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On 29 November 2018, NATO held an exhibition to mark the 60th anniversary of the Science for Peace and Security (SPS) Programme. Prototypes of the most promising technologies were displayed at NATO’s Headquarters by 25 scientists from NATO and partner countries who presented their research and results to other scientists, diplomats and officials.
The prototypes address some of NATO’s key security development needs, such as counter-terrorism, maritime security, the protection of critical infrastructure and defence against chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) agents.
Created in 1958, NATO’s SPS Programme sponsors research activities organised between scientists from Allied nations and partner countries across the world. Over the past decade, the SPS Programme has initiated nearly 800 collaborative activities among the Alliance’s 29 member states and 41 partner countries, ranging from cyber defence in Jordan to humanitarian demining in Ukraine.
Some of the prototypes presented at the event can be discovered below.