Europaudvalget 2018
KOM (2018) 0435
Offentligt
1908190_0001.png
EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
Brussels, 7.6.2018
SWD(2018) 307 final
PART 1/3
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT
IMPACT ASSESSMENT
Accompanying the document
Proposals for a
REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL
establishing Horizon Europe
the Framework Programme for Research and
Innovation, laying down its rules for participation and dissemination
DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on
establishing the specific programme implementing Horizon Europe
the Framework
Programme for Research and Innovation
COUNCIL REGULATION establishing the Research and Training Programme of the
European Atomic Energy Community for the period 2021-2025 complementing Horizon
Europe
the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation
{COM(2018) 435 final} - {COM(2018) 436 final} - {COM(2018) 437 final} -
{SEC(2018) 291 final} - {SWD(2018) 308 final} - {SWD(2018) 309 final}
EN
EN
kom (2018) 0435 (forslag) - COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposals for a REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL establishing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation, laying down its rules for participation and dissemination DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on establishing the specific programme implementing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation COUNCIL REGULATION establishing the Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community for the period 2021-2025 complementing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation
Table of contents
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................. 3
1
INTRODUCTION: POLITICAL AND LEGAL CONTEXT..................................... 7
1.1 Scope ................................................................................................................. 7
1.1.1 Political context ............................................................................................ 8
1.1.2 Legal context ................................................................................................ 9
1.2
2
2.1
2.2
2.3
3
Lessons learnt from previous programmes........................................................ 9
Key features of Horizon 2020 and expected impacts of its continuation ........ 12
Main R&I challenges and problems to be addressed ...................................... 14
Objectives of the future Programme................................................................ 16
CHALLENGES AND OBJECTIVES....................................................................... 12
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE AND PRIORITIES ................................................. 17
3.1 Scope and structure of the new Framework Programme................................. 17
3.2 Improvements and their expected implications ............................................... 24
3.2.1 The European Innovation Council (EIC) ................................................... 25
3.2.2 Research and Innovation Missions ............................................................. 30
3.2.3 International cooperation ............................................................................ 33
3.2.4 Open Science policy ................................................................................... 36
3.2.5 European Partnerships ................................................................................ 38
3.3
3.4
Overall impact on the new Framework Programme........................................ 40
Critical mass .................................................................................................... 44
The strategic planning process ........................................................................ 50
The single set of rules ...................................................................................... 51
The funding model .......................................................................................... 52
Forms of funding, including simplified cost options....................................... 53
Grants, financial instruments and blended finance.......................................... 54
Proposal evaluation and selection ................................................................... 55
Ex-ante and ex-post audits............................................................................... 57
Policy and rules regarding Dissemination and Exploitation ........................... 58
Delegation to Executive Agencies................................................................... 59
Overall impact on the objectives of the MFF .................................................. 60
4
DELIVERY FOR IMPACT ...................................................................................... 45
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
4.7
4.8
4.9
4.10
5
HOW WILL PERFORMANCE BE MONITORED AND EVALUATED? ............ 65
1
kom (2018) 0435 (forslag) - COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposals for a REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL establishing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation, laying down its rules for participation and dissemination DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on establishing the specific programme implementing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation COUNCIL REGULATION establishing the Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community for the period 2021-2025 complementing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation
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Glossary
Term or acronym
COSME
EIC
EIT
ERAC
ERC
ERCEA
ERDF
EU
FET
FP7
GDP
JRC
KICs
MFF
MSCA
R&I
REA
SMEs
TFEU
Meaning or definition
EU programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and Small and
Medium-sized Enterprises
European Innovation Council
European Institute for Innovation and Technology
European Research Area and Innovation Committee
European Research Council
European Research Council Executive Agency
European Regional Development Fund
European Union
Future and Emerging Technologies
Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological
Development
Gross Domestic Product
Joint Research Centre
Knowledge and Innovation Communities
Multiannual Financial Framework
Marie
Skłodowska-Curie
Actions
Research and Innovation
Research Executive Agency
Small and Medium Enterprises
Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union
kom (2018) 0435 (forslag) - COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposals for a REGULATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL establishing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation, laying down its rules for participation and dissemination DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on establishing the specific programme implementing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation COUNCIL REGULATION establishing the Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community for the period 2021-2025 complementing Horizon Europe – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation
E
XECUTIVE
S
UMMARY
This impact assessment accompanies the Commission proposal for Horizon Europe, the
2021-2027 Framework Programme for EU Research and Innovation, which will succeed the
current Programme, Horizon 2020 (active between 2014-2020), and the proposal for the
2021-2025 Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community
(Euratom Programme).
