BSF Roundtable on “The Evolving and Ever-present Cyber Security”

On Friday, 17 November 2017, a roundtable discussion “The Evolving and Ever-present Cyber Security” will be taking place within the framework of the Bled Strategic Forum international conference in cooperation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Slovenia, Centre for European Perspective and Club Alpbach Senza Confini. The event will start with small refreshments at 16h in the Cafe of the City Museum of Ljubljana.

The roundtable will discuss main trends in cyber security and ways in which countries and companies are dealing with cyber threats. The ways in which IoT, block chain and cyber warfare are changing our lives and shaping our future will be explored.

The discussion will feature:

  • Mr Daniel Cohen, Head of the Strategy program at the Institute for International Diplomacy and a researcher at Blavatnik Interdisciplinary Cyber Research Institute
  • Major General Dobran Božič, Director of the Government Office for the Protection of Classified Information
  • Mr Gorazd Božič, Slovenian Computer Emergency Response Team
  • Mr Peter Geršak, International Business Machines Corporation, Slovenia

Please note, the discussion will be held in English.

RSVP: We kindly ask you to confirm your participation at by Tuesday, 14 November.

Confronted with fundamental challenges to our perceptions – how to adapt to the new realities?

Ljubljana, 30 August 2017 – The world has been changing rapidly. While globalisation and digitalisation have significantly increased the pace of our lives and brought us closer than ever before, we are confronted with fundamental challenges to our perceptions of politics, the economy, security and society. Organised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Centre for European Perspective under the title New reality, the twelfth Bled Strategic Forum, to be held on 4 and 5 September, will try to find ways to adapt to the new realities without forgetting the foundations on which our modern societies were built. The political-security Forum event will again be accompanied by the Business BSF and Young BSF, as well as several side events.

| Bled Strategic Forum (BSF)

The Leaders’ panel will feature a debate on today’s rapid changes, which present profound challenges to our self-perception, politics, the economy, security, and society. With the world order possibly at the breaking point, it will seek a strategic vision on how to adapt to the new reality without forgetting the foundations on which our modern societies were built.

Federica Mogherini will continue with the session Address by the High Representative / Vice-President of the European Commission before the Special panel – A new vision for a new reality, where instability, poor development, environmental changes and conflict situations that cause grave human suffering and result in violations of basic human dignity, social stability, peace and international law, will be debated. Long-term global peace, stability and sustainable development can be achieved only through result-oriented and enduring dialogue, taking into account the basic values, norms and principles enshrined in the UN Charter.

Conversation with the President-elect for the 72nd Session of the UN General Assembly will feature Miroslav Lajčák, Minister of Foreign and European Affairs of the Slovak Republic, and will revolve around the priorities of the forthcoming presidency of the UN General Assembly, as well as the issues currently at the top of both United Nations and international agenda.

What drives Europe and the world in the 21st century? Is the move towards a society of change and innovation reshaping Europe’s economic model? How can Europe deal with growing economic (and political) inequalities within the EU and beyond, and how can we restore trust in democracy, especially among the younger generation? An informal chat entitled The Future according to Tanja Fajon and Jacques Rupnik will ‘pick the brain’ of two thinkers on the topic of big societal issues that are the EU’s key challenges for the decade to come.

The growing use of the Internet and social media platforms, where anyone can share their version of the truth and spread misinformation, has fragmented the commonly agreed basis for reality and led to the polarisation of public opinion. The ‘fake news’ phenomenon, the alternative facts phenomenon, along with media hacking, the changed rules of the political game, and the role of the media, will be discussed by the Night Owl Session – Fake news, and do the media still need editors?

The panel discussion Global nuclear governance: Quo vadis? will confront the unstable and unpredictable global security situation. Increased tensions, aggravated by public statements about the possible use and modernisation of nuclear weapons, as well as military exercises that simulate their deployment, including unannounced drills, and developments in other regions around the globe are a great cause for concern.

