EU’s e-CODEX data exchange channel to be based in Tallinn

July 23th 2021

 BNS/TBT Staff

TALLINN – The Committee of Permanent Representatives at the Council of the European Union (COREPER) has approved the EU’s IT agency eu-LISA, located in Tallinn, as the seat of the EU cross-border data exchange channel e-CODEX.

“The fact that e-CODEX will be located in Estonia is very welcome, as the digitalization of the field of justice is one of the priorities of this government,” Estonia’s Justice Minister Maris Lauri said according to spokespeople. 

“The decision is also significant in the sense that this platform will allow for easier and more convenient exchange of data with different member states in both civil and criminal matters. This, in turn, will bring legal possibilities closer to citizens, businesses, lawyers and public officials,” the minister said.

The further development and management of the system will take place at eu-LISA in Estonia. This will lead to the expansion of eu-LISA in Tallinn, including the creation of additional posts.

On June 2 this year, COREPER, which prepares the work of the EU Council, adopted a general approach regarding e-CODEX. On Thursday, the position was clearly changed to indicate that e-CODEX will be located at the Tallinn-based eu-LISA, which is an EU agency established to manage IT systems in the fields of internal affairs and justice. The decision will be followed by trilogue negotiations in the European Parliament. 

TALLINN, Jul 23, BNS – The Committee of Permanent Representatives at the Council of the European Union (COREPER) has approved the EU’s IT agency eu-LISA, located in Tallinn, as the seat of the EU cross-border data exchange channel e-CODEX.

“The fact that e-CODEX will be located in Estonia is very welcome, as the digitalization of the field of justice is one of the priorities of this government,” Estonia’s Justice Minister Maris Lauri said according to spokespeople. 

“The decision is also significant in the sense that this platform will allow for easier and more convenient exchange of data with different member states in both civil and criminal matters. This, in turn, will bring legal possibilities closer to citizens, businesses, lawyers and public officials,” the minister said.

The further development and management of the system will take place at eu-LISA in Estonia. This will lead to the expansion of eu-LISA in Tallinn, including the creation of additional posts.

On June 2 this year, COREPER, which prepares the work of the EU Council, adopted a general approach regarding e-CODEX. On Thursday, the position was clearly changed to indicate that e-CODEX will be located at the Tallinn-based eu-LISA, which is an EU agency established to manage IT systems in the fields of internal affairs and justice. The decision will be followed by trilogue negotiations in the European Parliament. 

Resource: Baltic Times

Skeleton Technologies will supply ultracapacitor energy storage to another major player in the tram industry

July 2021

As energy efficiency is now the key design criteria for any public transportation system, ultracapacitors are ready to significantly contribute to the rail industry.  Skeleton Technologies, the global technology leader in supercapacitor for automotive, industrial, and grid stability applications has signed a contract with CAF Power & Automation, the global manufacturer of electric power solutions for the rail industry, to supply supercapacitors in their trams.

Skeleton’s cells will be included in the Greentech OESS portfolio already used by some of the leading railway companies worldwide to offer cutting-edge solutions to energy recovery, peak shaving, and catenary-free applications.

Energy efficiency is key in public transportation 

As energy efficiency is now the key design criteria for any public transportation system, ultracapacitors are ready to significantly contribute to the rail industry.

Headquartered in Donostia – San Sebastian (Spain), CAF Power & Automation has chosen Skeleton Technologies to supply ultracapacitor cells to its Greentech OESS-s pointing out multiple innovative purposes: The ultracapacitor technology can significantly improve trams efficiency – reducing costs and CO2 emissions, it can also enable compatibility between existing limited power in infrastructure and the demand of high peaks of power of modern trams, and finally it enables a unique solution for 100% catenary free solutions operating only with ultra-fast charging in stations.

“Skeleton’s cells offer very high efficiency and low heat losses, and their high-power density enables further weight and space savings. Therefore, they are a perfect fit for the rail and tram industry. Adding them to our energy storage systems will greatly benefit our existing and future customers, allowing us to maximize energy efficiency at an unprecedented level.” CAF Power & Automation explains.

