IIII - Comité Expansion Economique du Puy de Dôme
Transcription
IIII - Comité Expansion Economique du Puy de Dôme
Aerial view of Volvic plant © Xavier LEFEBVRE Puy-de-Dôme: excellence in business and the art of living With infrastructure to optimise travel, superfast networks for effortless communication, space to set up new businesses, renowned centres of excellence and precious human resources brimming with energy, Puy-de-Dôme ensures excellence in business and the art of living. DEMOGRAPHIC DYNAMICS According to the latest figures released by INSEE, the French Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies, more people come to live in Puy-de-Dôme than those who leave. The county is expected to increase its population by 46,200 in exchanges with other French counties and foreign countries, according to forecasts for 2007-2040. The capital of Auvergne, Clermont-Ferrand, is a beneficiary of this trend, as it is beginning to rank among the top 10 cities in France for investors. Given current demographic dynamics and the ease of access to the property and land markets, which is more favourable than in other comparable cities, the return on investment is clearly worth considering. One heavyweight player from the furniture sector, the Swedish giant IKEA, made a smart move in choosing Clermont-Ferrand for its latest 24,000 m² site, which has just been inaugurated. a business cluster known as Le Damier, which operates on the music and imagery sector. Auvergne has a total of 8 clusters. 3 of these were established recently (with a focus on spa treatments, lumber and industrial efficiency), a great addition to the existing clusters, which include E2IA (eco-industry). On a larger scale, the county’s three competitiveness clusters – Céréales Vallée, Elastopôle and Viaméca – benefit from a pool of companies and researchers, as well as the presence of multinationals needed to ensure dynamic projects. 2 © CICE In the field of physics, the Université Blaise Pascal is placed around 200th worldwide on the University of Shanghai’s academic ranking. The Université d’Auvergne, which appears in the ranking for the first time, is among the top 10 French universities in terms of successful Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees, and is the 3rd best university in France for law, economics and management in terms of postgraduate employment rates. More than 15% of students in Auvergne’s universities are from overseas, attending as part of the Erasmus programme or international agreements. The cultural sector is every bit as impressive, including the Ecole Supérieure d’Art de Clermont Métropole, the unique possibility of completing a Master’s degree in sound engineering, and Greentech © Denis POURCHER EXCELLENCE RANKINGS AXIOBIB 650/85R38 TYRE © MICHELIN and its products now appear in some of the finest restaurants worldwide. Small SMEs have invested in niches in the luxury sector, including Cabiria which produces bronze and aluminium objects to be used by artists, designers, architects, etc. 70% of its production is exported. Cycles Victoire, founded in 2011 by young entrepreneurs from Clermont-Ferrand, has received international recognition through its collaboration with luxury brand Berluti: “they have revived French expertise in producing exceptional bicycles”. A total of 32 companies from the county of Puy-deDôme have been awarded the State accreditation as “Entreprises du patrimoine vivant” (living heritage businesses), which rewards French manufacturers for exceptional craft skills and industry par excellence. cutting-edge equipment that has received international recognition. This is the strength of Puy-de-Dôme: to make this exceptional quality of life available to industry and researchers. Jacques FOURNET President of the Puy-de-Dôme Committee for Economic Growth (Comité d’Expansion Économique du Puy-de-Dôme) QUALITY OF LIFE Finally, the county’s geographic features make it a unique location. The Clermont-Ferrand agglomeration is surrounded by two natural regional parks (Volcans d’Auvergne and Livradois-Forez), and the Puy mountain chain is due to be included on UNESCO’s list of world heritage sites. Such an environment does not only make for an exceptional quality of life but also underpins our scientific excellence. The Laboratoire d’Excellence (LaBex) Clervol, a volcanology research centre in Clermont-Ferrand, boasts unrivalled skill sets and © Allizé Plasturgie Automotive profiling © SNCP APRV © CRV Lastly, high-end manufacturing has brought growth to the leather/luxury sectors, which employs around 2,000 employees in Auvergne, with the notable example of the Hermès Group and its production units for luxury leather goods. Cutlery manufacturing in Thiers, which is currently undergoing a successful restructuring process, is also focusing on markets with high value added, © Office de tourisme du Sancy But Puy-de-Dôme continues to maintain a strong industrial presence, home to innovative activities on the biology and medical sectors, the manufacture of rubber products and plastics, aeronautics and groups with an international dimension: Michelin of course, but also Constellium, Sanofi, Limagrain, Laboratoires Merck Sharp & Dhome Chibret, Volvic, Aubert et Duval and others. And when it comes to companies with fewer than 10 employees, the latest figures released by INSEE show that they have a greater capacity to survive in the long term here than elsewhere in France. Field crops © Vincent BOUCHET STRONG INDUSTRIAL PRESENCE 3 PLATFORM SERVING A EUROPEAN EXCHANGES The high-speed POCL project could put ClermontFerrand just two hours from Paris for passengers. Parc de l’Aize © SYMPA In more concrete terms, as part of the east-west axis (A89), the development of the Balbigny motorway section in 2013 has cut a half an hour from the transit time between Clermont-Ferrand and Lyon, and a further reduction is expected once the final section has been completed (Tour de Salvagny – Lyon). © Produced by the Comité d’Expansion Économique du Puy-de-Dôme With its three motorways (A71, A75 and A89), Puy-de-Dôme serves as a technical transport hub. In terms of rail links, the high-speed POCL line (Paris / Orléans / Clermont / Lyon) has been included in plans to ease congestion on the Paris/Lyon rail link. And multimodal transport for merchandise is improving. With a central location in the transport network, Puy-de-Dôme is now identified as a strategic target for sustainable investment going forward. This transport route means that just 7 hours now separate Clermont from Turin by truck. And the Millau viaduct on the A75 enables trucks leaving Clermont to reach Barcelona in 7½ hours. As traffic intensifies, the north-south axis (A71/A75) increasingly serves as the intended alternative to the Rhone corridor in terms of distance, driving time and cost, especially since large sections of the A75 are toll-free. The success of this route is such that the increase in traffic volumes (from 45,000 to 60,000 vehicles per day in different sections) has led to an increase from 2 to 3 lanes on the A71 on the Gerzat toll/A75 section north of Clermont-Ferrand. 