The uneven distribution of freshwater in the world, its vital importance for life and development, as well as factors such as population growth, urbanisation, and climate change, all determine the relationship between peace and water, as well as increase the relevance of the latter. While some states have already demonstrated their commitment to preserving this vital natural resource for future generations; nevertheless, global awareness of the importance of the nexus between water and peace still lags behind current pressing trends. The success of international initiatives and comprehensive awareness of the urgent need to address the challenges that water poses for peace and security will be addressed by the panel discussion on Water for peace and security.

The economic and financial crisis, unstable eastern and southern neighbourhoods, migration pressures,and generally deteriorating security situation have in recent years eroded trust between the Member States and caused a shift in relations between the EU institutions. With such developments occurring at a time when major global players are turning away from multilateralism and considering economic protectionism, the panel discussion on The European Union in a changed world will weigh in, whether the EU will be able to consolidate from within and re-establish itself on the global stage as a bastion of multilateralism and free and fair trade.

A growing list of nightmares, perfect storms, and global catastrophes fuel fear of the future. But there is another way of looking at the future. We do not have to be pessimistic or optimistic; we can simply have realistic hope, like future-oriented thinkers and doers who do not ignore reality, but take these challenges into account when exploring the possibility of making a better future for many more generations. The reasons for hope will be discussed by the panel discussion on Realistic hope – How transformation happens faster than one thinks.

The serious challenges faced by the Countries on all the shores of the Mediterranean today will be debated at the panel discussion on Southern Mediterranean and the promise of regional integration. In the context of global instability, and yet of immense regional opportunities, we will discuss the scope and a need for strengthened multilateralism and, even more importantly, for stronger integration in the South.

As history teaches us that protecting human rights and dignity helps prevent conflict, dispel ignorance, instil respect for others, and build better societies that are more resilient to threats from within and from without. What is the role of human rights in today’s society, why do we need them, and how they can help us face the insecurities of modern times will be discussed with the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein at the session entitled Human rights in times of change.

Never before in the history of foreign affairs or diplomacy have heads of state had a method of such immediate and uncensored communication at their disposal as they have today with social media tools such as Twitter. Some argue that foreign policy should not be conducted via Twitter, while others feel that Twitter and the vast array of social media tools available today could launch a new form of public diplomacy, called Public Diplomacy 2.0. To Tweet or not to Tweet in foreign affairs will be the focus of the panel on the Digital diplomacy in the 21st century: To Tweet or not to Tweet in foreign affairs?

The side event entitled InvestTalk Slovenia will present opportunities for investment and business climate in Slovenia. Presentations will be held by the representatives of SPIRIT Slovenia – Public Agency for Entrepreneurship, Internationalization, Foreign Investments and Technology, as well as representatives of the the Bank Assets Management Company, who will present concrete business cases and investment opportunities.

The debate on the Western Balkans, a recurrent topic at the Bled Strategic Forum, will assess a lack of implementation of agreements in a panel entitled Western Balkans: EU enlargement – Is pretending the name of the game? While this may be a consequence of the fractured relations in the region, the internal political situation in individual countries, the situation in the EU, and the slow pace of the enlargement process it should have been clear by now that it is in the EU’s strategic interest that the enlargement process has no real alternative.

| Business Bled Strategic Forum (Business BSF)

Organised in cooperation with the Ministry of Public Administration, the American Chamber of Commerce in Slovenia, and the German-Slovene Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the 2017 Business BSF will focus on the role of innovations. As the world is changing rapidly it no longer suffices to understand these changes solely on the basis of past experience and to adapt to a new reality with traditional approaches. We need to create and implement new business, economic and social concepts and new approaches in order to successfully address the challenges of our new reality.

The gap between reality (awareness) and the near future (new reality) will be discussed by the AmCham Business Breakfast – A Changing World: How Do We Feel and Co-create the New Reality?, while in the second part, breakfast will continue with the session entitled Red Monkey Innovation Management Organizations and Regions in Search of a New Balance and a discussion on how to bridge this gap.