Skeleton Technologies

 

Most modern and energy-efficient trams in the world

Taavi Madiberk, co-founder and CEO of Skeleton Technologies says: “In terms of public transportation, trams are already a very energy-efficient solution. However, our ultracapacitors can take them to the next level allowing maximum energy recovery. We are very glad to now collaborate with CAF Power & Automation and supply our cells to make trams that use their energy storage systems some of the most modern, cost and energy-efficient in the world. Our supercapacitors are already the most advanced ones on the market but thanks to our curved graphene material, we are planning to increase our advantage even further, offering more reliable, long-life alternatives to high-power batteries.”

Skeleton’s cells will be integrated into Greentech OESS-s, which are already powering trams in dozens of countries including the UK, Australia, Estonia, Luxembourg, and Spain.

✈️  Can’t travel but want to hear the e-Estonia story or implement e-services in your country or company? Take a look at our services and get in touch – we’ve got you covered!

Resorce: e-estonia

e-Estonia podcast: Kevin Tammearu of Cybernetica: e-solutions act as tools for democracy

July 2021

by Dea Paraskevopoulos

communications manager at the e-estonia briefing centrer

Cybernetica are known as a company that has had a leading role in developing the X-Road – the backbone of e-Estonia. The company has been solving complex challenges for almost sixty years – both in Estonia and abroad – yet maintaining the privacy of citizens and data. Our speaker Florian Marcus talked with Kevin Tammearu, the Head of Business Development for Data Exchange Technologies, for the newest episode of our podcast “The Art of Digitalisation”. 

Kevin’s day-to-day work revolves around the topic of digital transformation – of both the public sector and enterprises. “Redesigning how these entities and organisations and, largely, ecosystems work together. We’ve found that the Estonian model – the model for interoperability and secure data exchange based on a distributed architecture – is based on universal principles for information security and governance. And it can be widely adopted in different settings and sectors – from e-governance to healthcare, insurance, banking even,” Kevin said.

Political risks

Behind Kevin Tammearu’s impressive job title is actually an even more impressive reality – he works daily with government and private sector leaders for digital transformation in Africa, Asia, and in the Americas. His job is to help them understand how to build their digital transformation strategies and action plans in a feasible way by sustaining their future needs.

“This is the most gratifying part of my job – the ability to travel to places like Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Rwanda, Namibia, Ethiopia, the Philippines, Japan, the Americas, etc.,” Kevin admitted.

But there are downsides, too, of course. “Political risk is a high challenge for us especially if we’re working in developing countries. Changes in political leadership can shift the entire balance of where a country is moving. So if we’ve managed to create an understanding with leaders in a government or an enterprise and then the political winds change – the process has to restart from the beginning.”

E-governance takes time

E-governance brings complex challenges. “Getting from the first conversation to full implementation takes several years,” Tammearu says. “Take Estonia, for example – reaching maturity took almost 20 years, right? And we’re still growing and developing. For other countries, of course, we can cut out some of that time because of the lessons learned and the experience we’ve gained. But it’s inevitable that it still takes time for people to get on board and to change their minds about how they do things today. Plus, there are usually many different stakeholders that all have to buy into us because they have existing strategies, plans, their ambitions, and so on.”

A legend already

Cybernetica was founded in 1960 – as the Institute of Cybernetics under the Estonian Academy of Sciences. Estonia was then still occupied by the Soviet Union. It was a lucky strike that the Institute was founded in Estonia, Kevin Tammearu told us in our podcast, because it was not a straightforward decision. Several candidate countries proposed that at the time. Having Estonia gain that Institute catapulted some of the developments of Estonia in terms of science and research in this field.

In the 1990s, Cybernetica became a spin-off into a private entity as part of a science reform, and this was when the company began finding solutions to complex challenges both in government, public sector, healthcare, and for enterprises, for the maritime field, in communications, and border surveillance, etc. “There’s quite a wide breadth of things that we do. But while solving these complex challenges, we always do it in a way that maintains information security, data security, the privacy of citizens and data,” Tammearu stressed, adding “And our solutions are robust – not prone to malicious activities or attacks, and also usable for the purposes that they have been built for.”

Among the “fathers” of the X-Road and ID-cards

Cybernetica is known as one of the leading thinkers of the X-Road – the backbone of e-Estonia. In the early 2000s, the company also worked on the first ID-card pilots in Estonia. Throughout the years, the company has been the partner for the Estonian state in really complex challenges around cryptography. “Cybernetica’s Smart-ID solution – used in and across all three Baltic countries – is based on the underlying technology of SplitKey, a tokenless digital identity that doesn’t require any hardware security or any security on the user’s side,” Tammearu shared.