4 All of this has placed the county of Puy-de-Dôme in close proximity to the Rhône-Alpes and Paris markets, and by extension those of Italy, Spain and Switzerland. Auvergne has a positive trade balance (446 million euros in 2013), mainly due to its primary export sectors: rubber, pharmaceuticals and chemical products. More than half of Auvergne’s exports are made within the European Union, primarily to neighbouring countries. Puy-de-Dôme alone is responsible for two thirds of the region’s exports. In order to increase exports, the region has implemented a plan to encourage companies to expand internationally through specially adapted support programmes. With the same objective in mind, Clermont-Ferrand airport has just opened a new terminal, maintaining its essential role as a business airport in order to offer local companies the ability to develop internationally. Dachser © Jérôme CHABANNE Transport and the economy Further north, in Combronde, the Dachser Group has set up in the Parc de l’Aize, where it has expanded its activities. At the junction between the A71 (Paris-Clermont) and A89 (Lyon-Bordeaux), its 3rd biggest hub after Germany and Slovakia offers highly competitive logistics. It connects the main commercial centres of France and all of the Group’s agencies within just 24 hours. In order to meet the needs of the markets, professionals from this sector have integrated all of the supply chain services: goods transport and information transfers, logistics (storage, order picking and packaging), consolidation (networks, groupage and messaging), piloting and optimisation of transport flows, sustainable deliveries, development of specialised software, and e-commerce transport management. Some of these services are regrouped within Auvergne Logistique Développement, which accounts for 3,000 employees, 2,600 registered vehicles, 4 transloading platforms and 280,000 m² of storage. Another association has been set up to offer multimodal transport solutions. A group of around 10 companies, including Multitransports and ATR, came together to establish Auvergne Ferroviaire Développement. Ferovergne, which is majority owned by the Combronde Group, offers rail links for the transport of sea containers. Ferovergne currently operates one weekly connection between Clermont-Ferrand and Le Havre and three weekly connections between Clermont-Ferrand and Fos-sur-Mer, with stops in Saint-Etienne and Lyon. The multimodal platforms in Clermont-Ferrand and Saint-Etienne will soon offer bonded storage for these containers. Finally, qualified staff with diplomas provided by AFT-IFTIM, CCI Formation, Polytech and Groupe ESC complement offer from Certificate of Professional Competence up to Master’s level. The courses on offer cover all the needs of the logistics chain: head of logistics (4 years), Master’s degree specialised in logistics and international logistics (5 years), BTS (technical diploma) in transport and for senior technicians in logistical operating methods. © Jérôme CHABANNE Dascher © Jérôme CHABANNE Dedicated sites such as the Clermont Auvergne logistics site offer companies a physical presence in close proximity to key areas of consumerism and employment. 40 companies currently occupy its 156-ha site, representing 939 jobs. Companies with more than 20 employees include the Plane Group, Pomona, Norbert Dentressangle, Omnitrans, Atsm, Euromulticourses, Chronopost, Fenwick Linde, Fraikin, Maximo, Exapaq Clermont, Transports Star, Calberson Auvergne, and Auvergne Racing Pneumatique. Multitransports © Jérôme CHABANNE HOSTING AND LOGISTICS INFRASTRUCTURE © CSP FEROVERGNE – Clermont-Ferrand’s multimodal platform © Carine Sai As part of the European objective to reduce greenhouse gas emissions fourfold by 2050, multimodal goods transport is becoming increasingly structured. 5 INFRASTRUCTURES FOR THE DIGITAL ECONOMY With 100% coverage, Auvergne is a forerunner in highspeed broadband networks and is taking up a leading position in very high speed broadband. The entire region is set to enjoy speeds of more than 8 Mb/s by 2017, and 42% of homes are already at more than 100 Mb/s. The development of this new network is being organised by a public company, Auvergne Numérique. Digitalisation forms one of the 4 missions of Auvergne 2030, the outline for sustainably planning and developing the region, and makes provision, among other things, for forming and backing actions within the realm of the e-economy, e-education and e-health. Clermont-Ferrand has itself established a very highspeed network through a public service outsourcer, Clermont Networks. The availability rate is nearly 100% for the 200 locations currently connected to very high speed Internet. 180 kilometres of network connect community activity zones, public research centres, universities, higher education institutes and the hospital. It is also extended on a regular basis so as to link businesses which need it, above all affordably. its immersive cube, until then hosted in the Pascalis business centre. The Virtual Reality Centre enables interactive 3D simulations in real time. ISIMA is already playing host to 4 companies working on themes including Catopsys, which develops immersion solutions, and Reoviz, which specialises in augmented reality. Every year, a hundred or so students follow a unique computer engineering course with 5 areas of specialisation: embedded system computing, software engineering and computer systems, information systems and decision support tools, scientific calculation and modelling, and networks/telecommunication. For year 3, and an optional 4th year, ISIMA is also providing an introduction to research. Working with various laboratories has been fruitful, especially with the LASMEA (Automatics and Electronics Materials Sciences Laboratory), and through Gravir group, which works in artificial perception to produce tailor-made and autonomous automated systems. In Clermont-Ferrand, Pascalis has become a dedicated digital and ICT centre. This is a business centre and incubator that provides various services: access to secure very high speed broadband, a multimedia amphitheatre, company synergies etc. Finally, for professionals only, PRATIC is a resource and assistance centre dedicated to ICT and discussing digital