Research and innovation help Europe
deliver on citizens' priorities, as embodied in the
Sustainable Development Goals and in the Paris Agreement on fighting climate change, to
bring about sustainable growth and high-quality jobs, and to solve present and unforeseen
global challenges. However, Europe overall currently underinvests in research and innovation
compared to its main trading partners, and so risks being irreversibly outpaced.
EU-level investment, through successive Framework Programmes, has supported the
provision of public goods with a high European added value.
This added value comes
from the Programmes’ focus on excellence through EU-wide
competition and cooperation.
Framework Programmes support training and mobility for scientists, create transnational,
cross-sectoral and multidisciplinary collaborations, leverage additional public and private
investment, build the scientific evidence necessary for EU policies, and have structuring
effects on national research and innovation systems. The significant and long-lasting impact
of the Framework Programmes, in particular the current Programme, is acknowledged by the
EU institutions, Member States and stakeholders alike.
Horizon Europe is built on the evidence and lessons learnt from the Horizon 2020
interim evaluation,
and the recommendations of the independent High-Level Group on
maximising the impact of EU research and innovation. The new Programme will be an
evolution, not a revolution, focusing on a few design improvements to further increase
openness and impact.
Horizon Europe’s general objectives stem from the Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union.
These will be: to strengthen the scientific and technological bases of the
Union and foster its competitiveness, including for its industry; to deliver on the EU's
strategic policy priorities and contribute to tackling global challenges, including the
Sustainable Development Goals. To address particular research and innovation challenges
faced by the EU, Horizon Europe also has specific objectives. All objectives apply across the
Programme, and all individual Programme parts will contribute to their achievement.
The evolution from Horizon 2020 is reflected in the revamped structure.
The three-pillar
structure will be continued, but redesigned for more coherence, both between and within
pillars, in support of the Programme objectives.
Pillar 1 - Open Science
will continue to focus on excellent science and high-quality
knowledge to strengthen EU’s science
base through the European Research Council, Marie-
Skłodowska Curie Actions and Research Infrastructures. As a "bottom-up",
investigator-
driven pillar, it will continue to give the scientific community a strong role.
Pillar 2 - Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness
will better address EU policy
priorities and support industrial competitiveness by integrating the Horizon 2020
Societal
Challenges
and
Leadership in Enabling Industrial Technologies
into five clusters (i.e. Health;
Resilience and Security; Digital and Industry; Climate, Energy and Mobility; and Food and
natural resources). The clusters will better support the full spectrum of the Sustainable
Development Goals, and increase collaborative research and innovation across sectors,
disciplines and policy fields
boosting flexibility, focus, and impact. Due to its policy focus,
the pillar will be implemented "top-down", through a strategic planning process ensuring the
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involvement of stakeholders and society, and alignment with Member States' activities. The
pillar will give appropriate visibility to industry’s essential role in achieving all the
Programme’s objectives, not least in tackling global challenges, including by developing key
enabling technologies for the future.
Pillar 3
Open Innovation
will offer a one-stop shop for high-potential innovators with the
European Innovation Council and increase cooperation with innovation ecosystems and
actors. This pillar will integrate and reorganise Horizon 2020 activities, such as Innovation in
SMEs (notably the SME instrument), Fast-track to Innovation, as well as Future and
Emerging Technologies. Innovation will continue to be supported throughout the whole
Programme, not just in this innovation-focussed pillar.
Horizon Europe will reinforce the European Research Area
through: Sharing excellence
(extending the Horizon 2020 actions that help tackle low research and innovation
performance i.e. Teaming, Twinning, ERA chairs, and COST); research and innovation
reforms and policy, covering the Policy Support Facility; foresight activities; and Framework
Programme monitoring, evaluation, dissemination and exploitation of results
The new Programme will also have some new features and enhancements
of existing
elements. With Horizon 2020 well on track to deliver excellence, impact and openness, these
changes will make the successor Programme achieve even more impact (through the
European Innovation Council and mission-orientation) and more openness (through
strengthened international cooperation, a reinforced Open Science policy, and a new policy
approach to European Partnerships).
The European Innovation Council
will help place the EU in the lead for breakthrough
market-creating innovation. It will support high-risk, market-creating innovation projects that
do not (yet) generate revenues, to bridge the “valley of death” between research and
commercialisation and help companies scale up. The tailor-made support to innovators will
be channelled through two main funding instruments. The Pathfinder for Advanced Research
will provide grants from the early technology stage (proof of concept, technology validation)
to the early commercial stage (early demonstration, development of business case and
development of strategy). The Accelerator will support the further development and market
deployment of breakthrough and market-creating innovations, to a stage where they can be
financed on usual commercial terms by investors (from demonstration, user testing, pre-
commercial production and beyond, including scale-up). It will place a particular emphasis
on innovation generated within the Pathfinder, although it will also fund projects from other
parts of the Programme, such as the European Research Council or the Knowledge and
Innovation Communities. The expected implications of the role played by the European
Innovation Council include more innovation that creates the new markets of the future, more
companies that scale up in Europe, higher growth among SMEs, and more entrepreneurship
and risk-taking.
