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FOUR DAYS OF EVENTS AND HUNDREDS OF VISITORS AT THE HOME OF ITALIAN INNOVATION: ITALY STANDS OUT AT CES IN LAS VEGAS

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The pitches of the 50 startups, the insights of the 25 protagonists of the Italian innovation ecosystem hosted by the pavilion, and the great success of Italian Night, which brought together more than 300 investors, startuppers, and industrial players

Las Vegas, NV, January 13, 2023 – Hundreds of visitors over the four-day event featuring pitches from 50 startups and insights into the Italian innovation ecosystem. And a sold-out Italian Pavilion for the Investor Night that captured the attention of more than 300 guests. The Italian delegation at CES in Las Vegas, the world’s most important tech event, enjoyed great success in terms of audience, ideas, and energy. Organized by ITA (Italian Trade Agency) the country’s participation in the American event thus met its goal of providing the world’s most cutting-edge audience with “a taste of Italian innovation”.

 

“At CES in Las Vegas, Italy presented a truly integrated ecosystem consisting of successful, future-oriented companies, research centers, universities, administrations, and local authorities,” said Alessandra Rainaldi, Trade Commissioner at ITA – Los Angeles Office. “We brought 50 startups engaged in all major areas of the innovation market to the tech world’s most important showcase. All this is part of the broad support that ITA provides companies to help them enter markets all across the globe. The success of this experience further strengthens the value of the entire network of initiatives.”

 

Italy’s participation at CES got off to the best possible start, with Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), the organizer of CES, attending the ribbon-cutting ceremony along with Los Angeles Consul General Silvia Chiave and Antonino Laspina, Trade Commissioner of ITA’s New York office and executive director for the United States.

 

Then, over the course of the four-day event, numerous “Innovation Talks” were held in the arena in the center of the pavilion, touching on various topics of the Italian and European ecosystem and opportunities offered by the US market. Representatives from the government of California, along with Consul Chiave and Alessandra Rainaldi, explained the state’s opportunities for startup growth, while Jean-David Malo, president of the European Innovation Council (EIC), spoke about European programs such as Horizon Europe. The microphones were then passed on to Prospera Women – an organization in Silicon Valley that brings together programs to support female-led startups around the world – for a discussion on the topic of Diversity & Inclusion, more central than ever to this year’s CES.

 

The focus of the concluding panel of the first day was the mobility of the future, with presentations by Dario Peirone, president of the Foreign Center for International Expansion of the Piedmont Region (Ceipiemonte), the cradle of the Italian automotive industry, and Benedetto Carambia, head of R&D and Innovation at Movyon, the smart mobility company of the Autostrade per l’Italia group. They were joined by Paolo Taticchi, professor of Strategy & Sustainability at the UCL School of Management in London, Vincent Mauroit, director of Tech Transfer at NOI Techpark; and Sergio Savaresi, professor at Politecnico di Milano and team leader of the PoliMOVE project, fresh off several successes in the Indy Autonomous Challenge, including victory in the Las Vegas race that took place during CES.

 

On the second day, in addition to the startups that enlivened the arena with their pitches, first on stage were Ceipiemonte with its president Peirone, the regional councilor for international expansion Fabrizio Ricca, and Italdesign CEO Antonio Casu. Then it was the turn of “The New Italian Manufacturing” with Professor Carlo Bagnoli, professor at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice and director of the VeniSIA accelerator, who spoke with three representatives of Italian manufacturing innovation: Barbara Sala, CEO of the innovative SME Delcon, a Bergamo-based biomedical company that partnered with the New York Blood Center to develop the Compasso D’oro design award-winning blood scale named Milano; Enrico Zobele, president of Everel Group, a components company that has opened an Open Innovation center; and Mario Cammarota, R&D manager of Unox.

 

In the late afternoon of the second day there was then the event with the largest audience participation: the Italian Investor Night welcomed more than 300 people to the Italian pavilion, including innovators and international investors, who enjoyed a fruitful networking opportunity with a “Spritz&Pitch.”

 

The day of January 7 was dedicated to local innovative ecosystems, featuring the Innovation Talk of the Area Science Park national research organization, a partner of the Italian initiative at CES, and the regional delegations of Sardinia and Marche, which hosted panels dedicated to the innovative ecosystems of these two regions most structurally represented within the pavilion, and then with pitches from the respective startups present at Las Vegas.

 

Innovit

To complement the excellence of these regions, but in an international dimension, Innovit, the world’s first Italian Innovation and Culture Hub, was officially presented in the afternoon. Inaugurated last October at 710 Sansome Street, a short walk from San Francisco’s Italian quarter, the hub is a space that aggregates initiatives supporting Italy’s technological, scientific, and innovative ecosystems with its Innovation Center, those promoting Italian culture and language organized by the Italian Cultural Institute, and others promoting products Made in Italy abroad and the international expansion of Italian companies made available by ITA. Promoted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation together with the Italian Embassy in Washington and the Italian Consulate General in San Francisco, Innovit is a true outpost of Italian innovation in the heart of Silicon Valley, the center of gravity of the global tech sector. Specifically, Innovit’s Innovation Center, which for the next four years will be managed by the Giacomo Brodolini Foundation and Entopan Innovation, features event areas, co-working spaces, and offices that host training, public relations, and business matching initiatives with US companies and investors.

 

The pavilion’s calendar of events concluded with a panel devoted specifically to Innovit, featuring Leandro Agrò, head of innovation programs at the San Francisco Center, Sebastiano Peluso, head of ITA’s Innovation Desk also at Innovit, and Alessandra Rainaldi. Among the main topics touched on was the call for accelerator programs for Italian startups and SMEs (accessible at www.call4innovitsf.com), which includes a two-week residency in Silicon Valley.

Vic

Editor / Writer / Producer For Drop the Spotlight