Benin and the Bahamas

Kevin Tammearu also shed light on two international projects Cybernetica has been involved with lately. In Benin, West Africa, the company has been implementing nationwide interoperability and secure data exchange solutions with a citizen portal. “This will entail different services targeted to citizens and acts as a one-stop-shop for them,” Kevin explained. “It has been an excellent example of what can be achieved if you have the powerful political will. We have seen the responsible minister following these developments and keeping a close eye on what’s happening, and pressing both parties – the companies implementing this and also the government agencies behind this – to focus on actual impact, not just to implement or to install the software.”

In the Bahamas, Cybernetica works with a company called Cloud Carib. “This is a company with a strong understanding of the underlying technologies, and they were able to work more closely and more independently with the Bahamas government. In some sense, this allowed us to take a more laid-back position, providing them with knowledge transfer and the insights that we have gained, and of course, the core solution.”

To hear more of Cybernetica’s international projects, why a political science major Kevin ended up working for a tech company, and how the company could create a more considerable impact in the Caribbean region, tune in to listen to our podcast:

🎧Available on Apple Podcast and Spotify:

https://www.buzzsprout.com/1730490/8849482-the-art-of-digitalisation-s1e5-kevin-tammearu-of-cybernetica-e-solutions-act-as-tools-for-democracy?client_source=small_player&iframe=true&referrer=https://www.buzzsprout.com/1730490.js?player=small&tags=x-road&container_id=buzzsprout-small-player-1730490-tags-x-road

🎧…and on Soundcloud

Resouse: e-estonia

When trust means travel: Estonian ICT firms on managing digital transformation remotely

July 2021

by Justin Petrone

freelance journalist and writer

One might think that when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, companies that support digital transformation were best poised to transition to working remotely. For years they had been advising and designing services that could support exactly this: working, shopping, voting, and doing basically anything necessary from home. 

But there is actually a strong interpersonal component built into such projects, and those in the sector were challenged like any other in making the switch to remote work during the pandemic.

“Trust in our business means travel,” says Net Group CEO Priit Kongo. “It’s important to learn your counterpart’s background, history, and personality so that you can build trust,” he says. “You need to go out and have a few beers, bring difficult topics to the table, see the reaction,” he adds. “I cannot learn that via Teams.”

Speedboating to meetings

Kongo has served as CEO of Tallinn-based Net Group since 2000. The software development and consultancy have expertise in e-commerce, e-governance, fintech, and business digitalisation. It maintains a team of more than 100 developers and consults various industries, including investment banks, governments, education, e-commerce, and utilities, such as the energy sector.

Speedboat of the CEO of Net Group

 Net Group CEO Priit Kongo on his speedboat, a vessel often used to go to meetings in Helsinki. 

Before 2020, Kongo was on the road constantly, with monthly stops in Africa. Net Group’s main export market is Estonia’s northern neighbor Finland, where it serves 15 customers in the energy sector alone, and the company maintains an office in Helsinki. Kongo was in Finland so often that he even had his own mode of transportation.

“I had a speedboat to go to meetings, which I sold last year because of the pandemic,” says Kongo. “I had no need for it anymore.”

Adapt, adjust, overcome

Making the switch to remote project management was a challenge of course. It took several months to make the necessary rearrangements. There were cultural challenges too. “Finnish people like to have meetings, in fact, the main topic of most meetings is to decide on the next one,” says Kongo. At first, they tried to structure meetings the same way but eventually moved to different ways of managing things.

Specifically, Net Group worked with Helsinki Region Environmental Services Oy (HSY), waste management and water services provider, to implement a billing software renewal project. This included data integration, migration, and training. Altogether, a team of 15 persons worked to manage and train their counterparts at HSY remotely.

“It was no magic, but it worked,” says Kongo. “The pandemic was a kind of force majeure,” he says. “We couldn’t deliver everything on time, but the customer couldn’t deliver everything either. But once we delivered the solution, they were really happy. It was a great success.”

From the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean 

“The biggest challenge was time management,” agrees Mari Krusten, head of marketing at Cybernetica, a Tallinn-based ICT company that helped develop Estonia’s e-government systems, including the X-Road, i-voting, e-customs, and more. A core offering is its unified exchange platform (UXP), which supports secure data exchange. Since the pandemic began, Cybernetica has been remotely managing projects with partners around the world, from the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean.

Mari Krusten, Cybernetica

Mari Krusten working remotely.

