| ||
|---|---|---|
FormerPrime Minister of Russia FormerPresident of Russia Political views Elections
Premiership | ||

TheMedvedev modernisation programme was an initiative launched byPresident of RussiaDmitry Medvedev in 2009, which aimed at modernisingRussia's economy and society, decreasing the country's dependency on oil and gas revenues and creating adiversified economy based on high technology andinnovation.[1] The programme was based on the top 5 priorities for the country's technological development:efficient energy use;nuclear technology; information technology;medical technology andpharmaceuticals; andspace technology in combination with telecommunications.[2]

After the near total collapse in 1998, theRussian economy recovered as a result of high oil prices during the presidency ofVladimir Putin, but remained heavily dependent on energy and raw material exports. In the first decade of the 2000s, global oil prices kept rising, fuelling economic growth. Medvedev later stated his belief that this was not only a boom, but also damaging to the Russian economy, saying that if the oil price is too high, "we’d never change the structure of our economy... We haven’t done anything in the last 10 years because oil kept rushing higher and higher."[3]
There had been repeated calls for a more diversified economy under Putin; already in 2005, Putin's Prime MinisterMikhail Fradkov warned about the dependency of the economy on raw material exports, and in 2007 Deputy Prime MinisterSergey Ivanov said that without diversification, the Russian economy will sooner or later face a collapse.[4]Dmitry Medvedev, elected as president in 2008, made economic modernisation his prime presidential agenda. Medvedev's statements regarding this issue went much further than other statements by the Russian leadership.[4] In 2009, Medvedev founded thePresidential Commission on Innovation. The commission comprises almost the entire Russian government and some of the best minds from academia and business.[5]
Medvedev outlined his programme in an article called "Go Russia!" that was published online in September 2009. In the article, he formulated his strategic objective of modernising Russia.[6] He criticised Russia's economic "backwardness" and what he called Russia's "humiliating" dependency on oil and raw materials.[7] He described the Russian society as "archaic" and "paternalistic" and said that the country can no longer rely on the achievements of the past to secure a prosperous future.[8] In Medvedev's view, Russia should aim for a modern, diversified economy based on high technology and innovation.[7] Medvedev criticised the previous attempts to modernise Russia—those initiated byPeter I the Great and theSoviet Union—saying that the results they brought came at too high a cost, and this time modernisation must come not through coercion but via the development of the creative potential of every individual, through private entrepreneurship and initiative.[9]
Medvedev identified five key areas for economic modernisation, in which breakthroughs must be achieved:[10]
Medvedev further discussed and publicised his programme in his second state of the nation address in November 2009, as well as in a televised speech in December 2009.

As of 2014, theenergy intensity of the Russian economy was estimated to be about 2.5 times more than theworld average.[11] The government set an aim of 40% decrease of the energy intensity by 2020.[11] It was estimated that the main potential of achieving this aim lies within the housing sector and the budget organisations.[11] The following state projects were initiated to increase energy efficiency:[11]
| English | Russian | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Count, save and pay | Считай, экономь и плати | establishing and propagation of the thrifty model of energy resources use; governmental coordination of mass installation and production ofcounters andeconomizers. |
| New light | Новый свет | gradual replacement of traditionalincandescent light bulbs with more efficient types of lamps; development of the national production of energy saving devices. |
| Energetically efficient city block | Энергоэффективный квартал | pilot project aimed to create efficient energy distribution and saving systems in urban blocks of several Russian cities. |
| Energetically efficient social sector | Энергоэффективный социальный сектор | realisation of the energy efficiency programmes in schools and hospitals, with planned subsequent enlargement of the project scope to all social services. |
| Local energy systems | Малая комплексная энергетика | developing of the local systems of electricity generation and central heating, where such small-scale systems were thought to be more effective than large, centralized systems; development of the production of equipment for local energy generation and supply. |
| Innovative energy supply | Инновационная энергетика | stimulation of new innovative developments in energy sector; nationwide technological contests in the area of energy efficiency. |

Nuclear power in Russia is managed byRosatom State Corporation. The aim of the programme was to increase the total share of nuclear energy from 16.9% to 23% by 2020. It was planned to allocate 127 billion rubles ($5.42 billion) to a federal program dedicated to the next generation of nuclear energy technology. About 1 trillion rubles ($42.7 billion) was to be allocated from the federal budget to nuclear power and industry development before 2015.[12] The programme aimed to establish secure, cheap, and long-term nuclear energy supply in Russia as well as increase Russian exports of nuclear energy and technology abroad.[13] Besides construction of the newnuclear power plants in Russia and elsewhere, the following major state projects were initiated in the area of nuclear technology:[13]
| English | Russian | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Development of the Standard Project of the optimised and informatised powerblock based on the VVER technology (VVER-TOI) | Создание Типового Проекта оптимизированного и информатизированного энергоблока технологии ВВЭР (ВВЭР-ТОИ) | development by 2012 of all the technology needed for a modernnuclear power station with theVVER-typereactor, adapted for Russian as well as for American and European markets. |
| New technological platform: closed nuclear fuel cycle and fast-neutron reactors | Новая технологическая платформа: замкнутый ядерный топливный цикл и реакторы на быстрых нейтронах | development by 2030 of a new technological base in nuclear technology, characterised by the usage of closednuclear fuel cycle andfast-neutron reactors. This technology allows better efficiency of nuclear fuel usage, an important advantage in light of the expected future squeeze in the world'suranium supply. Russia is a world leader in fast-neutron reactor technology.[14] |
| Controlled thermonuclear fusion | Управляемый термоядерный синтез | development by 2050 of practical methods ofcontrolled thermonuclear fusion, the technology aimed to produce cheap energy fully independent fromnon-renewable resources. |