Horizon Europe will see the introduction of a limited set of highly visible research and
innovation ‘missions’
under Pillar 2 (but potentially also providing direction to the other
pillars). Missions will prioritise investment and set directions to achieve objectives with
societal relevance, thereby creating more impact and outreach, encouraging a systemic
approach (moving from a view of narrow sectors to entire systems), and aligning instruments
and agendas for research and innovation across Europe. Missions will either accelerate
progress towards a set scientific, technical or societal solution, by focusing large investment
on a specific target; or transform an entire social or industrial system within an established
timeframe. They will be selected after the Programme launch, according to strict selection
criteria, and co-designed with Member States, stakeholders and citizens. The expected
implications of this new mission approach include more cross-sectoral and cross-disciplinary
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cooperation, higher impact on global challenges and EU priorities, and a reduced gap
between science and innovation, and society.
Strengthened international cooperation
is vital for ensuring access to talent, knowledge,
facilities and markets worldwide, for effectively tackling global challenges and for
implementing global commitments. The Framework Programme will intensify cooperation
and extend openness for association to all countries with proven science, technology and
innovation capacities, to make cooperation and funding of joint projects as smooth as
possible. The programme will continue to fund entities from low/middle income countries.
Entities from industrialised and emerging economies will be funded only if they possess
essential competences or facilities. The expected implications include higher excellence in
the Programme, more influence for the EU in shaping global research and innovation
systems, and higher impact.
Open Science
will become the modus operandi of the new Programme, going beyond
Horizon 2020’s open access policy to require
immediate open access for publications and
data (with opt-out possibilities for the latter), and research data management plans. The
Programme will encourage the proliferation of FAIR data (findable, accessible, interoperable,
and re-usable) and support a sustainable and innovative scholarly communications
ecosystem. It will foster activities to improve researcher skills in Open Science and the
reward systems that promote this. Research integrity and citizen science will play a central
role, as will the development of a new generation of research assessment indicators.
The new approach to European Partnerships
will be more impact-focussed. The need to
establish future European Partnerships or renew existing ones will be identified as part of the
strategic programming process for the Framework Programme. European Partnerships will be
open to all types of stakeholders (e.g. industry, Member States and philanthropic foundations)
and will be limited in time, with clear conditions for the phasing out of the Framework
Programme funding. They will be based on the principles of Union added value,
transparency, openness, impact, leverage effect, long-term financial commitment from all
parties, flexibility, coherence and complementarity with Union, local, regional national and
international initiatives. The future partnership landscape will ensure optimal coherence
between Framework Programme activities and partnerships. There will be only three types: i)
co-programmed European Partnerships, based on memoranda of understanding or contractual
arrangements; ii) co-funded European Partnerships, based on a single, flexible co-fund
action; iii) institutionalised European Partnerships (based on Article 185 or 187 of the Treaty
on the Functioning of the European Union). Following a life-cycle approach, the Framework
Programme will set out the criteria for selecting, implementing, monitoring, evaluation and
phasing out all European Partnerships.
The changes to the Programme's structure and the improvements to it will facilitate the
achievement of the Programme's objectives,
making it more effective and helping it
generate even more economic benefits and value for money. These effects will be amplified
by strengthened synergies and complementarities with other EU programmes, for example
through the Seal of Excellence.
Efficient delivery is essential for meeting all the objectives.
It is also key to achieving
higher impact and further simplification. Building on the achievements of Horizon 2020,
simplification remains a continuing endeavour also in the new Programme. Several
improvements have been made to streamline delivery for impact. The Programme will aim at
further simplification within the present real cost reimbursement system with its simplified
funding model. Increased use will be made of project funding against fulfilment of activities
(i.e. lump sum) and other simplified forms of funding allowed by the new Financial
Regulation. Cross-reliance on audits across EU programmes and acceptance of usual cost
5
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accounting practices will be developed. To increase flexibility, the Programme will support
the intersection of disciplines and sectors and allow allocation of funds between and within
pillars to react swiftly to emerging issues or challenges. Further improvements to the proposal
submission and evaluation process will be envisaged by continuously trying to reduce the
'
time to grant
'
and by improving feedback to applicants. The evaluation criteria, process and
involvement of independent experts will underscore the Programme's excellence and impact.