best practices. There are close ties with higher education and research, especially with ISIMA (the French graduate engineering school focused on computing and its applications) which has recently incorporated the Virtual Reality Centre and Pascalis © Horizon Photographie / Clermont Communauté / Architectes: Jacques et Philippe Moinard 6 Robot © ISIMA The Data Centre, recently established start-ups and international digital companies, productively designed businesses. With R & D in magnetic systems, multimedia 3D designers, man-machine interface development etc., Puy-deDôme is a natural home to research and development. This requires brainpower, of course, but also the right environment and equipment (very high speed broadband, business centres, clusters etc.) provided by local authorities. Other laboratories are associated with research projects: LIMOS (Computer Science, Modelling and Systems Optimization Laboratory) The Corpuscular Physics Laboratory, which is renowned for its IT expertise in calculation grids. © ISIMA Information and Communication Technologies More generally speaking, training courses providing qualifications in software engineering, telecommunications, networks and infrastructures, web specialist software engineering and industrial data processing are also available in secondary schools, universities and institutes of technology. AUVERGNE TIC Companies in the ICT sector (700 businesses and more than 7,000 jobs) are still nearly all based in Puy-de-Dôme and especially Clermont-Ferrand. It assists in developing training courses suited to company requirements via, for example, its involvement in the upcoming Campus des Métiers and qualifications provided by ISIMA and the Lycée Lafayette, whilst promoting innovation and joint projects, especially between research and business, in areas such as cyber security, conference calls, connected objects etc. Some of the more notable examples are Vesalis with its facial recognition software, Exotic Systems, IP Leanware, Numtech for its environmental and atmospheric modelling, Openium, Veodis 3D, Yansis and CIPAM. Auvergne TIC is also working on new projects such as building a saw simulator - a world first - in partnership with Auvergne Promobois. ICT products are also available from other familiar names, including Neyrial, Adista and IBO. • ALMERYS, a major player in industrial processing of sensitive digital data including third party payments, which has physical infrastructures with very high security and confidentiality levels, for managing huge quantities of data on a daily basis. Perfect Memory is the latest major organisation to have relocated its business from Paris to Clermont-Ferrand. IBO has built an eco-centre in Cébazat that is among the most ecological in France, for 4 million Euros. Its business centre is home to around a hundred computer racks. Its services are based on developing a unique semantic software platform for managing, indexing and monetizing large quantities of multimedia content so as to transform it into knowledge. Its clients include Radio France and the RTBF. This start-up is looking to become a major name internationally in the semantic web. Implementation of an air quality monitoring system by Numtech © Numtech Campus © ISIMA • ALLEGORITHMIC is especially innovative, responding to problems encountered by video game companies concerning texturing. The products it provides automate various tasks from artists, enabling them to concentrate on their creativity. Its partners include Dassault Systèmes, Nvidia and Intel. An invitation to tender has enabled Auvergne to provide assistance to 7 young digital entrepreneurs who were selected from a hundred or so applications from all over France. Haptic arm © ISIMA It includes some innovative companies among its numbers: LATEST SETUPS © Perfect Memory At regional level, they are grouped in the Auvergne TIC cluster, which has 80 members representing around 3,000 jobs: SMEs and SMIs, large groups, research laboratories, training centres and public institutions. APRV © CRV French and foreign computer engineering service companies are widely represented, and include CGI, Sopra Group, IBM, Capgemini, Atos Origin, Orange and Cegi Alpha. 7 The impact of food on public health, along with environmental challenges and food safety regulations, have emphasised once again the importance of high-quality food produce, labels and PDO products. From family-run businesses to the largest international groups, meat and dairy products, cereals and water have made the agrifood industry the third largest industrial employer in Auvergne. AGRI-FOOD Ripening © Société Laitière de Laqueuille The agri-food business can be broadly divided up into the dairy, meat, cereal and drinks industries. More than one third of cheese production falls under the four PDO labels: Saint-Nectaire, Cantal, Bleu d’Auvergne and Fourme d’Ambert. Major groups such as Beuralia (Groupe SODIAAL) and the Compagnie des fromages Richemonts, as well as companies with more than 100 employees (e.g. Société Laitière des Volcans d’Auvergne), work alongside many SMEs: Laiterie de Laqueuille, Société Laitière des Monts d’Auvergne, Société Fromagère Les Terres d’Auvergne, Fromagerie Dischamps and others. 8 One fifth of France’s mineral water production takes place in Auvergne. The best-known example, Volvic (Groupe Danone), produces up to 7 million bottles per day. Volvic plant © JP MARLEIX / Société des eaux de Volvic The presence of global nutrition and agronomic research centres, as well as research and development units for the meat sector, is a source of excellence in this area. Retail groups (Intermarché, Leclerc), and even independent businesses, have shown an interest in this local resource by exploiting several springs: SainteMarguerite, Saint-Diéry, Laqueuille, Le Mont-Dore, Rozanna, Ardesy and Châteldon. More specifically, sugar is produced at the Sucrerie de Bourdon (which transforms sugar beet), the region’s longest-standing active sugar processing plant and the only one south of the river Loire. Other examples include Cruzilles SA, which for 130 years has produced Auvergne’s traditional fruit jellies and candied fruit, and STEVIA NATURA, the only European producer of a plantbased and calorie-free sweetener. As for the meat and bakery grain processing industries, these are represented by structured sectors that form a network with laboratories, research centres, higher-level institutes and universities. THE MEAT SECTOR The meat sector makes a major contribution to Puy-deDôme, with meat cutting and processing businesses, including Label Rouge (poultry production) and cured and salted meat producers (André Volailles, Domaine de Limagne, Le