The government planned to develop theinformation society in Russia and counter a shortage of IT specialists due to high demand. In 2009 Russian companies employed more than 1 million IT specialists, making up 1.34% of the country's workforce, a figure lower than in other major economies such as the United States (3.74%), United Kingdom (3.16%), and Germany (3.14%).
The following major state projects were realized or planned in the area of information technology:[15][16]

| English | Russian | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Development of supercomputing and grid technology | Развитие суперкомпьютеров и ГРИД-технологий | creation of the common space for the domestically produced high-performancesupercomputers on the basis ofgrid computing, in order to provide means for the complex calculations fornuclear technology centers,aircraft industry and other major clients which need high-performance computing forcomputer simulation of their projects. |
| Electronic government | Электронное правительство | gradual movement towards thee-government, which includes the providing of interaction with the state and access to the state services via Internet and other communication technologies; reducing the volume of paper documentation in favour of electronic one (first in the pilot regions, then on the state level); full transfer to the public announcement of thegovernment procurement orders in electronic form. |
| IT and communication services in education and social development | ИКТ-услуги в области развития образования и социального развития личности | creation and development of the newe-learning Internet resources aimed into improving the access to higher and professional education, especially for people withdisabilities, inhabitants of remote regions of the country, andRussian speakers outside of Russia; establishment of the special centers for the education of specialists in IT and the involvement of gifted secondary and higher education students into IT development. |
| IT and communication services in medical science, health care and social security | ИКТ-услуги в области медицины, здравоохранения и социального обеспечения | creation and development of the Internet resources and automatic systems aimed into providing quality state services inpublic health andsocial security; IT-based monitoring of the personal health of citizens; development of systems that improve the interaction between medical scientists and physicians; transfer ofmedical records into the electronic form and introduction of the similar electronic "social cards". |
| IT and communication services in public and personal security | ИКТ-услуги в области безопасности жизнедеятельности | development of systems ofautomatic speech recognition,closed-circuit television and security-relatedpattern recognition. |
| Supercomputer education | Суперкомпьютерное образование | creation of the national system of education of specialists insupercomputing on the basis of Supercomputer Consortium ofRussian universities; 500 experts in supercomputing were planned to be prepared in 2010–2012, and 25 universities were expected to join the system of supercomputer education. |

Much of the sector area still awaited large-scale commercialisation,.[17] aimed to be achieved by the combination of space technology and telecommunications. The following state projects were initiated in this area:[17]
| English | Russian | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Space-based navigation, including the commercialisation of the GLONASS system | Космическая навигация, включая коммерческое использование системы ГЛОНАСС | providing thesatellite navigation services of RussianGLONASS system to various type of clients, includingemergency services, construction andfreight companies, natural gas andpetroleum industry, energy supply andlogistics, and individual customers. |
| Space-based monitoring and search | Мониторинг и слежение из космоса | distant space-based monitoring of theEarth atmosphere and surface, aimed into the search ofmineral resources, ecological control,climate change andweather forecasting, andrescue operations support. |
| Space-based targeting systems | Системы наведения из космоса | implementation of the capabilities of military and anti-terrorist space-based targeting systems into the area of dealing with certain types of emergencies, control of the atmosperic processes etc. |
| Space-based telecommunications in the broadband access systems | Космические телекоммуникации, как часть системы широкополосного доступа | transfer to the space-based broadband access systems, including in the area ofdigital television andradio. |
The funding ofRussian Federal Space Agency Roscosmos has almost tripled from 2007, standing at $3.1 billion in 2011. President Medvedev and the modernisation programme is credited with the increase.[18]

Despite a number of achievements, Russia was significantly behind the world leaders inmedical technology andpharmaceutical production.[19] The country produced only 20% of the drugs used domestically, while 80% is imported.[citation needed]
The specific major state projects in the area of medical technology and pharmaceuticals were not defined or announced.[19] The government aimed to achieve the primarily domestical production of the most needed types of medical equipment and pharmaceuticals, as well as support the development and commercialization of new innovative products, especially those related tobiotechnology,cell andnuclear medicine, andnanotechnology.[19]
According to theFrench Institute of International Relations, the programme has failed.[20]