Innovation support schemes will be streamlined under the European Innovation Council,
while the complementarity between grants and financial instruments could be reinforced
through blended finance.
Impact depends ultimately on the dissemination and exploitation of research and
innovation data and results,
and it needs to be effectively captured and communicated. An
ambitious and comprehensive strategy will increase the availability of such data and results
and accelerate their uptake to boost the overall impact of the Programme. Portfolios of
mature results will be exploited in synergy with other EU programmes to ensure their uptake
at national and regional level, maximising European innovation potential. This will be
complemented by effective communication and outreach campaigns that build trust and
engage citizens.
Progress towards the Programme’s objectives will be tracked along
'
impact pathways
'
(on scientific, societal, and economic impact). The impact pathways will be time-sensitive,
distinguishing between the short, medium and long term. The impact pathway indicators will
contain both qualitative and quantitative information, the availability of which will depend on
the Programme's stage of implementation. Individual programme parts will contribute to
these indicators to varying degrees and through various mechanisms. The data behind the key
impact pathway indicators will be collected in a centrally managed and harmonised way that
imposes minimum reporting burden on beneficiaries, including using unique identifiers for
applicants and sourcing data automatically from existing external public and private
databases. Baselines, targets and benchmarks will be established before the Programme’s
launch. Management and implementation data from the Programme will continue to be
collected in near real-time. An analysis of progress on key dimensions of management and
implementation will be carried out every year. Interim and ex-post evaluations will ensure
that methodologies are consistent and coverage is comprehensive.
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1
1.1
I
NTRODUCTION
: P
OLITICAL AND LEGAL CONTEXT
Scope
This impact assessment accompanies the Commission proposals for Horizon Europe, the
2021-2027 Framework Programme for EU Research and Innovation (R&I), which will
succeed Horizon 2020 (2014-2020): proposals for the Framework Programme and Rules for
Participation
1
, the Specific Programme
2
, as well as the 2021-2025 Research and Training
Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom Programme)
3
. An impact
assessment for the defence research has been carried out separately and is accompanying the
proposal for the European Defence Fund Regulation.
R&I are crucial for providing solutions to the challenges of our time.
They deliver on
citizens' priorities, as embodied in the Sustainable Development Goals and in the Paris
Agreement on fighting climate change
4
, on growth and jobs, and to solve the global
challenges we face today and will face tomorrow
5
. In areas like health, digital technologies,
industrial transformation, resilient societies, natural resources, energy, mobility, environment,
food, low-carbon economy and security, R&I are critical to the success of EU priorities, in
particular jobs and growth, Digital Single Market, Energy Union and climate action. R&I are
at the core of the productivity and competitiveness of our economy. About two-thirds of
Europe's economic growth over the last decades has been driven by R&I. R&I support the
creation of new and better jobs and the development of knowledge-intensive activities, which
account for more than 33% of total employment in Europe. Moreover, to ensure sustainable
growth and the capacity to address the societal challenges ahead, Europe must reinforce and
maintain its technology and industrial capacities in the key areas that underpin the
transformation of our economy and society.
"Fostering R&I across the EU" is the most important policy challenge for 97% of
respondents to the cluster-based public consultation on EU funds in the area of
investment, research & innovation, SMEs and single market
6
.
R&I determine the productivity and competitiveness of our economy:
about two-thirds of
Europe's economic growth over the last decades was driven by innovation. They support the
creation of new and better jobs, and the development of knowledge-intensive activities,
which account for more than 33% of total employment in Europe
7
. Europe must maintain and
1
The Treaty requires that rules for participation and dissemination are adopted by the European Parliament and the Council
in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure.
2
The Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) requires that a multiannual Framework Programme is
adopted by the European Parliament and Council in accordance with the ordinary legislative procedure, and implemented
through Specific Programmes adopted in accordance with the special legislative procedure.
3
The Euratom Treaty provides the legal basis for promoting and facilitating nuclear research.
4
European Commission (2017), 2017 Special Eurobarometer on Climate change. According to the 2017 Special
Eurobarometer on Climate change, 92% of EU citizens see climate change as a serious problem, and 79 % of Europeans
believe fighting climate change can boost the economy and create jobs.
5
This initiative contributes in particular to the following Commission priorities: Jobs, Growth and Investment; Digital Single
Market; Energy Union; Deeper and Fairer Internal Market; An Area of Justice and Fundamental Rights; Towards a New
Policy on Migration; EU as Stronger Global Actor; and EU of Democratic Change. It contributes as well to the
implementation of the 2030 Agenda on sustainable development, the EU Global Strategy, and new EU priorities, notably
security, defence and migration, in line with the Rome declaration.