The innovation movement is growing and acquiring a global dimension, and the new reality demands a genuine effort to achieve sustainability. What role does innovation play in the new reality and how does it manifest itself will be discussed by The role of innovation in a new reality session. However, as even the most visible and successful technological innovations are not enough to drive change, they can act as a trigger. Transformation in its broadest and real sense entails changing both the mind-set and culture in a particular organisation or society as a whole. Thus, the session will also take into focus the need for social innovations.

The special session Musical Leadership Strategy – For a European Identity in a Multipolar World will feature the social innovation brand of Miha Pogacnik, known as the “resonance platform”. By using the disruptive method, he empowers business and political leaders to experience the genius of classical music masterpieces as a specific European strategy for vision, the mobilisation of total human potential and action.

While the rapid ongoing digitalisation and technological transformation of the economy and society holds many promises, it also brings disruptions, transforms our societies and the way we live and work, and opens new issues on regulation. The session entitled Innovative Europe – Opportunities for a new breakthrough will therefore address the main obstacles to, and/or catalysts for, a new breakthrough in the field, as well as how does the business sector perceive these opportunities for Europe as a whole.

The modern technological platforms connecting supply and demand are assuming the roles of accommodation providers, tour operators, taxi drivers, tour guides and restaurants (for example: Airbnb, Couchsurfing, Uber, Blablacar, EatWith, ToursByLocals etc). This collaborative economy is causing profound shifts in tourism. The needs, wishes, and motivations of contemporary consumers, but also the ways to address the question of what the fair rules of the game are for all tourism stakeholders in the existing system and how to establish effective cooperation to the benefit of all, will be discussed by the tourism panel entitled The collaborative economy: sharing, cooperation or simply business?

| Young Bled Strategic Forum (Young BSF)

Under the title (Dis)connected reality, the seventh edition of the Young BSF will bring together successful and innovative young leaders, diplomats, academics, representatives of NGOs and business professionals from all around the world between 1 and 3 September. They will discuss the different ‘realities’ of our physical world that seem completely disconnected from the reality that our societies actually live in. Young BSF will give visionary young leaders an opportunity to form real, connected, or virtual partnerships and networks. This goal-oriented forum will seek to prompt discussions and create synergies between different ideas, turning them into connected or disconnected realities of, and for, everyone.

Bled Strategic Forum in brief

Over the years, the annual Bled Strategic Forum has become established as a leading conference in Central and South East Europe focused on discussing and seeking solutions to pressing regional and global issues. The Forum attracts some one thousand participants, including heads of state and government, ministers, diplomats, businesspeople, scholars, youth, and media from around the world. It also provides opportunities for bilateral and multilateral meetings with prominent regional and global actors, as well as possibilities for networking and exchanging ideas between political and business leaders.

Bled Strategic Forum to address “new reality”, sec-gen says (interview for Slovenian Press Agency)

Ljubljana, 28 August – The 12th Bled Strategic Forum (BSF) will get under way next week to find answers to the New Reality of the ever changing world, Peter Grk, the BSF secretary general, has announced. “We need a joint deliberation on how to address this new reality,” he said in an interview for the STA.

“Things change really quickly and our perception changes along with them… History in a way repeats itself and the crises we face today, the regional conflicts, migrations, etc. are not that different than they were in the past. But our perceptions are,” he said.

“Because of digitalisation and globalisation, all things seem closer, more important, more part of our lives and our new reality,” added Grk. He pointed out that people were bombarded with thousands of pieces of unfiltered information every day without knowing whether they were reliable.

Panel debates at the forum will aim to highlight the topical issues in the international community: “This year’s BSF is very ambitious. It follows our goal – to become some sort of a regional Davos, where all key figures from politics, economy and the civil society come together in one place. We need a joint deliberation on how to address this new reality or better yet how to adjust to it and direct it.”

Among other things, a panel will be held on nuclear safety and another on “digital diplomacy”. According to Grk, the latter will deal with “tweeting in international relations – does it change the culture of communication between countries”.

A panel will also be hosted on fake news, “which is yet another topic that changes our perception of the world,” the BSF secretary-general pointed out.

According to him, the BSF is growing and becoming increasingly recognised in Europe and wider. This is reflected in one of the strongest turnouts in recent years with more than 1,000 participants already confirmed.

