Innovation in Sweden

The cardiac pacemaker has been implanted in more than 3.5 million people. The three-point auto seatbelt saves a life every six minutes, and has been doing so for more than 50 years. Both are Swedish inventions, part of a long list of innovations born in this country that have made the lives of their users longer, better or just more convenient: the zipper, safety matches, dynamite, nicotine gum, drinks cartons, ball bearings, the adjustable wrench, the artificial kidney and Bluetooth are just a few of the others.

This national knack for creative thinking has helped make Sweden one of Europe’s and the world’s most innovative nations, according to numerous surveys. Many Swedish (or half-Swedish) companies have grown wealthy off this innovativeness, including Volvo, Ericsson, ABB, Tetra Pak and AstraZeneca, while Skype (free phone calls over the internet) and Spotify (music streaming) belong to the next generation of Swedish technological successes. Less high-tech, but with immense potential to improve billions of lives in developing countries, is the Peepoo, a Swedish-designed personal single-use toilet that stops human waste from contaminating the immediate area and the wider environment.

Sweden invests about 3 percent of its GDP in research, one of the highest rates in the world. The Swedish Government itself invests heavily in research and development, and there are several government agencies that fund and coordinate research. Their efforts are currently focused on medicine and bioscience, technology and the climate.

Sweden is also associated around the world with innovation in another way. The famous Swedish chemist and engineer Alfred Nobel — who invented dynamite – used his fortune to encourage and reward innovators from around the world. The Nobel Prizes, presented each year in Stockholm by the Swedish monarch, recognize important breakthroughs in medicine, physics and chemistry, and are regarded as the most prestigious awards in the world of science.

Source: www.sweden.se

10 innovations you didn’t know were Swedish

by: Lola Akinmade Åkerström

From Anders Celsius’s thermometer in the 1700s to Skype in 2003, Sweden has long been a country that breeds innovation. The Global Innovation Index 2012 ranked Sweden as the most innovative country within the European Union.

 Why do Swedish innovations continue to make a mark globally? It may have to do with an educational system that incubates business startups, the free-thinking democratic Swedish society that encourages research and development, the prestigious Nobel Prizes handed out every December and the challenging weather that fosters resourcefulness, sustainability and eco-friendly initiatives.
Take a look at our A to Z of Swedish innovations — many of them found around the world — that you maybe didn’t know were Swedish.

Automatic identification systems
Getting completely lost nowadays is difficult thanks to global positioning systems (GPS) which are now an essential part of our daily lives; embedded in various technologies from smartphones to in-car navigation systems. Swedish inventor Håkan Lans is credited with taking GPS technology one step further to create automatic identification systems (AIS) now widely used in the shipping industry for tracking ships and vessel traffic.

Adjustable 

wrench
A staple in many toolboxes, the adjustable wrench or spanner, also popularly called "Monkey wrench" or "English key," often comes in very handy during do-it-yourself (DIY) projects. While the first iteration of this spanner was originally invented in 1842 by British engineer Richard Clyburn, today's adjustable wrench, the "Swedish Key," is attributed to Johan Petter Johansson, a Swedish inventor who improved upon Clyburn's original concept and patented it in 1891.

HIV tracker
A recent addition to the list of Swedish inventions is the HIV tracker: a sensitive device used for mapping out and detecting the spread of HIV and other viruses. Conceptualized by Doctor of Biotechnology Martin Hedström and his team at Lund University, the device can detect extremely low concentrations of poisons, viruses or other substances in liquids — which also makes it potentially invaluable for fighting bioterrorism.

Hövding, the invisible bicycle helmet
To help combat the issue of people not using bicycle helmets, Swedish company Hövding has developed a cyclist’s equivalent of a vehicle airbag: an “invisible” helmet that inflates within 0.1 seconds and protects the head before impact. This helmet for the vain, which is worn around the neck as a collar that blends in with clothing, has sensors that detect any erratic patterns in the cyclist’s movements and deploy the airbag immediately when they sense an accident.

Pacemaker
In 1958, Rune Elmqvist developed a battery-run artificial pacemaker, which was used for the very first pacemaker operation done by surgeon Åke Senning at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm. The pacemaker is placed under the heart patient’s skin and the electrical pulses it generates ensure that muscles expand and contract normally, regulating the heart.

PowerTrekk
Futuristic-sounding PowerTrekk is a portable charger that uses eco-friendly fuel cell technology to convert hydrogen into electricity. By adding one tablespoon of water along with the fuel pack to the charger, you can connect any compatible electronic device — mobile phones, GPS, laptops, digital cameras — to the PowerTrekk to instantly charge it.

Tetra Pak
Thanks to the revolutionary paper-based packaging system called Tetra Pak we can now carry our milk home from the grocery store in cartons instead of glass bottles. Conceptualized in 1946 by Erik Wallenberg and produced by Ruben Rausing, Tetra Pak’s technology is used for storing and distributing liquids, semi-liquids and dairy products.

Three-point seatbelt
Now a standard requirement in every passenger vehicle saving around one life every six minutes, the three-point seatbelt was developed by Swedish inventor and safety engineer Nils Bohlin in 1959 for Volvo. It’s designed with a Y shape to spread out energy across a moving body during an accident.

Ultrasound / ECG
Ultrasound is so integral to healthcare today that remembering a time when it didn’t exist is difficult. Along with German researcher Carl Hellmuth Hertz, Swedish physician Inge Edler devised the modern day echocardiograms — a Doppler ultrasound of the heart — that are integral to monitoring cardiovascular health. This invention netted both Hertz and Edler a highly coveted Albert Lasker Clinical Medical Research Award in 1977.

Zipper
The modern-day zipper as we know it was improved upon and developed by Swedish-American inventor Gideon Sundbäck from an earlier less effective model in 1913. Sundbäck’s newly redesigned version called the “separable fastener” was patented in 1917 and features interlocking teeth pulled together and apart by a slider.

 Source: www.sweden.se
Photos:
Mona Loose/imagebank.sweden.se
Melker Dahlstrand/imagebank.sweden.se
Hannes Söderlund/imagebank.sweden.se

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