6
See Annex 2 on Stakeholder consultation.
7
European Commission (2017), The economic rationale for public R&I funding and its impact, Policy Brief Series, p. 23.
7
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even reinforce its technological, industrial and innovation capacities in a sustainable way, in
the strategic areas that underpin our society, economy and international commitments.
Currently, Europe underinvests in R&I compared to its main trading partners.
If this
continues, Europe risks being outpaced irreversibly. The EU's overall R&I intensity is just
above 2% of GDP (failing to meet the 3% target
8
). In particular, private investment in
research and development in the EU has remained low in comparison to other advanced
economies, and the gap has grown again since 2013. This poor EU performance signals a
weak capacity to translate knowledge into market-creating innovations
9
. Europe has to
anticipate and ride the new global wave of breakthrough innovation that is coming up, one
that will be more “deep-tech”
10
and will affect sectors such as manufacturing, financial
services, transport or energy.
EU-level R&I investments support public goods
11
with a high European added value
12
:
through EU-wide competition for excellence, EU investments support the training and
mobility of scientists, create transnational and multidisciplinary collaboration, leverage
additional investment from the public and private sectors, build the scientific evidence
necessary for effective EU policies, and structure national R&I systems
13
.
To stimulate innovation in Europe, more is needed.
EU investments in R&I must be
enhanced and re-designed to better serve strategic areas for Europe and cover the full value
chain development from early and advanced research to innovation and market deployment.
They must be matched by national investments in R&I, and the market and regulatory
framework must create the right conditions for innovation to flourish
14
. However, these issues
are outside the scope of this impact assessment.
1.1.1
Political context
The common view of the EU Institutions is that the Framework Programmes for R&I
have a high EU added value and that the implementation of the current Programme is
largely a success.
In addition to the Communication on the Interim Evaluation of Horizon
2020
15
, the Commission’s reflection paper on the future of EU finances highlights R&I as a
key European priority
16
, citing it as an example of a public good with clear EU added value.
Opinions and reports from the European Parliament
17
, the European Economic and Social
Committee
18
, the Committee of Regions
19
, the European Research Area and Innovation
Committee (ERAC, where Member States' public administrations are represented)
20
, and
8
In contrast, China's intensity is now higher, and South Korea's is more than double. The EU will need to train and employ
at least one million new researchers, but the share of R&I personnel in the labour force increased marginally 2002-2015.
9
LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p. 11
10
“Deep tech” refers to companies founded around scientific discoveries or meaningful engineering innovations.
11
European Commission (2017), Reflection paper on the future of EU finances.
12
More evidence can be found in the Annex 4 on the EU added value of R&I.
13
The EU has been investing in R&I since 1984. Over time, the share of the EU budget dedicated to R&I has increased.
14
LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p. 11.
15
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final.
16
European Commission (2017), Reflection paper on the future of EU finances.
17
European Parliament (2017), REPORT on the assessment of Horizon 2020 implementation in view of its interim
evaluation and the Framework Programme 9 proposal, EP T8-0253/2017.
18
European Economic and Social Committee (2016), EESC information report INT/807, Horizon 2020 (evaluation).
19
Committee of the Regions (2017), CoR Opinion SEDEC-VI/026, Local and Regional Dimension of the Horizon 2020
Programme and the New Framework Programme for Research and Innovation.
20
European Research Area and Innovation Committee (2017), ERAC Opinion on the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020
and preparations for the next Framework Programme, ERAC 1207/17.
8
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more recently, the Competitiveness Council (through Council Conclusions
21
) support the
findings of the Interim Evaluation, in particular stressing that EU added value must be the
major driver for the design and implementation of the next Framework Programme.
Box 1 Overall budget envelope
On 2 May 2018, the European Commission adopted its proposals for a new Multiannual Financial Framework
(MFF) for 2021-2027
22
.
Under these proposals, the Horizon Europe and the Euratom programmes will
have a combined budget of EUR 100 billion
over this period. This impact assessment report reflects the
decisions of the MFF proposals and focuses on the changes and policy choices which are specific to these
instruments.
In response to the Horizon 2020 interim evaluation, the European Parliament, supported by
the Committee of Regions, similarly calls, among others, on the EU to avoid budget cuts to
Horizon 2020 and to endow the successor programme with at least EUR 120 billion
23
. The
ERAC calls for proportionality between budget and ambitions. Similarly, Council
Conclusions emphasise the need to prioritise R&I across all relevant EU policies, and provide
significant funds for the future programme.