Among those scheduled to make an appearance are the new Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabić, 13 foreign ministers, including from all the countries of the Western Balkans and Turkey’s Mevlut Cavusoglu as well as Paul Richard Gallagher from the Vatican. Seven other ministers and the speaker of the Canadian House of Commons, Geoff Regan, are also expected in Bled.

In addition, senior officials of international organisations have also announced their arrival, including OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria, IAEA general director Yukiya Aman, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Prince Zeid bin Ra’ad and Fathallah Sijilmassi, the secretary general of the Union for the Mediterranean.

Also announced are the arrivals of Lassina Zerbo, the director of Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization, and NATO Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller.

A strong showing is also coming from the EU, with European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans and High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Federica Mogherini scheduled to make an appearance.

“Their taking the time to come to Bled proves that the BSF is growing and that it is becoming a hub of international discussions,” Grk noted.

The future of the EU will also be high on the agenda as it is expected to become a matter of serious discussions after elections in Germany in September. According to Grk, recent elections have shown that populism and extremism are not the leading force in the EU.

“I believe that after the German election, we’ll start a serious discussion on where we’re going, what kind of EU do we want and how strong and sympathetic we will be together. Slovenia is a country that advocates, with other like-minded countries, an integrated, strong, sympathetic, transparent and democratic EU.”

As has become tradition, the BSF will be divided into three parts – the main part, Business BSF and Young BSF.

Young BSF, held at the weekend before the main part of the forum, will be held in Ljubljana. “We have a selection of interesting and ambitious youths, so I expect that this part of the forum will also put forward interesting proposals for the strategic deliberation of our common future,” Grk noted.

According to him, Business BSF, taking place on 5 September, will be “in line with the new reality”, focusing on innovations and what they mean for the way we live in the future.

The organisers dedicated Business BSF to innovations because they “believe the economy also plays an important role in what kind of a world we’ll live in”.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Centre for European Perspective (CEP), which organise the BSF, have turned to the ministries of public administration and defence, and the Government Communication Office as well as the AmCham and for the first time the German-Slovenian Chamber of Commerce for help organise Business BSF.

According to Grk, the BSF is growing every year and “plays an important role in strengthening the international reputation and in promoting Slovenia”.

Source: Slovenian Press Agency

Heads of state and government, ministers, diplomats, business people, scholars and the media gather to discuss the “New Reality”

The world is rapidly changing, with globalisation and digitalisation significantly increasing the pace of our lives and bringing us closer together than ever before, as well as presenting profound challenges to our self-perception, politics, economy, security, and society. The annual Bled Strategic Forum will address the “New Reality” we live in and seek for the answers to the pressing issues of today’s globalised world.

Providing a high-level platform for discussions, the 12th Bled Strategic Forum will take place on 4 and 5 September 2017 addressing the challenges posed by the “New Reality”. As a leading strategic conference in Central and South East Europe it offers the room for exchange of ideas and concepts through the panels, round tables and one-on-one interviews in the idyllic environment of Bled, Slovenia.

Established political, economic and social elites are losing ground. Populist, nationalist and extremist movements are on the rise. It is difficult to keep up with the vast amount of information that bombards us daily, let alone evaluate its true value or meaning and put it in a proper context. Wars and conflicts in Europe’s immediate neighbourhood and in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia challenge our views on morality, norms, and values. Terrorist attacks fuel fear in our lives and societies, and the fact that there are millions of refugees worldwide deepens our sense of insecurity.

With the world order possibly at breaking point, we need a strategic vision, strong democratic leadership, and perseverance. We need to adapt to the new reality, but always remember the foundations on which our modern societies were built. It is vital to ensure that human rights and fundamental freedoms, democracy, and the rule of law continue to be respected, as well as everything else we have built through the decades.