Clos Mally, SEDIVOL, Salaisons Polette, Limoujoux, Porc Centre, Salaisons Lassalas…). The meat sector is structured by an initiative taken 30 years ago to support businesses by coordinating research & development and training activities run locally (INRA Clermont-Ferrand – Theix – Lyon, Université Blaise Pascal, in particular its microbiology laboratory, ADIV, Lycée agricole Pasteur de Marmilhat, VetAgro-Sup). This expertise has received both national and international recognition. As a special partner of professionals from the meat sector, ADIV plays a dual role: as a benchmark agriindustrial technical institute involved in collective R&D programmes, and as a research company under contract offering specialist consultancy on technical and economic innovation. ADIV provides companies with services in R&D, auditing, consultancy and training. It has exceptional tools at its disposal, making it a unique centre in France and part of a select group of organisations worldwide. • An EEC-approved 1,000 m² trial platform for cutting and processing activities. This facilitates improvements in products, procedures and equipment both at the pilot stage and on an industrial scale. It also has an area for aging products. 1 IRSTEA: National Research Institute of Science and Technology for Environment and Agriculture 3 LASMEA: Sciences and Materials for Electronics and Automatic Systems Laboratory 2 LaMI: Mechanics and Engineering Laboratory 4 LIMOS : Computing, Modelling and Systems Optimisation Laboratory © Vincent BOUCHET / LIMAGRAIN Food/ Nutrition • A multi-purpose robotic cell • A laboratory for handling P2+ pathogens and conducting challenge tests on pathogens. THE CEREALS SECTOR With 8,000 jobs in the cereals sector, including 4,300 in the grain processing industry, cereals represent a significant proportion of Auvergne’s economy. Its collaboration with INRA, which includes a research unit working on genetic diversity and crop ecophysiology, resulted in the long term investment project Breedwheat, which is worth more than €35 million and is scheduled to last for 8 years. The objective of this programme is to produce new wheat varieties to meet the requirements of sustainable and viable agriculture. Finally, the European Whealbi project is of international importance. It is being coordinated by INRA and supported by 18 partners from 9 different countries, representing Europe’s top wheat and barley research laboratories working in areas like genomics and agronomics. © Vincent BOUCHET / LIMAGRAIN CÉRÉALES VALLÉE From a small organic muesli producer in Livradois-Forez right up to the Thiers-based German group Brüggen (which specialises in breakfast cereals), there is a broad spectrum of businesses in this sector. LIMAGRAIN is the private sector’s second largest employer in the Clermont-Ferrand area, the world’s fourth-largest seed producer, and France’s leading producer of bakery and pastry products. It has seen a twofold increase in revenue over a ten-year period, with sales of nearly €2 billion and a staff of 8,600 worldwide. In 2013/2014, the Group invested €188 million in research. In the same area, the Nutravita cluster draws on existing skills in food/nutrition/health (350 researchers, 35 companies and 2 technological resource centres). It is affiliated with CRNH Auvergne (Research Centre into Human Nutrition), which has received global recognition for its scientific excellence (150 publications annually). Together, they offer an integrated services platform which combines CRO (Contract Research Organization) and CMO (Contract Manufacturing Organization) with experiments on muscular and bone health, cardiometabolism and the digestive system. Research areas focus on the effects of food, nutrients and micronutrients on ageing, certain chronic pathologies, metabolism, etc. Finally, the Clermont-Ferrand-based Institut Carnot Qualiment® works specifically on the nutritional qualities of food. In support of its collaborative projects, the Céréales Vallée competitiveness cluster is naturally based in Puy-de-Dôme, at the heart of the Limagne plains. It brings together 500 representatives from both the public and private sectors, involved in research, the services industry and training in the cereals sector. The cluster focuses on 4 areas: sustainable agricultural production, human nutrition/health, animal feed and agri-materials. It has the following objectives: • develop new crop varieties based on a reading of genomes, • offer training designed to cope with changing business and technologies, • and serve as the interface between agricultural production, industry and consumers. The overall aim is to build up sustainable sectors for the creation of value and to produce the seeds of the future. FOOD-RELATED HEALTH Building on this is a comprehensive university-level teaching unit working in the area of nutrition/food/health: the Centre de Clermont d’Agro Paris Tech is a member of ESTIVE (Enseignement Sciences Technologiques et d’Innovation dans les domaines du Vivant et de l’Environnement). This scientific interest group also includes IRSTEA, INRA Clermont-Ferrand – Theix – Lyon Centre, and VetAgro-Sup (agronomic engineering school). © Vincent BOUCHET / LIMAGRAIN Finally, it includes two mixed technology units: • UMT Aprocel, for the “streamlining and improvement of processing procedures for meat products”, which is also partnered by the Université Blaise Pascal (represented by the Institut Pascal) and the Quapa unit of INRA’s Clermont-Ferrand – Theix centre. • UMT Mécaméo, which offers “dedicated mechatronic and robotic solutions for the meat industry” and is jointly represented by ADIV and the three governing bodies of the Institut Pascal (IFMA, Université Blaise Pascal and CNRS), as well as associate partner, CEA. © Florent GIFFARD / INRA ADIV also has laboratories for microbiological and chemical analysis, a laboratory for physical measurements and a mechanics/sheet metal workshop. 