Since its founding 19 years ago as a pioneering collaboration with Portuguese universities, research institutions and corporations, the MIT-Portugal Program (MPP) has achieved a slew of successes â from enabling 47 entrepreneurial spinoffs and funding over 220 joint projects between MIT and Portuguese researchers to training a generation of exceptional researchers on both sides of the Atlantic.
In March, with nearly two decades of collaboration under their belts, MIT and the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation (FCT) signed an agreement that officially launches the programâs next chapter. Running through 2030, MPPâs Phase 4 will support continued exploration of innovative ideas and solutions in fields ranging from artificial intelligence and nanotechnology to climate change â both on the MIT campus and with partners throughout Portugal. Â
âOne of the advantages of having a program that has gone on so long is that we are pretty well familiar with each other at this point. Over the years, weâve learned each otherâs systems, strengths and weaknesses and weâve been able to create a synergy that would not have existed if we worked together for a short period of time,â says Douglas Hart, MIT mechanical engineering professor and MPP co-director.
Hart and John Hansman, the T. Wilson Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT and MPP co-director, are eager to take the programâs existing research projects further, while adding new areas of focus identified by MIT and FCT. Known as the Fundação para a CiĂȘncia e Tecnologia in Portugal, FCT is the national public agency supporting research in science, technology and innovation under Portugalâs Ministry of Education, Science and Innovation.
âOver the past two decades, the partnership with MIT has built a foundation of trust that has fostered collaboration among researchers and the development of projects with significant scientific impact and contributions to the Portuguese economy,â Fernando Alexandre, Portugalâs minister for education, science, and innovation, says. âIn this new phase of the partnership, running from 2025 to 2030, we expect even greater ambition and impact â raising Portuguese science and its capacity to transform the economy and improve our society to even higher levels, while helping to address the challenges we face in areas such as climate change and the oceans, digitalization, and space.â
âInternational collaborations like the MIT-Portugal Program are absolutely vital to MITâs mission of research, education and service. Iâm thrilled to see the program move into its next phase,â says MIT President Sally Kornbluth. âMPP offers our faculty and students opportunities to work in unique research environments where they not only make new findings and learn new methods but also contribute to solving urgent local and global problems. MPPâs work in the realm of ocean science and climate is a prime example of how international partnerships like this can help solve important human problems.”
Sharing MITâs commitment to academic independence and excellence, Kornbluth adds, âthe institutions and researchers we partner with through MPP enhance MITâs ability to achieve its mission, enabling us to pursue the exacting standards of intellectual and creative distinction that make MIT a cradle of innovation and world leader in scientific discovery.â
The epitome of an effective international collaboration, MPP has stayed true to its mission and continued to deliver results here in the U.S. and in Portugal for nearly two decades â prevailing amid myriad shifts in the political, social, and economic landscape. The multifaceted program encompasses an annual research conference and educational summits such as an Innovation Workshop at MIT each June and a Marine Robotics Summer School in the Azores in July, as well as student and faculty exchanges that facilitate collaborative research. During the third phase of the program alone, 59 MIT students and 53 faculty and researchers visited Portugal, and MIT hosted 131 students and 49 faculty and researchers from Portuguese universities and other institutions.
In each roughly five-year phase, MPP researchers focus on a handful of core research areas. For Phase 3, MPP advanced cutting-edge research in four strategic areas: climate science and climate change; Earth systems: oceans to near space; digital transformation in manufacturing; and sustainable cities. Within these broad areas, MIT and FCT researchers worked together on numerous small-scale projects and several large âflagshipâ ones, including development of Portugalâs CubeSat satellite, a collaboration between MPP and several Portuguese universities and companies that marked the countryâs second satellite launch and the first in 30 years.
While work in the Phase 3 fields will continue during Phase 4, researchers will also turn their attention to four more areas: chips/nanotechnology, energy (a previous focus in Phase 2), artificial intelligence, and space.
âWe are opening up the aperture for additional collaboration areas,â Hansman says.
In addition to focusing on distinct subject areas, each phase has emphasized the various parts of MPPâs mission to differing degrees. While Phase 3 accentuated collaborative research more than educational exchanges and entrepreneurship, those two aspects will be given more weight under the Phase 4 agreement, Hart said.
