New report: Three concrete initiatives can unlock Europe's deep tech potential
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New report: Three concrete initiatives can unlock Europe's deep tech potential


A new report highlights three strategic initiatives that will foster research-based growth companies across Europe. DTU President Anders Bjarklev sees universities as key players in the movement towards European technological sovereignty.

Although Europe excels in research and creates innovative deep tech solutions with great potential, it struggles to scale up its startups into influential growth companies.

A new report, prepared for the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) by the international innovation platform Hello Tomorrow, identifies the challenges and outlines what it will take to solve them.

"It is clear that Europe has the potential through its excellent research environments, but lacks cohesion. Without a common action plan, we risk groundbreaking technologies never leaving the laboratory. Therefore, there is a task at hand to remove the barriers that are currently slowing down innovation," says DTU President Anders Bjarklev.

According to the report, the main barriers are a lack of capital, limited access to technical infrastructure, and regulatory obstacles across the 27 national borders of the European Union.
Therefore, the report proposes the following three strategic initiatives:
  • Positioning the Scaleup Europe Fund as a leading investor in deep tech companies. Among other things, by strategically focusing investments on Europe's critical technology areas, including quantum and biotechnology, and basing investments on technological advances rather than revenue.
  • Create a common access charter for advanced infrastructure across Europe. This will ensure that startups have more open and equal access to test facilities and pilot plants.
  • Establish "regulatory sandboxes" which, by streamlining Europe's 27 different national regulatory frameworks, can promote the testing of new solutions and faster implementation of technologies.
In addition, the report recommends that universities focus on attracting and retaining talent by rewarding the ability to combine research and innovation.

From ambition to action
The report bases its recommendations on extensive interviews and workshops with actors across the entire innovation ecosystem, including entrepreneurs, investors, and public institutions.

It is published ahead of the international innovation conference ASCEND, which is being held under the Danish EU Presidency and hosted by DTU. The aim is for key players from across the EU innovation ecosystem to meet and discuss how the EU's Startup and Scaleup Strategy, published in May, can be translated into concrete action.

The report's three strategic initiatives form the framework for the discussions.

"It is crucial that we use the conference as a platform to strengthen cooperation across EU members so that we can bring the initiatives to life. Ambition must be converted into action to create global impact, and technical universities play a key role in this," says DTU President Anders Bjarklev.

DTU can contribute with concrete experience
Specifically for European universities, the report recommends that they strengthen their role in the deep tech ecosystem by creating career paths for research talents that reward commercialisation. Additionally, they should actively contribute to regulatory sandboxes that provide technical and legal advice.

Anders Bjarklev points out that over the past 12 years, DTU has been working on research commercialisation, talent development, and building an innovation ecosystem that is now internationally recognised.

As a result, in 2024, DTU was ranked in Denmark's top three in terms of patent applications. In the same year, DTU-based startups accounted for 21 percent of the total venture capital invested in Denmark, while 120 startups emerged from DTU.
Now, with the DTU SkyFactory scaling hub, DTU aims to bridge the gap in the value chain that hinders growth.

"DTU SkyFactory is a breakthrough in the university world, putting the deep tech startups with the greatest potential into a framework that gives them full backing and support to grow," says Anders Bjarklev.

The ambition is for every tenth DTU startup to become a growth company with international impact. According to Anders Bjarklev, this is part of DTU's contribution to the common European solutions highlighted in the report.
Another part involves sharing DTU's experiences.

"DTU's work with innovation has enabled us to build up valuable knowledge that can make a difference. Our role is therefore to strengthen European cooperation by presenting a proposal for the ASCEND conference such as this one and at the same time sharing our experiences with others," Anders Bjarklev says.

The ASCEND innovation conference will take place on November 25-26 in Copenhagen. The conference aims to formulate several concrete inputs for the implementation of the EU's Startup and Scaleup Strategy.

About the report
The report From Strategy to Scale: Unlocking Europe's Deep Tech Potential is published ahead of the international innovation conference ASCEND, which will be held on 25–26 November in Copenhagen under the Danish EU Presidency, hosted by DTU.

Based on interviews and workshops with actors across the entire innovation ecosystem, the report highlights the barriers faced by Europe in creating scalable companies and the three strategic initiatives that can help remove these barriers.
The report is prepared by Hello Tomorrow, commissioned by DTU, and funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation.

Participants at the ASCEND conference will use the proposed strategic initiatives to discuss how EU member states can implement the EU's Startup and Scaleup Strategy, published in May 2025.

Among the speakers are:
  • Anders Overgaard Bjarklev, President, DTU
  • Margrethe Vestager, Chair of Board of Governors, DTU
  • Christina Egelund, Minister of Science and Higher Education, Denmark
  • Michiel Scheffer, President of the Board, EIC.
See the full list of speakers.
Attached files
  • From Strategy to Scale: Unlocking Europe's Deep Tech Potential - Ascend Innovation Pre-conference report by Hello Tomorrow (pdf).
  • Among other things, a new report recommends creating a common access charter for deep tech companies to advanced infrastructure throughout Europe. DTU Nanolab is one of the places that operates an ‘open access’ approach for companies to manufacture micro and quantum chips. Photo: Thomas Steen Sørensen
Regions: Europe, Denmark
Keywords: Applied science, Public Dialogue - applied science, Science, Public Dialogue - science, Society, Economics/Management, Business, Knowledge transfer, Universities & research

Disclaimer: AlphaGalileo is not responsible for the accuracy of content posted to AlphaGalileo by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the AlphaGalileo system.

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