1.1.2
Legal context
The Framework Programme for R&I is based on Articles 173, 182, 183 and 188 of the
Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union
24
. This initiative is in an area of (shared)
parallel competence and the subsidiarity and proportionality principles apply. This impact
assessment satisfies the requirements of the Financial Regulation in respect of preparing an
ex-ante evaluation.
The EU Framework Programme for R&I respects the subsidiarity and proportionality
principles.
Action at EU level is
necessary:
the underlying findings of a recent external
study are that more than four out of five Horizon 2020 projects would not have gone ahead
without Horizon 2020 funding
25
. They produce
undeniable added value
in terms of scale,
speed and scope compared to national and regional-level support to R&I (without replacing
it
26
) by boosting excellence through transnational competition, strengthening impact via
collaborative R&I, and providing critical mass to tackle global challenges (see Annex 4).
Moreover, it is
proportionate,
not going beyond what is required for Union objectives.
1.2
Lessons learnt from previous programmes
EU Framework Programmes have generated significant and long-lasting impacts
27
, as
shown by successive evaluations since the EU started investing in R&I in 1984. More details
on the lessons learnt from evaluations of previous Programmes are in Annex 3.
21
Council of the European Union (2017), From the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020 towards the ninth Framework
Programme - Council conclusions.
22
European Commission (2018), A Modern Budget for a Union that Protects, Empowers and Defends, The Multiannual
Financial Framework for 2021-2027, COM(2018) 321 final.
23
European Parliament (2017), REPORT on the assessment of Horizon 2020 implementation in view of its interim
evaluation and the Framework Programme 9 proposal, EP T8-0253/2017.
24
The Euratom proposal is based on Article 7 of the Treaty establishing the European Atomic and Energy Community.
25
PPMI (2017), Assessment of the Union Added Value and the Economic Impact of the EU Framework Programmes (FP7,
Horizon 2020).
26
Lab
Fab
App, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group report, Annex 5, p. 32. Indeed, the
Lamy High Level Group report identified no direct evidence of overall crowding-out effect of national funding. While some
countries present simultaneously a decrease in national budget for R&D and an increase in EU contribution from the
Framework Programme, this result is not systematic for all countries.
27
European Commission (2018), A new, modern Multiannual Financial Framework for a European Union that delivers
efficiently on its priorities post-2020, COM(2018)98 final.
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Box 2: Recommendations from the ex-post evaluation of the Seventh Framework Programme
The Ex Post Evaluation of the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) made the following recommendations
28
,
which are also relevant for this impact assessment:
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Ensure focus on critical challenges and opportunities in the global context.
Align research and innovation instruments and agendas in Europe.
Integrate the key components of the Framework Programmes more effectively.
Bring science closer to the citizens.
Establish strategic programme monitoring and evaluation.
The Communication on the interim evaluation of Horizon 2020
29
identified several areas for
improvement. In addition to in-depth analysis, this was based on extensive stakeholder
feedback
30
and the strategic recommendations of the independent High Level Group on
maximising the impact of EU R&I Programmes (Lamy High Level Group):
Continue simplification.
Horizon 2020 has made great progress in terms of
simplification compared to FP7, but simplification is an ever continuing undertaking,
requiring constant improvements. Further simplification should be pursued to support
faster innovation cycles and lower administrative burden.
Support breakthrough innovation.
While some potential for supporting
breakthrough, market-creating innovation was identified in Horizon 2020, such
support should be considerably strengthened in order to identify, develop and deploy
breakthrough and market-creating innovations and support the scale-up of young and
quickly growing innovative companies to international and European levels.
Create more impact through mission-orientation and citizen involvement.
The
Framework Programme needs greater impact and more outreach to citizens. A
mission-oriented approach would increase the focus on impact, while involving
citizens, customers and end-users in agenda-setting (co-design) and implementation
(co-creation) leads to more innovation by stimulating user-driven innovation and the
demand for innovative solutions.
Increase synergies with other EU funding programmes and EU Policies.
While
synergies already exist between Horizon 2020 and other EU programmes, they should
be further strengthened. In particular, building on synergies with the European
Structural and Investment Funds (ESIF) and smart specialisation strategies, R&I
capacities built over the past decade in lower performing regions could be better used
for Framework Programme-supported projects.
Strengthen international cooperation.
While Horizon 2020 has a broad
international outreach and openness to the world, third-country participations declined
when compared to FP7
31
. International cooperation in R&I is vital for ensuring access
to talent, knowledge, know-how, facilities and markets worldwide, for effectively
tackling global challenges, and for implementing global commitments. It needs to be
further intensified in order to strengthen Europe's R&I excellence and
competitiveness.
