closely with partners, our initiatives and investments will make new connections and act as a catalyst for new areas of business innovation, making a real difference to the prosperity and global competitiveness of the UK.”

Anne Glover, Chief Executive of Amadeus Capital Partners Ltd, who has been asked by the Chancellor to look into what barriers can be removed to allow SMEs to win more public sector business, said:

“I’m excited to take on responsibility for advising Government on the greater involvement of SMEs in Government procurement. Many small businesses are highly innovative and by taking account of innovation in the public procurement process the Government can achieve both value for money and greater engagement with SMEs.”

The strategy builds on themes around innovation raised in Lord Sainsbury’s Review of Government’s Science and Innovation Policies, published in October 2007. The Government has today published a progress report highlighting that the Government has or is in the process of implementing the review’s recommendations.

Notes to editors

1. Innovation Nation was published at 9.30am on Thursday 13 March by Written Ministerial Statement. The statement also published Implementing “The Race to the Top”: Lord Sainsbury’s Review of Government’s Science and Innovation Policies. The White Paper, Sainsbury progress report and the accompanying WMS can be viewed online at http://www.dius.gov.uk. Yesterday’s Budget can be found at http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/budget/budget_08/bud_bud08_index.cfm

2. The White Paper sets out an ambitious agenda for the UK’s innovation policy and is the first such strategy published since the creation of DIUS. A full breakdown of Government commitments made in the White Paper can be found in the executive summary of the document. The paper builds on the Government’s knowledge economy programme, launched in 1998, the 2003 Innovation Report, the 2004 Science and Innovation Investment Framework. It further builds on Lord Sainsbury’s recent review of science and innovation policy, to set out a modern framework for improving Britain’s capacity for innovation across society.

3. Government procurement spending totals around £150 billion a year, according to the UK Government Sustainable Procurement Action Plan 2007. This figure includes around £45 billion from Local Authorities. Today’s strategy commits each Government department to publish an Innovation Procurement Plan during 2008 setting out how it will embed innovation in its procurement practices and seek to use innovative procurement mechanisms. Plans will include details of how departments and the agencies they sponsor will seek to increase their procurement of innovative products and services, fulfil their commitments under existing initiatives, such as the Small Business Research Initiative, and how they will make use of innovative procurement mechanisms from 2009-10.

4. The creation of DIUS as a champion for innovation across the board is an important step towards building an Innovation Nation. DIUS brings together three of the main drivers of economic success in the 21st Century – the skills people bring to the workforce, support for science and research, and a responsibility for driving innovation. Its work – on further and higher education, science and technology, intellectual property, and supporting evidence-based policy making across Government – is central to national prosperity. It is just as important to our national wellbeing. Skills offer us all the means to better wages and more secure lives. Learning raises aspirations and helps to create a society where no-one is left behind. With responsibility for all post-19 learning – from basic literacy to postdoctoral level – DIUS will help improve the nation’s skills at every level, with provision for people at every stage of their adult lives.

5. The Technology Strategy Board is a business-focused organisation dedicated to promoting technology-enabled innovation across the UK. Established as an executive body at arm’s length from Government in July 2007, the organisation is sponsored by the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS). Its vision is for the UK to be seen as a global leader in innovation and a magnet for technology-intensive companies, where new technology is applied rapidly and effectively to create wealth. It invests in research and development; builds partnerships between business, research and Government to address major societal challenges; and runs a wide range of knowledge exchange programmes to help innovation flourish. With a leading role in UK innovation, it helps to build and maintain the country’s global competitiveness. More at http://www.innovateuk.org/

6. The Leitch Review of Skills, Prosperity for all in the global economy – world class skills, was commissioned by the Treasury in 2004 and published on 5 December 2006. The Review sets out a compelling vision for the UK. It shows that the UK must urgently raise achievements at all levels of skills and recommends that it commit to becoming a world leader in skills by 2020. The full report is available at: http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/independent_reviews/leitch_review/review_leitch_index.cfm

Written Ministerial Statement:

Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills
‘Innovation Nation’: a White Paper on Science and Innovation and
Implementing “The Race to the Top”: the response to Lord Sainsbury’s Review of Government’s Science and Innovation Policies

The Secretary of State for Science & Innovation (Mr John Denham):

Today I am publishing two documents ‘Innovation Nation’: a White Paper on Science and Innovation and Implementing “The Race to the Top”: the response to Lord Sainsbury’s Review of Government’s Science and Innovation Policies.