Pressing regional and global issues bring forth also the questions of the role of the business sector. Since it no longer suffices to understand the changes solely on the basis of past experience and to adapt to a new reality with traditional approaches, we need to create and implement new business, economic and social concepts and new approaches. The search for such approaches will be at the core of the Business BSF, an integral part of the Forum, organised in cooperation with the Ministry of Public Administration, the American Chamber of Commerce in Slovenia, and the German-Slovene Chamber of Commerce and Industry, under the title “Innovating New Reality”.

The challenges of the younger generation in their aspirations for a better future will be traditionally incorporated into the Young BSF. Taking place on 1‒3 September 2017, it will tackle the “(Dis)connected Reality” and give visionary young leaders an opportunity to form real, connected, or virtual partnerships and networks.

Attracting around one thousand participants, including heads of state and government, ministers, diplomats, business people, scholars and the media from around the world, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Slovenia and the Centre for European Perspective put a unique emphasis for the bilateral and multilateral meetings with the regional and global stakeholders and the leaders of today and tomorrow.

Photo: STA, BSF 2016 Archive

Rapid changes and new realities at the core of the 12th Bled Strategic Forum

The time has come to announce the 12th Bled Strategic Forum that will be taking place on 4 and 5 September 2017 under the title “New Reality”.

The world is rapidly changing, with globalisation and digitalisation significantly increasing the pace of our lives and bringing us closer together than ever before, as well as presenting profound challenges to our self-perception, politics, the economy, security, and society. Established political, economic and social elites are losing ground. Populist, nationalist and extremist movements are on the rise. It is difficult to keep up with the vast amount of information that bombards us daily, let alone evaluate its true value or meaning and put it in a proper context. Such challenges of the new reality we live in will be addressed through the panel discussions, round tables and one-on-one interviews at this year’s conference in the idyllic environment of Bled, Slovenia.

The leading conference in Central and South East Europe that provides the needed high-level platform for discussing pressing regional and global issues brings forth also the questions of the role of the business sector, big corporations and small businesses and the challenges of the younger generation in their aspirations for the better future. Therefore, the forum also incorporates the Business BSF, addressing the topic of “Innovating New Reality” and Young BSF, taking place on 1-3 September 2017, tackling the “(Dis)connected Reality”.

Attracting some one thousand participants, including heads of state and government, ministers, diplomats, businesspeople, scholars and the media from around the world, the Forum is a unique opportunity for bilateral and multilateral meetings with the foremost regional and global stakeholders and offers the possibility of extensive networking among political and business leaders of today.

We are excited to share some further details about the conference in the weeks to follow – stay tuned via our website, Facebook and Twitter.

Photo courtesy of Tourist Information Center (TIC) Bled, Bled Tourist Association.

2016 BSF concludes with success

The 2016 Bled Strategic Forum has now officially concluded!

With more than 31 separate events, 136 moderators and speakers, as well as around 1000 participants (including BSF, Business BSF and Young BSF), the 11th Bled Strategic Forum was the biggest and most successful event in its history.

We would like to thank the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Centre for European Perspective, volunteers, our moderators, speakers, guests, institutional partners, sponsors and everyone else who helped to make this years’ Bled Strategic Forum come true.

Wishing you all the best and looking forward to welcoming you all at the 12th Bled Strategic Forum that will be taking place on 4 – 5 September 2017!

Do not forget to save the date!

Yours,

BSF Project Team

Mobility and the Future of Automotive Industry

The car industry as we know it will gradually disappear, agreed participants of the panel termed Mobility and the Future of Automotive Industry at the Business Bled Strategic Forum on Tuesday. The industry will become increasingly adjusted to individuals and their lifestyle.

We are moving from the economy of ownership towards the economy of sharing. »This is logical because an average car today is less that 10% used,« said Mr Matej Čer, entrepreneur from Slovenia. With digitalisation comes a revolution that will change the way that transport is being used, ordered, paid for and shared.

Dr Annalisa Primi, Head of Structural Policies and Innovation Unit at the OECD, warned though that even in the economy of sharing someone was still the owner and this role would be important. Company Uber for example is already planning autonomous car that will be owned by the company.

The alternative will be a platform through which individuals, who are still the car’s owners, decide on its sharing.

