The GEG was an independent group of experts appointed by the European Commission. They were tasked with articulating a 2020 vision for European research and education networking and identifying an action plan for realising this vision.
The vision of the GÉANT Expert Group, expressed in their report published in October 2011, informed the European Commission's policy for GÉANT to 2020. This vision is beginning to be implemented in GN3plus and will continue to be realised within Horizon 2020.
As the nature of scientific research rapidly evolves, becoming ever-more data intensive and collaborative, so this exponential growth in data and access to it depends more heavily than ever on research networks. To ensure Europe's continued competitiveness in the global economy the future development of e-infrastructure such as GÉANT and the National Research and Education Networks (NRENs) is considered vital to Europe's Digital Agenda.
In preparing the report the GEG took input from a variety of sources including interviews with over 25 experts operating in the research networking and related fields, as well as input from official policy documents, NREN reports and GÉANT deliverables.
The final report was presented on Tuesday 4 October 2011 to Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission and European Digital Agenda Commissioner.
The following is an extract from the report, which distils the main vision and goals of GÉANT 2020.
A Vision to maintain Europe's lead
"GÉANT 2020" is the European communications commons, where talent anywhere is able to collaborate with their peers around the world and to have instantaneous and unlimited access to any resource for knowledge creation, innovation and learning, unconstrained by the barriers of the pre-digital world.
1.Support Knowledge Communities
2. Expand Knowledge Communities
3. Push the State of the Art
4. Reorganise for Change