The White Paper sets out what Government will do to ensure innovation can flourish across every area of our economy – in business, the third sector, and in the public sector.

We want to make Britain the best country in the world to run an innovative business or public service. We can do this by investing in people and knowledge, unlocking talent at all levels, by investing in research and in the exploitation of knowledge and by using regulation, public procurement and public services to shape the market for innovative solutions.

This White Paper marks a step change in the way we describe, understand and develop the Government’s role in creating the best conditions for innovation. We need to ensure that Britain contributes to the innovative solutions that will be needed if we are to tackle the big challenges of the 21st century, like global warming and sustainable development, and that British business and the British people benefit from the new opportunities and prosperity they create.

In our response to “The Race to the Top”: Lord Sainsbury’s Review of Government’s Science and Innovation Policies which was published in October 2007 we outline the Government’s progress in implementing the recommendations set out in Lord Sainsbury’s Review.

The Government has made good progress at implementing the recommendations. All recommendations have either been implemented or are in the process of implementation.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank David Sainsbury for his work on the Review, which has been a catalyst for our further work on science and innovation.

Source: gnn.gov.uk

Innovation nation – Unlocking talent

Gizmodo Bill Gates Interview – CES 2008 Las Vegas

Business Leaders Adopt Decaration on Responsible Business Practices

As Global Compact Leaders Summit closes in Geneva, participants pledge to pursue a more sustainable and inclusive economy

(Geneva, 6 July, 2007) — Business leaders from developed and developing countries today pledged to comply with labour, human rights, environmental and anti-corruption standards as a two-day conference closed in Geneva.

At the second United Nations Global Compact Leaders Summit, top executives of corporations such as Coca-Cola, Petrobras, Fuji Xerox, China Ocean Shipping Group, Tata Steel, L M Ericsson and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria adopted the 21-point Geneva Declaration, which spells out concrete actions for business, governments and United Nations Global Compact participants.

Some 4,000 organizations from 116 countries — among them trade unions, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and some 3,100 businesses — have so far subscribed to the Global Compact, pledging to observe ten universal principles related to human rights, labour rights, the environment and the struggle against corruption.

The Geneva Declaration expresses the belief that “globalization, if rooted in universal principles, has the power to improve our world fundamentally — delivering economic and social benefits to people, communities and markets everywhere”.

“The need for action is urgent,” the document says. “Poverty, income inequality, protectionism and the absence of decent work opportunities pose serious threats to world peace and markets”.

“Business, as a key agent of globalization, can be an enormous force for good”, the Declaration says, adding that companies, by committing themselves to corporate citizenship, can create and deliver value in the widest possible terms. Globalization can thus act as an accelerator for spreading universal principles, creating a values-oriented competition for a “race to the top”.

Summing up the outcome of the meeting, Secretary-General Ban-ki Moon told participants that “through several groundbreaking reports, you have made it abundantly clear that market leadership and sustainability leadership go hand-in-hand. This will help us build the supportive measures needed to create more sustainable markets. And it will ultimately help improve the lives of many people around the world.”

Stressing that the voluntary character of the Compact “does not mean unaccountable,” Mr. Ban called on business leaders to convene board meetings to share developments at the Summit, and ensure that the Global Compact is fully implemented within their companies and through their suppliers and business partners.

The Secretary-General called on civil society and labour leaders “to remain vigilant and engaged and continue to hold businesses accountable for their commitments.” He called on governments to support the Global Compact as a unique public-private partnership initiative. And he called on the United Nations to integrate the Global Compact principles throughout the Organization.

