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29 November – 1 December 2016

Centre Albert Borschette, (Rue Froissart 36, 1049 Brussels)



 

Event summary

 

We invite you to be part of the CEF eDelivery & eInvoicing DSIs Stakeholder Days, which are to be held on 29 November – 1 December 2016 at Centre Albert Borschette (Rue Froissart 36, 1049 Brussels).

 

The CEF eDelivery infrastructure Day (Tuesday 29 November) will demonstrate how CEF can help users set up their future eDelivery infrastructures. Case studies from eDelivery implementation in the Netherlands, Norway and Germany will be presented. The afternoon session will focus on the Message Exchange, the Discovery and the Security Models.

 

The CEF eDelivery industry Day (Wednesday 30 November) focus is to discuss what is currently missing to create an eDelivery market in the context of the Digital Single Market. Software vendors that have passed the conformance testing will present their experiences and a conformance testing exercise workshop will take place in the afternoon session.

 

The CEF eInvoicing Stakeholders' event (Thursday 1 December) aim is to provide an update on the policy and support activities, namely the eInvoicing Readiness website and the State of play of B2G eInvoicing in public procurement.

 

If you wish to take part in any of these days please register here for:

 

  • CEF eDelivery infrastructure Day (Tuesday 29 November)
  • CEF eDelivery industry Day (Wednesday 30 November)
  • CEF eInvoicing Stakeholders' event (Thursday 1 December)


Agenda

CEF eDelivery infrastructure Day (Tuesday 29 November)

 

     

 

TimeItemSpeakers

09.30 – 10.00

Registration & Coffee

 

10.00 – 10.40

The Digital Single Market:

 

  1. Overview of the CEF Building Blocks;
  2. How eDelivery and eIDAS help Member States to realise the Digital   Single Market.

Andrea Servida, DG CNECT H4

10.40 – 11.20

User Journey – How can CEF help you set up your future eDelivery infrastructure?

João Rodrigues Frade, DIGIT B4

11.20 – 11.35

Coffee break

 

11.35 – 12.05

Case 1 – How   was an eDelivery infrastructure implemented in the Netherlands?

Freek van Krevel, Ministry of Economic Affairs, the Netherlands

12.05 – 12.35

Case 2 – How   was an eDelivery infrastructure implemented in Norway?

André Hoddevik, Agency for Public Management and   eGovernment (DIFI), Norway

12.35 – 13.05

Case 3 – How   was an eDelivery infrastructure implemented in Germany?

Natalie Nickel and Tim Nowosadtko, Ministry of Justice of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

13.05 – 14.15

Lunch break

 

14.15 – 14.45

Round table discussion

Lessons learnt from the eDelivery implementations

Participants: Freek van Krevel, André Hoddevik, Natalie Nickel and Tim Nowosadtko

Moderator: Thomas Fillis, DIGIT B4

14.45 – 16.00

(room 3.05)

Breakout A: Choosing the Message Exchange Model

The e-SENS Profile of the AS4 message exchange protocol

Pim van der Eijk, OASIS

14.45 – 16.00

(room 0.20)

Breakout B: Choosing the Discovery Model

Static Discovery vs. Dynamic Discovery with Service Metadata Publisher   and Service Metadata Locator technology

Sven Rostgaard Rasmussen, the Danish Agency for Digitisation

14.45 – 16.00

(room 3.10)

Breakout C: Choosing the Security Model

Linking eIDAS Electronic Registered Delivery Service and CEF eDelivery

Speaker TBC

16.00 – 16.25

Coffee break

 

16.25 – 16.55

Plenary feedback on the breakouts

All

16.55 – 17.00CloseJoão Rodrigues Frade, DIGIT B4

 

 


                                                                                

 


CEF eDelivery industry Day (Wednesday 30 November)


 



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Background

The CEF eDelivery building block helps public administrations and businesses (and indirectly citizens) to participate in eDelivery Messaging Infrastructures. These facilitate organisation-to-organisation messaging by enabling their systems to interact with each other in a secure, reliable and trusted way. The Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) Digital Programme, is currently promoting the adoption of common standards in the eDelivery Messaging Infrastructures in different policy domains (Business Registers, eJustice, eProcurement, etc.).

CEF eDelivery builds on the work of the Member States on the Large Scale Pilots (such as e-SENS) and the Regulation (EU) 910/201 on Electronic identification and trust services, commonly known as 'eIDAS'.

CEF eDelivery supports the fundamental principles of the digital age by promoting the alignment between its technical specifications and the eIDAS regulatory framework. eIDAS establishes the principle that an electronic document should not be denied legal effect on the grounds that it is in an electronic form.

CEF eDelivery promotes the use of existing technical specifications and standards rather than trying to define new ones. Organisations adopting these technical specifications are free to select any software that conforms to them. In short, there are three alternative scenarios for Public Authorities and Business interested in deploying a CEF eDelivery Access Point. They can buy, build or reuse one.

 

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