The car industry will need to change its mindset. Rather than cars, it will be offering mobility. Cars are increasingly disappearing from cities. The price of cars is increasing and the price of sharing is decreasing, said Mr Matej Zakonjšek, Head of Cabinet of European Transport Commissioner Violeta Bulc.

Participants agreed that there can be no uniform mobility solutions, as the needs of those living in the countryside, which is still most of the population, are different from those in big cities.

Dr Uroš Rosa, CEO of Akrapovič d.d., Slovenia, therefore expects more diversification in the future, based on the actual needs and lifestyle of individuals.

While agreeing that car sharing services will be popular among the young in 2050, he doubts that car ownership will disappear completely. »Many people will still want to have a car as a way of life.«

Mr Zakonjšek said that in the future, an average car will have less emissions, and will be interconnected, largely automatised and shared.

Dr Primi begged to differ, saying there would be no average cars but many different vehicles of different design and fuel.

Mr Felix Ang, President of the Auto Nation Group, Inc., Philippines, believes that in the future, roads usage will be a payable service. Mr Čer, meanwhile, believes the car industry as we know today will not exist in 20 years.

Smart Cities Not Only About Digitalisation, Technology

Smart cities are around the corner as the use of information and communications technologies is propelling the humanity towards the age of smart cities. We are now facing the question of how to transform these urban environments into comprehensive, intelligent and cognitive communities.

During the Smart Cities and Cognitive Communities panel on smart cities and cognitive communities, moderated by Ms Ajša Vodnik, Executive Director of AmCham Slovenia, Dr Maja Makovec Brenčič, Minister of Education, Science and Sport of the Republic of Slovenia stressed that moving towards smart communities was not only about digitalisation. Knowledge is important, and it should be available to all in open environments, she added. It is about the responsibility of improving the lives of all, at the global level.

 Dr Anil Menon, Global President of Smart+Connected Communities at Cisco Systems Inc., moreover stressed that in building smart communities, it was important to be globally aware, to teach “kids that they are a part of a global network”. “You can’t be a great leader if you’re not a great follower; this is important in the new, smart world,” Dr Menon stressed.

 This was built upon by Dr Yoshiaki Ichikawa, Head of Chief Architect Office, Global Center for Social Innovation, Research and Development Group of Hitachi, who stressed that economy was changing and social innovation was very important in building smart cities.

 Mr Makoto Watanabe, Executive Director of New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO), Japan, however remained more technical, highlighting the importance of introducing new systems for smart communities.

Apart from technology, smart cities also include the collection of data and smart mobility, the panel moreover heard. It was also stressed that it was all about transparency in collecting data – about what data is collected, who uses it and how.

Mobility was meanwhile gladly taken on by Mr Davor Tremac, General Manager, South East Europe at Uber, who believes his company is building the next platform. “While water and electricity have been taken for granted for years, we want to make transport something that is taken for granted.”

Turning to introducing smart cities, Mr Blaž Golob, Director of SmartIScity Ltd, meanwhile noted his company was focusing on how to improve smart cities, as while there are over 120 definitions of what a smart city is, they are mainly technology driven. What is more, very few strategies in moving towards smart cities have been drafted in cooperation with mayors, cities.

Security and Sustainability in Tourism

Tourism creates a better world, but with the rise of tourism come more responsibilities, Mr Taleb Rifai, Secretary-General of the World Tourism Organization, told a panel on Security and Sustainability in Tourism at the Business Bled Strategic Forum (BSF) on Tuesday.

“1.2 billion people travelling across the borders of their country can present 1.2 billion opportunities or 1.2 billion catastrophes,” Rifai warned, adding that the tourism industry must constantly seek to find ways to make the world a better place.

Peace should not be taken for granted and in today’s globalised world no country can sustain peace on its own. “Peace in Slovenia depends on peace in the region and in the world. A problem anywhere is a problem everywhere,” he said in his address to the panel.

Mr Rifai believes a key challenge for the future will be to enable obstacle-free travel despite security measures. Security measures are necessary, but they must be humane, he said, warning against the closing of European borders. He also called for the continuation of visa liberalisation process.

