The four winners of the European Inventor of the Year 2008 award have been
revealed at a gala event in Slovenia as part of the European Patent Forum.
Entries included a ground-breaking Aids treatment, a lighter and more
environmentally friendly aluminium car frame, a pain-free laser scanner for the
eye and a robot designed to overhaul medical surgery.
The awards were jointly instituted by the European Commission and the
European Patent Office, and are considered to be one of Europe's top innovation
prizes.
"All winners of the European Inventor of the Year 2008 award developed truly
groundbreaking inventions," said Gunter Verheugen, vice president of the
European Commission.
"They are evidence of Europe's innovative strength and competitiveness.
Promoting innovation remains a top priority for creating jobs and growth."
The international jury considered inventions patented and successfully
marketed between 1993 and 2002, looking for innovations that have made a
significant and lasting contribution to technical progress in Europe and beyond.
"The award winners have excelled in their creative achievements, and their
success demonstrates the importance of patent protection in the invention
process," said Alison Brimelow, president of the European Patent Office.
"If we want to tackle climate change or develop new ways of treating
diseases, we need a quality-oriented patent system which stimulates and sustains
innovation.
"The intellectual property system can be a pivotal element in the efficient
diffusion of cutting-edge technologies, as this year's awards clearly
demonstrate."
The jury selected the winners in the following categories:
Industry: Audi's Norbert Enning, Ulrich Klages, Heinrich
Timm, Gundolf Kreis, Alois Feldschmid, Christian Dornberg and Karl Reiter
(Germany) for revolutionising automotive manufacturing by making car frames
lighter and safer through the use of aluminium.
SMEs and Research: Douglas Anderson, Robert Henderson and
Roger Lucas of Scotland's SME Optos (UK) for developing a new laser scanning
technology for the eye which allows powerful but pain-free examination of the
retina.
Lifetime Achievement: Erik De Clercq of the University of
Leuven (Belgium) for landmark contributions to antiviral treatment, including
the development of the drug cocktail for Aids which has become the gold standard
of our day.
Non-European Inventors: SRI International's Philip S. Green
(US) for developing a robotic surgical system that has helped to improve surgery
in Europe by allowing surgeons to perform complex procedures with the highest
precision.
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