“Together, through the Geneva Declaration, we have deepened our collective commitment to embedding universal values in economies and markets,” Mr. Ban said. “Let us each do our share to give practical meaning to the Declaration.”

“Dear friends, together we can achieve a new phase of globalization — one that creates inclusive and sustainable markets, builds development and enhances international cooperation. We each have a responsibility in moving our agenda forward. Let us leave here today with renewed commitment.”

“We had a remarkable successful meeting,” said Anglo American Chairman Sir Mark Moody-Stuart at the closing plenary. “At the first summit three years ago, many companies subscribed to the Global Compact principles because it sounded like the right thing to do, but did not really know how to put them into practice. We are now moving forward towards implementation.”

Today, a Ministerial Roundtable chaired by General Assembly President Sheikha Haya Rashed al Khalifa discussed the role of governments in promoting responsible corporate citizenship.

Also today, six parallel sessions focused on human rights, labour, climate change and the environment, United Nations-business partnerships, corruption and responsible investment. Speakers included United Nations Human Rights High Commissioner Louise Arbour, International Labour Organization Director-General Juan Somavia, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Chairman Rajendra K. Pachauri, United Nations Environment Programme Executive Director Achim Steiner, Nestlé Chief Financial Officer Paul Polman, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa and Goldman Sachs Chief Investment Officer Anthony Ling.

On the role of business in society, the Declaration notes that responsible business practices contribute to social and economic inclusion, helping to advance international cooperation, peace, development and human rights protection. It invites businesses to establish partnerships and collaboration with governments, civil society and labour, and states that in countries afflicted by conflict or weak governance investors and companies can play a more helpful role by engaging rather than divesting — provided they act in line with the Global Compact principles.

Investors should encourage companies to be transparent and to pursue responsible business practices, the Declaration says, while lenders should ensure that their loans are in line with international standards. Investors should also urge governments to act responsibly and uphold laws and international norms.

Governments should cultivate environments with effective economic institutions and supportive policy to promote stability, transparency and entrepreneurship, says the Declaration. Governments should also support an open international trading system, discourage protectionism and ratify and implement international instruments on labour standards and against corruption.

For their part, Global Compact Participants should follow a principles-based approach in their strategy, operations and culture, the Declaration says. This involves encouraging supply chain and business partners to commit to the Compact’s ten principles, and carry out advocacy on climate change and development.

Global as well as local initiatives were launched at the Summit. Through the “Caring for Climate” platform, Chief executive officers (CEOs) of 150 companies from around the world — including 30 from the Fortune Global 500 — pledged to speed up action on climate change and called on governments to agree as soon as possible on Kyoto follow-up measures to secure workable and inclusive climate market mechanisms.

The CEOs of six corporations — The Coca-Cola Company, Levi Strauss & Co., Läckeby Water Group, Nestlé S.A., SABMiller and Suez — urged their business peers everywhere to take immediate action to address the global water crisis. They launched “The CEO Water Mandate”, a project designed to help companies to better manage water use in their operations and throughout their supply chains.

Also launched at the Summit, the “Principles for Responsible Investment” seek to disseminate the tenets of corporate citizenship among capital markets. The “Principles for Responsible Management Education” seek to take the case for universal values and business into business schools around the world.

A total of 1,027 people registered for the Summit — 638 from companies, 95 from government entities, 76 from international organizations, 65 from international business organizations, 62 from international NGOs, 45 from academia, 28 from the Global Compact network, 13 from foundations and five from international labour organizations.

The first Global Compact Leaders Summit took place in New York in 2004, and the next is planned for 2010.

Please click here to download the Geneva Declaration

For more information, please visit http://www.globalcompactsummit.org or contact Gavin Power, Global Compact Senior Advisor and Head of Public Affairs, at + 41 79 629 4482; powerg@un.org; or Matthias Stausberg, Global Compact Spokesperson, at + 41 79 629 4431; stausberg@un.org.

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