28
European Commission (2016) Response to the Report of the High Level Expert Group on the Ex Post Evaluation of the
Seventh Framework Programme, COM(2016) 5 final.
29
European Commission (2018), Horizon 2020 interim evaluation: maximising the impact of EU research and innovation,
COM(2018)2.
30
The open public stakeholder consultation on the Interim Evaluation received 3500 replies and 300 position papers.
31
The discontinuation in Horizon 2020 of the automatic funding to organisations from Brazil, Russia, India, China and
Mexico caused an important decrease of their participation.
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Reinforce openness.
There is a need to build on the great progress made in terms of
making the scientific publications and data generated by Horizon 2020 openly
accessible to the wider scientific community and public. The next Framework
Programme should fully embrace Open Science policy as a way of strengthening
scientific excellence, benefiting from citizen participation, achieving better
reproducibility of results, and increasing the re-use of research data.
Rationalise the funding landscape.
A key area for improvement is the rationalisation
of the funding landscape, in particular with respect to partnership instruments and
initiatives. Reforming the current policy approach to European Partnerships should
make it possible to use the full potential of the new or renewed European Partnerships
in achieving ambitious policy objectives that cannot be achieved by the Union or
national action alone.
Following the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, the Lamy High Level Group report
(presented at the conference "Research & innovation
shaping our future" on 3 July 2017)
32
and the open public stakeholder consultations for the preparation of the sectorial legislation
accompanying the proposal for the post-2020 MFF, more than 300 position papers were
received. Fostering R&I across the EU resulted as the most important policy challenge
according to the respondents to the public stakeholder consultation. Key messages and a
detailed analysis of this stakeholder input can be found in an Annex 2.
2
2.1
C
HALLENGES AND
O
BJECTIVES
Key features of Horizon 2020 and expected impacts of its continuation
Having excellence as the core underlying principle, Horizon 2020 attracts participants from
the best institutions and companies in and outside Europe, covering a wide range of
disciplines. Stakeholders express strong satisfaction with the programme, as shown by the
sustained interest in its highly competitive calls and high oversubscription rates (which is
commonly quoted by stakeholders as being the biggest problem). The programme offers
unique collaboration and networking opportunities. Scientific publications of Horizon 2020
are cited already at twice the world average rate. Patents produced through the programme
are of higher quality and likely commercial value than similar patents produced elsewhere.
Horizon 2020 has shown flexibility in responding to evolving political priorities, such as
migration, and emergencies such as the Ebola and Zika outbreaks. Horizon 2020 is on track
to contribute significantly to the creation of jobs and growth. Moreover, it supports EU policy
objectives through its focus on excellent science, industrial leadership and societal challenges
Key features of Horizon 2020:
significant budget (close to EUR 77 billion) for 7 years (2014-2020), with a target of 35% related to
climate action and 60% related to Sustainable Development;
seamless integration of R&I into a single framework, from ‘blue-sky’, frontier research to close-to-
market innovation activities;
direct R&I investments through an EU-wide competition based on excellence as guiding principle (and
main evaluation and selection criterion);
central management by the European Commission, its executive agencies or other implementing bodies;
a three-pillar structure focusing on excellent science, industrial leadership and societal challenges.
major simplification measures implemented through the Common Support Centre, such as a single set of
rules, an easy to use cost reimbursement model, a single point of access for participants, fewer audits.
32
Conference proceedings available at
https://publications.europa.eu/s/fC5N
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The continuation of the ongoing Programme is expected to generate even more:
new knowledge and technologies, promoting scientific excellence and significant
scientific impact.
The Programme will continue to facilitate cross-border
collaboration between top scientists and innovators, allowing for trans-national and
cross-sector coordination between public and private R&I investment. Horizon 2020
has already attracted the world’s
best research institutions and researchers, supported
~340,000 researchers, and developed Europe’s human capital. The first scientific
publications from Horizon 2020 are world-class (cited more than twice the world
average) and contributed to major discoveries like exoplanets, the Higgs boson, and
gravitational waves.
33
.
positive effects on growth, trade and investment flows
34
, quality jobs and
international mobility for researchers in the European Research Area. The
continuation scenario is expected to bring an estimated average GDP increase of
0.08% to 0.19% over 25 years, which means that each euro invested can potentially
generate a return up to 11 euros of GDP gains over the same period
3536
(see Annex
5). EU investments in R&I are expected to directly generate an estimated gain
37
of up
to 100,000 jobs in R&I activities in the “Investment phase” (2021-2027)
and to foster
an indirect gain of up to 200,000 jobs over 2027-2036, of which 40% are high-skilled
jobs, through the economic activity generated by the Programme.
significant social and environmental impact.