Mr Rifai believes countries should not react with panic to security threats, but must work together instead. People should not be advised against travelling to places where locals need their help and support the most, he stressed.

Ms Helen Marano, Senior Vice President of Government and Industry Affairs at the World Travel & Tourism Council, UK, agreed that tourism can contribute to better understanding of different cultures and thus to peace. She too warned against the closing of borders and building of walls.

Addressing the panel, Mr Zdravko Počivalšek, Minister of Economic Development and Technology of the Republic of Slovenia, said that tourism was faced with increasingly many challenges, foremost connected to terrorism and migration.

He called for sustainable development. “There can be no security without sustainability and no sustainability without security,” he said.

Slovenia is dedicated to green and sustainable tourism, said Ms Maja Pak, Director-General of the Slovenian Tourist Board. “Natural resources improve the quality of life and the latter is one of the most important elements of a safe country,” she stressed.

According to Dr Terry Stevens, MD at Stevens & Associates and Professor at School of Management, Swansea University, UK, world leaders have a great responsibility. Panic and overreactions should be avoided, decisions must be proportionate and reasonable, he warned.

Ms Tatjana Juriševič, CEO of travel agent Kompas d.d., Slovenia  said that panic among tourists was often created by the media. “It is important to stay rational,” she stressed.

Ms Eva Štravs Podlogar, General Director of the Directorate for Tourism and Internationalization at the Ministry of Economic Development and Technology of the Republic of Slovenia, pointed to cooperation in the branch, noting that all Slovenian stakeholders were included in the drawing up of a new national tourism strategy.

Ms Irena Gueorguieva, Deputy Minister of Tourism of the Republic of Bulgaria, stressed that tourism connected people and warned that all stakeholders carried responsibility for the overall stituation.

Ambassador Dr Gusztav Bienerth, Government Commissioner for Tourism at the Prime Minister’s Office, Hungary,  too pointed to the importance of cooperation, calling on Slovenia to back Budapest’s candidacy for the Summer Olympics in 2024.

Dr Mario Hardy, CEO of the Pacific Asia Travel Association, Thailand, called on European countries to present themselves to Asian tourists as safe countries that are far away from France.

Digital Transformation Huge Opportunity for Slovenia, Panel Hears

A third wave of digital transformation – the growth of global urban services –  is coming, and it will be bigger than the first two, Dr Anil Menon, Global President of Smart+Connected Communities at Cisco Systems Inc., stressed at the Digital Transformation panel at Business BSF.

This wave is a huge opportunity for countries like Slovenia, Mr Menon added, stressing that it was all about “who will win the race” of becoming a smart country.

Mr Joseph Macri, Vice-President Public Sector, Europe Middle East & Africa at Microsoft Corporation noted that Slovenia was at the same time small enough to be agile and big enough to have an impact as a reference country.

Mr Boris Koprivnikar, Minister of Public Administration of the Republic of Slovenia, meanwhile noted that we were facing the 4th industrial revolution. However, technology is already here, the real revolution is how we use it. According to the minister, the state has one role in this revolution – to provide open data and open communication, and though that improve “the lives of our citizens and improve the opportunities for businesses”. “A country without big data is just another country hoping for the best,” he pointed out.

The debate kicked off with presentations of their companies’ activities by Mr Dieter Brunner, CEO of Iskraemeco d.d., who pointed out that people needed an internet of energy, by Mr Luciano Cirinà, CEO of Generali CEE Holding B.V., who believes industry will play an even more important role in improving people’s lives, and Mr Boris Sovič, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Elektro Maribor, who stressed that the energy sector was the forerunner in the digital transformation.

Mr Primož Pusar, Partner and CEO of Pristop, on the other hand stressed that “the pain is around the corner if you don’t change immediately”. “Digital transformation is becoming a race to adapt to a new reality,” he also stressed.

Mr Mitja Jermol, Head of the Centre for Knowledge Transfer at Jožef Stefan Institute, noted that society faced a clash of generations. “It is not only about opening the minds, it is also about opening institutions,” he stressed.