One such project has been a partnership with Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank, a large Japanese trust bank active in the Asia-Pacific region, to develop a bank solution that will connect service providers from various sectors from financial and e-health services to local governments. According to Krusten, one project related to the partnership was completed at the beginning of the year and also fully remotely.

Adapt, adjust, overcome

Such remotely managed endeavors continue. In March, Cybernetica announced it was working with the Aruban government to set up secure data exchange and interoperability for digital government services. In June, it announced a pilot project with a partner on Réunion, a French island off the coast of Madagascar, to implement UXP and showcase how interoperability can improve access to public administrative services.

While these projects have progressed in spite of the pandemic, there has been some lag in implementing them because of the need to manage them remotely, rather than on-site.

“Normally you can just fly in and get to work and get things done in an expected timeframe,” says Krusten. “In this case, you have to allocate more time because you don’t know how much time things are going to take.”

There are also the aforementioned cultural issues. In countries that have limited experience with digital services, having someone with expertise on-site to manage such transitions is helpful. “I understand why it was rare to do these projects remotely in the past,” says Krusten. “To have someone come on board and support and guide you through this really big process is necessary.”

Cybernetica was able to transition to managing projects remotely though, but the company learned it had to be more flexible with its schedules. “It’s a case of adapt, adjust, and overcome,” says Krusten. “A key lesson we learned in the process was that you had to account for more time, you have to allocate more time for the project to be finalised.”

Gaining acceptance

The pandemic experience has been similar for the e-Governance Academy (eGA), a Tallinn-based think tank and consultancy that advises partners on best practices concerning e-governance, e-democracy, cybersecurity, and the development of open information societies. The years before COVID-19 saw its staff boarding aircraft to some of the most remote countries on Earth. Tõnis Mäe, a senior expert on digital transformation, traveled to Tonga in the Pacific.

eGA remote project management meeting

 e-Governance Academy team during a remote meeting.

“It takes two days to get there,” he says, “but we do have a 10-hour time difference that is not in our favor, as when they start work at 9 am, it’s 11 pm for us. It’s not easy to do remote meetings.”

Yet eGA had to move to remote management like everyone else. Part of the associated challenges included gaining acceptance from partners that they were ready to work remotely. Many projects involved travel plans, so scrapping that component caused a change in project scope. “We had to agree with customers that they would accept remote work,” says Mäe. “At first, it wasn’t easy but everyone understood that this needed to be done.”

Eager to find solutions

Marit Lani, program director of smart governance at eGA, said that the transition to managing projects remotely has been a learning experience for the academy.

“At first, all of our colleagues and our international partners were very eager to find solutions for how to work remotely and it seemed that this enthusiasm would allow us to reach our objectives as planned, despite the pandemic,” she said. “But we soon realized that progress was slowing down, so we had to go for shorter but more frequent meetings and constantly check in with partners to reestablish contact and help push projects forward.” Nevertheless, timelines were extended because of the need to work remotely.

“With many countries, we have seen that work moves 10 times more quickly when you are there on the spot,” says Lani.

She notes that the pandemic itself also slowed down project timelines, as local counterparts, often at government ministries, we’re overburdened with responding to COVID-19.

“The IT ministries or others coordinating e-governance had many tasks to take care of,” she says. “This has been more of a cause for delay.”

A new hybrid model?

Now that some travel restrictions are being eased, there is the sense that managing digital transformation could return to its pre-pandemic, travel-intensive state. But companies in the sector say the process of managing work remotely has caused them to rethink their operations. Going forward, some travel will remain necessary, but not at pre-pandemic levels.

“I think we learned a lot during this COVID period,” says Mäe. “Definitely we will resume some travel but not as intensely as it was before,” he says. “We understand that we can resolve things remotely as well.”

His colleague Lani agrees. “These physical meetings cannot be replaced in a sense,” she says. “I think the 20 hours of flight time to Tonga is the price to pay for this.”

While Net Group’s CEO Kongo is resuming his regular travel to Finland, he says that processes have been so streamlined that the number of physical meetings will be reduced in the future. Still, he stresses the need for meeting one’s counterparts face to face. Nothing can replace it.

“You cannot start a new project from a distance,” says Kongo.

✈️  Can’t travel but want to hear the e-Estonia story or implement e-services in your country or company? Take a look at our services and get in touch – we’ve got you covered!

Resource: e-estonia