Companies already participating in the project shared their expertise and experience. One-on-one business meetings were organized to promote networking among the participating industries and between western and eastern companies to explore opportunities for new business models and mutual collaboration. Participants had the opportunity to promote their company's technology in the presence of other leading global and local industries.
To celebrate the opening of the IBF Korea this year, special guests attended including the first Vice Minister Sang-Mok Lee of the MSIP, Ambassador Tomasz Kozlowski from the European Union delegation to Korea, and Deputy Director-General Joo-Shik Bak of the ITER Organization. ITER Director-General Osamu Motojima addressed the IBF participants by video.
"Big science projects such as ITER offer participating industries a chance to secure cutting-edge technologies and find opportunities to explore new business domains," stressed Vice Minister Lee in his speech. "When such companies begin to contribute to advancement of science and technology, we can expect a virtuous circle of a win-win relationship between big science research projects and the participating corporations." Here's what some others had to say:
Kijung Jung, head of ITER Korea: "It was my honour and my pleasure to hold the first Asian ITER Business Forum in Korea and I hope this event was very helpful to all participants, with plenty of opportunity to exchange information. I believe that all participants left IBF Korea with several prospective partnerships and also certainly brought home a better understanding of what ITER is about and a clearer perspective of the project's economic weight."