âWe have approval in Phase 4 to bring a number of Portuguese students over, and our principal investigators will benefit from close collaborations with Portuguese researchers,â he says.
The longevity of MPP and the recent launch of Phase 4 are evidence of the programâs value. The program has played a role in the educational, technological and economic progress Portugal has achieved over the past two decades, as well. Â
âThe Portugal of today is remarkably stronger than the Portugal of 20 years ago, and many of the places where they are stronger have been impacted by the program,â says Hansman, pointing to sustainable cities and âgreenâ energy, in particular. âWe canât take direct credit, but weâve been part of Portugalâs journey forward.â
Since MPP began, Hart adds, âPortugal has become much more entrepreneurial. Many, many, many more start-up companies are coming out of Portuguese universities than there used to be.â Â
AÂ recent analysis of MPP and FCTâs other U.S. collaborations highlighted a number of positive outcomes. The report noted that collaborations with MIT and other US universities have enhanced Portuguese research capacities and promoted organizational upgrades in the national R&D ecosystem, while providing Portuguese universities and companies with opportunities to engage in complex projects that would have been difficult to undertake on their own.
Regarding MIT in particular, the report found that MPPâs long-term collaboration has spawned the establishment of sustained doctoral programs and pointed to a marked shift within Portugalâs educational ecosystem toward globally aligned standards. MPP, it reported, has facilitated the education of 198 Portuguese PhDs.
Portugalâs universities, students and companies are not alone in benefitting from the research, networks, and economic activity MPP has spawned. MPP also delivers unique value to MIT, as well as to the broader US science and research community. Among the programâs consistent themes over the years, for example, is âjoint interest in the Atlantic,â Hansman says.
This summer, Faial Island in the Azores will host MPPâs fifth annual Marine Robotics Summer School, a two-week course open to 12 Portuguese Masterâs and first year PhD students and 12 MIT upper-level undergraduates and graduate students. The course, which includes lectures by MIT and Portuguese faculty and other researchers, workshops, labs and hands-on experiences, âis always my favorite,â said Hart.
âI get to work with some of the best researchers in the world there, and some of the top students coming out of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, MIT, and Portugal,â he says, adding that some of his previous Marine Robotics Summer School students have come to study at MIT and then gone on to become professors in ocean science.
âSo, itâs been exciting to see the growth of students coming out of that program, certainly a positive impact,â Hart says.
MPP provides one-of-a-kind opportunities for ocean research due to the unique marine facilities available in Portugal, including not only open ocean off the Azores but also Lisbonâs deep-water port and a Portuguese Naval facility just south of Lisbon that is available for collaborative research by international scientists. Like MIT, Portuguese universities are also strongly invested in climate change research â a field of study keenly related to ocean systems.
âThe international collaboration has allowed us to test and further develop our research prototypes in different aquaculture environments both in the US and in Portugal, while building on the unique expertise of our Portuguese faculty collaborator Dr. Ricardo Calado from the University of Aveiro and our industry collaborators,â says Stefanie Mueller, the TIBCO Career Development Associate Professor in MITâs departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Mechanical Engineering and leader of the Human-Computer Interaction Group at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab.
Mueller points to the work of MIT mechanical engineering PhD student Charlene Xia, a Marine Robotics Summer School participant, whose research is aimed at developing an economical system to monitor the microbiome of seaweed farms and halt the spread of harmful bacteria associated with ocean warming. In addition to participating in the summer school as a student, Xia returned to the Azores for two subsequent years as a teaching assistant.
âThe MIT-Portugal Program has been a key enabler of our research on monitoring the aquatic microbiome for potential disease outbreaks,â Mueller says.
As MPP enters its next phase, Hart and Hansman are optimistic about the programâs continuing success on both sides of the Atlantic and envision broadening its impact going forward.
âI think, at this point, the research is going really well, and weâve got a lot of connections. I think one of our goals is to expand not the science of the program necessarily, but the groups involved,â Hart says, noting that MPP could have a bigger presence in technical fields such as AI and micro-nano manufacturing, as well as in social sciences and humanities.
âWeâd like to involve many more people and new people here at MIT, as well as in Portugal,â he says, âso that we can reach a larger slice of the population.âÂ