9 Auvergne ranks 4th or 6th for pharmaceuticals, depending on whether one counts firms or establishments, and in either case remains one of the leading French regions. The county of Puyde-Dôme employs three quarters of those working in the sector in Auvergne. More specifically its Health Cluster stands apart in the fields of nutrition and health, oncology, ophthalmology, perinatal care, medical imaging and pain management. Finally, life technologies are represented in Puy-de-Dôme in the food and plant industries (Green Chemistry Cluster) and nutrition. Les Laboratoires MSD Chibret Sanofi, located in Vertolaye, is one example. It is one of the most important sites in Europe for producing corticosteroids with a model workshop for the group in terms of micronisation and grinding of active ingredients. Sanofi has invested €150 million over the last three years in its Auvergne site. MSD Chibret has made its Riom site a centre for excellence in sterile products for Merck & Co in the fields of ophthalmology, antibiotics, infectious diseases and parasitology. Les Laboratoires Théa Laboratoires Théa, which celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2014, is ranked 6th worldwide and 4th in Europe in ophthalmology. Growth has been stimulated by international expansion (19 subsidiaries in Europe) and the launch of new products. Nearly 10% of sales (€295 million in 2013 compared to €270 million in 2012) is dedicated to Research & Development. Théa has recently joined the G5 Health association whose members include the main French firms in health and life sciences. Finally, Quantel Medical, with head offices in Puy-deDôme, has achieved a leading position worldwide in ocular sonography and laser photocoagulation. The firm is present in 110 countries with 22,000 machines set-up across the globe and has developed 15 innovations over the last 20 years. 10 © MSD Quantel Medical Other firms have been created locally and grown significantly to occupy strategic positions on French and international markets. The best example of this is Dômes Finance, a holding company that now has several laboratories in veterinary and human pharmaceuticals: TVM (leader in veterinary ophthalmology), Vétocentre (leader in pharmacies for the pet market), Europhartech (production of dry-form medications), etc. On more specific markets we can note these success stories: • The IRP (Institut de Recherche Pharmabiotique) has encouraged research and development in probiotics by creating a skills cluster and securing its legal status. • In the field of medical devices, we can cite the example of Prodont Hollinger, the first French designer and producer of dental instruments in stainless steel that has moved its production sites in Nice and Cholet to its existing site at Olliergues in Puy-de-Dôme. Also within the Livardois-Forez region, Top Clean Packaging is now a reference in the medical and pharmaceutical industry. The firm designs and injects ultra-clean technical devices in white rooms. Products include implants for long-term use (spine cages or subcutaneous ports) in biocompatible PEEK (Polyetheretherketone), a very strong polymer with an elasticity similar to bones, and electronic gastric bands in silicone. These represent technological breakthroughs for the firm as it has moved from plastics to the medical sector. © Europhartech The pharmaceutical industry is represented by firms that have invested heavily over the last few years. Three of them are recognized in the field of ophthalmology: More generally speaking, firms in the pharmaceutical industry have joined forces within the GIMRA (Groupement des Industries du Médicament). The organisation represents all the businesses involved in developing drugs, from research on new molecules to the production, commercialisation and distribution of medicines. Its members include around forty firms, some of which have major production sites. And at the other end of the chain is CSP (Centre Spécialités Pharmaceutiques), a firm that manages the entire logistics circuit by handling healthcare products from the factory gate, and ensuring their storage and distribution. The leading French depository for healthcare products, its premises meet all the current standards: temperature control, air conditioning, anti-dust surfaces, video surveillance... THE MEDICAL CLUSTER The Medical Cluster’s research teams are recognized for three broad areas of excellence: oncology, with teams from the CHU (university hospital) and the Gastric band © Top Clean Packaging THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY Greensea rhodella violacea © Copyright Greentech Health / Life technologies In the field of analgesics, the first European institute dedicated to transnational research and innovation in pain management has just been created in ClermontFerrand and calls on the expertise acquired over several years within the cluster. Analgésia Partnership includes 13 members, 5 public organisations and 8 private firms in Auvergne, but also other regions in Switzerland and Belgium. Clermont-Ferrand boasts an internationally renowned team in neuro-surgery and is working closely with imaging and digital technologies (computerassisted surgery). In the same building the CENTI (Centre d’Endoscopie et de Nouvelles Technologies Interventionnelles) includes several medical-surgical teams concerned with the future of surgery (robots, medical biotechnologies) and vascular exploration. It also is home to the ISIT unit, specialised in fundamental research in medical imaging and applied to gynaecology and cardiovascular disease. Other platforms exist, such as the CICS (Centre d’Imagerie Cellulaire Santé) and the CIC (Centre d’Imagerie Confocale) at the University of Auvergne. They have cutting-edge scientific equipment and dedicated skills for handling research or industrial projects. There is also a dedicated building for start-ups, the Centre Biomédical de Recherche et de Valorisation, with laboratories and work areas. BIOTECHNOLOGIES: SITES FOR PREMISES AND RESEARCH Ties between firms and universities, particularly the faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy, national research organisations (INRA, CNRS, CEMAGREF and INSERM) and engineering schools (VetAgroSup, Polytech, Chimie Clermont…) are extremely strong. There are fourteen specific undergraduate and graduate degree programs dedicated to biotechnologies, ranging from 2 to 8 years. A few other examples of firms located on the Biopôle include: • Neuronax, which has just obtained orphan drug status for the development of the NX210 molecule for treating spinal cord injuries • Roowin (fine chemicals) has transferred its business from the Paris area to the Riom site • ANS Biotech, which takes part in the Analgésia Partnership cluster • Aptys Pharmaceuticals, specialized in galenic and analytical development • Icare (service provider in contamination management) which hopes to triple its capacities in ten years thanks to an ambitious development plan • Greentech, one of the first firms to join the Biopôle • and many others... We must not overlook BUSI, a business incubator that promotes the creation of innovative start-ups in life sciences as well as engineering and ICT. BUSI offers a pre-creation structure (economic, legal, strategic and scientific assistance) and support during the creation phase (access to financing, support for research and organising partnerships). To provide a base for them, a technology cluster dedicated to bioindustries has been set up. Biopôle Clermont-Limagne includes three sites in Riom, SaintBeauzire and Clermont-Ferrand. It has a 20,000 m² Training at CICE © CICE Indeed, there is a great deal of imaging equipment that can be put to use in research. The CICE (Centre International de Chirurgie Endoscopique) was created in 1990 during a period where both surgical techniques and new imaging technologies were evolving. A recognised leader in gynaecology, the ClermontFerrand team has set up an experimental simulation centre dedicated to teaching. The centre is open to other specialisations and welcomes 1,500 individuals from around the world. business park that is highly equipped for activities in plant biotechnologies and others related to drug development and health. Firms have access to a complete range of amenities: premises, promotion, services, networks...There are currently around 50 firms located there. The SaintBeauzire site has specific day-care and company restaurant services. This is where Limagrain has its head offices. © Greentech Concerning cancer, research activities are conducted at CLARA (Cancéropôle Lyon Auvergne RhôneAlpes) in which teams from Clermont-Ferrand that also belong to the GRED (Génétique Reproduction Développement) coordinate research projects concerning, in particular: • the environment, nutrition, cancer • tumour escape mechanisms, cellular plasticity and targeted therapies For example, within the framework of CLARA’s "proof of concept" system, a project associating Cyclopharma and INSERM (French National Institute of Health and Medical Research) aims to improve diagnosis and provide more targeted treatment of melanoma. © Copyright Jérôme CHABANNE Centre Jean Perrin, neurosciences, with a strong focus on pain management, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease and nutrition, particularly during the ageing process and chronic illnesses, in cooperation with the CRNH Auvergne (Centre de Recherche en Nutrition Humaine). 11 The engineering sciences represented in Puy-de-Dôme include design engineering, management and industrial production, research and innovation, resulting in some of the world’s leading companies in the tyre, braiding and cable production sectors. Ancestral know-how is enhanced with modern technology in cutlery production. Subcontractors have also developed solutions for the automotive and aviation industries in their laboratories and engineering departments, or in partnership with engineering schools (IFMA, POLYTECH, Chimie Clermont, ISIMA and more) and public laboratories in the materials and mechanics field. AT THE CENTRE OF TWO COMPETITIVENESS CLUSTERS: ELASTOPÔLE AND VIAMÉCA Elastopôle, the rubber and polymers competitiveness cluster, is helping to develop new materials, products and processes. Its scientific committee consists of 14 members, including three in Puy-de-Dôme: Michelin, Socamont and CNEP. Michelin, the world’s 2nd largest tyre manufacturer recently strengthened its historic roots in ClermontFerrand by investing more than €270 million in its plans to modernise and expand its global technological innovation centre. It is called ‘RDI Campus’ (RDI: Research, Development and Industrialisation). • Socamont is specialised in the production of coloured and black rubber compounds. • CNEP (National Photoprotection Evaluation Centre) studies the long-term behaviour of polymer materials. CNEP, in cooperation with the photochemistry team at the Institute of Chemistry in Clermont-Ferrand (ICCF, CNRS, ENSCCF and Université Blaise Pascal), and surrounded by 40 major European industrial groups, is proving to be an original organisation with world scope. Other members of Elastopôle include industrial groups such as Valéo, Trelleborg Modym and Auvergne Caoutchouc as well as institutions of higher learning such as the Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Chimie (National Graduate School of Chemistry), which offers a variety of specialised courses on high-performance materials. Viaméca, the mechanics competitiveness cluster based in Clermont-Ferrand, has given its seal of approval to projects focusing on surface engineering, advanced manufacturing processes, intelligent and robotics systems and usage-centred and service engineering, a new area of focus developed in 2013. The Laboratoire d’Excellence Mobilité Innovante (IMobS3) has close ties to the cluster and is home to 7 laboratories. It has three main areas of focus: intelligent vehicles and machines, intelligent mobility services and systems and energy production processes for mobility. A founding member of the IMobS3 laboratory, the Institut Pascal concentrates on four thematic pillars: mechanics, materials and structures; perceptual images and systems; robotics; process, energy and biosystems engineering and photonics, waves and nanomaterials. It has created a cluster that gives structure to the field of engineering sciences and systems that are significant both nationally and internationally. 12 © Michelin / Cabinet Chaix et Morel • For example, POLYTECH Clermont is involved with the Institut Pascal through 50 of its lecturers/researchers. The school trains engineers in 6 specialised fields: biological engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, mathematical engineering and modelling, physical engineering and production systems engineering. It has developed two innovation platforms specialised in biological engineering (BIO-UP) and materials and structures (GEN’MAT). • IFMA is involved in many projects and recently created 2MAtech, a subsidiary that brings together the Auvergne-based technology platforms. The mechanical and industrial engineering activity operates with resources transferred by the technology transfer platform, Mec@prod, and the materials activity receives resources from Casimir, the Auvergne technology unit. Its collaboration with the École de Chimie (School of Chemistry) has resulted in the founding of a Mining School and a master’s degree programme in chemical and mechanical engineering. Elastopole - Automotive profiles July 2010 © SNCP Materials & Mechanics © ENSCCF / Joël DAMASE MOBILITY ENGINEERING AND TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT More specifically, and besides Michelin, expertise in the automotive sector draws on the competencies it has developed and on the equipment suppliers who are inventing the cars of the future. For example, Valéo has transformed its site in Issoire into a global research centre for the development of wiper systems. Its latest innovation is the Aquablade, a windscreen wiper whose rubber blade can project water onto the windscreen. Research and optimisation of the materials required for road and air transport, in particular aluminium and composite materials, play a key role in and around Issoire. More generally, all the automotive industryrelated trades are represented in Puy-de-Dôme: machining, precision engineering, smelting, metal forging, plastics processing, composites, electrical and electronic components, surface treatment and packaging, cable braiding and sheathing. Local companies are recognised as top-tier suppliers by European automobile manufacturers. ECONOMIC ZONES SPECIALISED IN MATERIALS The Thiers zone is highly specialised in metallurgy and the transformation of metals, plastics manufacturing and in the wood and paper industry. Its industrial activities are linked to the cutlery industry, which represents 70% of French production. The brand ‘Esprit de Thiers’ represents cutlers who meet the requi- Representing 6 to 8% of industrial jobs, the plastics processing cluster in Thiers and Clermont-Ferrand is highly innovation-oriented. This sector includes the design and production of moulds (Massacrier, Gilbert, etc.), thermoplastic injection (CEP, Gepman and Manuthiers), heat moulding, extrusion (CGP, Pichot etc.) and rotational moulding (SAAM, etc.). CEP has developed a new range of flexible tubing and has acquired multiple patents for its injection moulding process. Top Clean Injection is specialised in the clean-room injection moulding of high-precision plastic parts for the medical and pharmaceutical fields. The recyclable jacket © Picture Organic Clothing and general mechanical engineering activities, including machining, cutting tools, screw turning, fine sheet-metal working, surface preparation, polishing and more. Wichard, for instance, is one of the world’s leading marine hardware companies, and also has a precision forging business for the aviation, healthcare and automotive sectors. Others, such as Forginal, are specialised in the petrochemical and military fields. Forginal is quickly expanding into the healthcare field with its titanium forging business, which focuses essentially on orthopaedic implants. It also manufactures medical devices under its own trade mark. Leading companies specialised in packaging and furniture manufacturing (Durolle Emballage, CELTA and so on) have developed around the cardboard sector. Several secondary schools also offer specialised courses related to the manufacturing industries in Thiers (technician certificate in industrial sheet metal working, professional secondary school diploma in plastics and composites, higher technician certificate in the design and production of material-forming tools, plastics industries and Europlastic, etc.). In Ambert, located in the Livradois-Forez region, around a dozen businesses (Omerin, Plastelec, Joubert, Gauthier, Promotress, Tresse Industrie, IFT, Favier, Berne and so on) have specialised in the production of technical braiding and speciality cables. These products are exported around the world. Joubert and Omerin have each become global leaders in the production of braided and woven elastic cords and silicone-insulated wires and cables. Sheath braiding © JOUBERT Hot stamping © FORGINAL rements of a manufacturing quality charter, which serves as a guarantee of local know-how. In the same vein, the Confrérie du Couteau de Thiers complies with the same quality standards for the production of the ‘Le Thiers®’ knife, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2014. Metal processing has become centred on metal forming Raw material © Allizé Plasturgie Auvergne Polydyam, a technology innovation platform, was created in 2010 and is supported by the competitiveness clusters Elastopôle and Viaméca. It is specialised in the industrial testing of material behaviour in a number of fields of activity including automobiles and aviation, with a significant focus on vehicles of the future. As an expert in the study and recycling of rubber and polymer materials in order to establish their characterisation, formulation, ageing and durability, it also performs studies on vehicle suspension systems and dynamics. Issoire is also home to major groups such as Constellium, which produces low-density aluminium alloys, as well as Aubert et Duval, which manufactures aluminium parts, high-performance steel and superalloys for aeronautics companies. Recently created companies include: MTechnologies, which has designed and built several competition vehicles (WRX) in Issoire. It began exporting within Europe and to the United States two years ago. EMI has been located in the area for the past decade or so. It designs and develops comprehensive mechatronics systems for all types of vehicles by integrating high technology for harsh environments. And there are many more on the list. NEW MATERIALS Young companies here are innovating. For example, Picture Organic Clothing has invented a 100% recyclable down jacket made with a bio-ceramic membrane that absorbs every type of energy, helping to quickly eliminate lactic acid in muscles. The start-up Revlum uses exclusive patents from the Institut de Chimie (Institute of Chemistry) in Clermont-Ferrand to develop customised luminescent materials for the LED lighting and visualisation markets. And, of course, these areas are also studied and researched in engineering schools, including the Institut de Chimie in Clermont-Ferrand, which focuses its research activities on functional materials using soft chemistry, on the durability of organic materials and on polyplastic system engineering. They are also studied in laboratories such as the particle physics laboratory in Clermont-Ferrand, which develops bioactive materials used as a bone substitute, especially in bioactive ceramics. 13 Aeronautics A STRUCTURED ORGANISATION Companies focus on: • the production of metallic materials, aluminium, special alloys, composites, plastics and rubber upstream • maintenance activities downstream The sub-contracting activities are primarily related to metal working, especially sheet metal working, as well as the use of composite materials. The textile sector rounds out the industry, represented by the braiding businesses in Ambert. The organisation is structured around major groups and 120 SMEs, 70% of which are located in Puy-de-Dôme. MAJOR GROUPS Metal production and metal working activities are carried out by major national and international groups. Towing a heavy plate at the Issoire plant © Photo G. Uféras for Constellium known as UKAD. This plant is located near the site in Les Ancizes, which is equipped with a vacuum melting furnace necessary for manufacturing aircraft engine and gas turbine discs, and landing gear too. There are fewer than ten furnaces in the world with such a capacity. The Issoire site, which is known for its 65,000 tonne die forging press, has just installed a heavy-duty press for aluminium forging used primarily for the production of fuselage/wing junction fillets for the A350. Aubert et Duval @ Joël DAMASE As France’s 5th strongest region in terms of jobs (10,000) and revenue (€1.8 billion), it’s safe to say that Auvergne — whose aeronautics tradition dates back to World War I with the construction of the Michelin-built Breguet fighter planes and the arrival of AIA (Industrial Aeronautics Workshops) — is going strong. A century later, the region’s membership in the VIAMÉCA and ELASTOPÔLE competitiveness clusters reaffirms this fact. Constellium continues to invest in its Issoire site. Constellium has one of the largest heavy plate rolling mills, used to manufacture wings. The group has invested in a new AIRWARE foundry, inaugurated in 2013, the only one of its kind in the world capable of producing advanced low-density alloys (aluminium - lithium). This technology has been such a success that Constellium is building two new foundries on-site, requiring an additional €43 million investment. This production capacity will be necessary in order to comply with the contract signed for the Airbus A350 XWB, the Bombardier C Series and the SpaceX Falcon 9. As for Michelin, its latest model of radial tyres, the NZG, will be used as original-equipment tyres in the future Boeing 737 Max, the newest version of the world’s top-selling commercial aircraft. Aubert et Duval, which belongs to Eramet group, is one of the world’s leading companies specialised in high-tech metallurgy. It designs, develops and uses heat to transform special steels, superalloys, aluminium alloys and titanium alloys through forging, die forging, metal rolling, technical processing and powder metallurgy. Finally, Aubert et Duval received the Safran Grand Prize for Innovation in 2014 for co-creating ML340 with SNECMA. This new ultra-high performance steel is used to manufacture turbine shafts for the LEAP and Silvercrest aircraft. In partnership with UKTMP, Aubert et Duval invested €47 million in a titanium ingot processing plant 14 Aubert et Duval @ Michel LABELLE €5 million was recently invested at the Ancizes site on a vertical tempering furnace for titanium parts, including landing gear components for the A350. NSE BU Intégrations designs, produces and sells systems embedded into high-end wire bonding, integrates complex wired structures and provides related services, in particular aircraft construction work. Finally, the Auvergne Aéronautique group employs 750 people, including some 400 in Auvergne, its historical home. Modification of Rafale aircraft © AIA – Richard ANDRIEUX A first-tier subcontractor, Groupe REXIAA (ISO 9001, EN 9100, PART 21 and PART 145) includes 8 companies specialised in the design and production of parts, assemblies and sub-assemblies using high-performance composite materials (metallic and hybrid). One of the companies, Issoire Aviation, was highlighted recently as part of a project carried out by the competitiveness cluster Viaméca, known as LCM SMART. The project is helping to improve injection moulding processes for complex composite parts for future aircraft sub-assemblies through the addition of sensors that interact with the process. The company also designs and builds certified aircraft for civil, military and non-profit flight training schools. MAINTENANCE Aircraft maintenance activities provide some 2,000 jobs in Puy-de-Dôme. AIA (Industrial Aeronautics Workshops) is one of the biggest employers, with 1,250 people working on the Aulnat platform. Some fifty of these activities are grouped together within the business cluster known as AVIA (Auvergne Valorisation of the Aviation Industry). It aims to provide a comprehensive range of services to major buyers, to improve the skills of business (qualifications, equipment, etc.) and to boost their competitiveness (pooling, international competitiveness). The A400M, designed to equip the French army’s transport fleet, will thus be updated in ClermontFerrand, just as the Transall, Rafale, Mirage 2000 and Alphajet aircraft as well as the Gazelle, Puma and Tiger helicopters were before. Near the airport you will also find the Hop! Regional maintenance centre (400 employees), which has a 16,000 sq. m facility. It has been certified by Embraer (ERJ 135/145, EJET 170/190) and ATR (42/72). Each year, it carries out maintenance on the aircraft used by Hop! as well as those of third-party clients. Finally, Enhance Aéro Maintenance, a Part 145certified establishment, provides maintenance services for the ERJ range and the Falcon 50. AÉROCAMPUS is one of the first 12 establishments to bear the ‘Campus des métiers et des formations’ label. It provides training programmes ranging from a technician certificate in boilerwork composites and plastics to a Ph.D in Engineering Sciences in three major aeronautics fields: civil and military maintenance, mechatronics and mechanical materials and assemblies. As both a technical and educational platform in one unique place, the 3,000 sq. m building has direct access to the Aulnat Airport runway. Aérocampus Auvergne offers training programmes that teach students how to make the best use of new technology and provides bilingual training modules. Finally, the one hundred or so students can hone their skills on the five aircraft, including a Mirage, a Cessna 421 and others. INFRASTRUCTURE For maintenance companies, the airport platform has more than 33 hectares of land connected to a 3,000 m runway via a private taxiway, a parking area offering temporary parking for some twenty medium-sized aircraft and hangars designed for aircraft such as the Airbus A320 and A340. With the support of Aérocampus Aquitaine, and initiated by the Auvergne region, the local education authority, the Lycée des Métiers Roger Claustres in Clermont-Ferrand and IFMA, Aérocampus Auvergne Tiger maintenance workshop © AIA – Richard ANDRIEUX The company posted a turnover of €52 million, mainly in the field of sheet metal working, welding and bodywork for the aviation sector. Its main customers include, among others, Airbus, Airbus Helicopters (formerly Eurocopter), Aérolia, Safran, and others…for which it is a first-tier supplier. © Fotolia Auvergne Aéronautique - Welded structure of the glass roof of the Super Puma-Airbus Helicopters © Jérôme Pallé SMEs: DRIVING FORCES AND BROAD EXPERTISE 15 175 millions d’euros d’investissements en 5 ans IIII Accroître la vitesse de réalimentation en cas d’événements climatiques IIII Améliorer la qualité de fourniture IIII Intégrer les énergies renouvelables Et l’électr icité vient à vous