This will happen directly through the
dissemination, exploitation and uptake of scientific results translated into new
products, services and processes, which in turn contribute indirectly to the successful
delivery on political priorities.
These impacts mean that the potential cost of discontinuing the EU R&I Programme
(i.e. cost of non-Europe) is substantial.
Discontinuation would result in a decline of
competitiveness and growth (up to EUR 720 billion of GDP loss over 25 years
38
), sharp
reductions in the private and national investments that are currently leveraged by EU-level
co-investments, creating significant losses of social, environmental and economic impacts.
Box 3: Three phases of the economic impact of the Framework Programme
The expected economic impact of continuation is decomposed in three phases in the NEMESIS model
39
:
The investment phase.
From the beginning to the end of the Programme (2021-2027). Assuming a
“maturation” lag of innovation between 3 and 5 years, economic impact is driven by the spending,
with comparatively moderate impact from the production of innovations at this stage.
The innovation phase.
During and after the investment phase, R&I investments produce economic
effects through the creation of new process and product innovations. Process innovation increases
efficiency, which leads to lower cost. Product innovation increases the quality of, and raises the
33
34
European Commission (2017), Key findings of the Interim Evaluation.
The economic impact of the Programme comes from the transformation of scientific excellence into innovations that
generate economic outcomes: employment, exports, competitiveness, value-added and higher GDP.
35
This multiplier is based on simulations done using the NEMESIS model and is consistent with figures provided in the
Interim evaluation of Horizon 2020 (calculated over a period of 17 years) and in the ex-post evaluation of the 7
th
Framework
Programme.
36
The average GDP gain in RHOMOLO is 0.08%, the average gain in QUEST is up to 0.14% and the average gain in
NEMESIS is 0.19%. NEMESIS results are based on Seureco (forthcoming), Support for assessment of socio-economic and
environmental impacts (SEEI) of European R&I programme. QUEST and RHOMOLO results were produced, respectively,
by DG ECFIN and DG JRC.
37
ibid.
38
This figure is calculated for the EU-27 only and it is based on the NEMESIS model.
39
Seureco (forthcoming), Support for assessment of socio-economic and environmental impacts (SEEI) of European R&I
programmes.
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demand for, products. The lower cost and enhanced quality increase competitiveness.
The obsolescence phase.
After the innovation phase, knowledge depreciation decreases gains.
Figure 1: GDP gains from the continuation of Horizon 2020 (percentage change compared to a situation
without Framework Programme)
*Note: Figures calculated for EU-27; different sets of results from QUEST are presented in Annex 5 based on
different funding assumptions. This graph presents the scenario with higher benefits.
2.2
Main R&I challenges and problems to be addressed
Based on the key findings and lessons learnt from the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation (see
section 1.2 above), the following key challenges in the area of R&I to be addressed by the
future Programme have been identified:
1) The creation and diffusion of high-quality new knowledge and innovation in Europe
should be improved.
Europe is overall a global scientific powerhouse, but it is essentially a
"mass
producer
[of knowledge]
with, relative to its size, comparatively few centres of
excellence that standout at the world level and with large differences between European
countries
"40
. Moreover, the gap between high productivity firms and the rest has grown,
illustrating a serious issue in the circulation of knowledge and technologies. This corresponds
to the following findings of the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation:
40
41
Sub-optimal creation
41
of high-quality knowledge and lack of diffusion
42
of
knowledge across borders, sectors, disciplines
43
and along the value chain;
Insufficient open science
44
;
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 46.
More than 14% of publications from the United States are in the top 10% most cited publications compared to 11% for EU
publications (see Research and Innovation Observatory). When looking at the top 1% most cited publications, the difference
is even larger (50% more in the US than in the EU) (see S. Thomson, V. Kanesarajah (2017), The European Research
Council
The first 10 years, Clarivate Analytics).
42
Knowledge diffusion between business and academia remains lower in the EU than in the US (public-private co-
publications per million-population stand at 50, over 35 points lower than in the US (see European Commission (2016),
Science, Research and Innovation Performance of the EU).
43
J. Allmendinger (2015), Quests for interdisciplinarity: a challenge for the ERA and Horizon 2020, RISE policy brief.
44
RISE Group (2017), Europe's future: Open innovation, open science, open to the world; reflections of the Research,
Innovation and Science Policy Experts (RISE) High Level Group, p. 65.
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Scattered pockets of scientific excellence and R&I infrastructures
45
;
Rapid increase of global competition for talent
46
;
Hampered global R&I cooperation
47
.
2) There is a need to reinforce the impact of R&I in policy-making.
R&I have to take a
more prominent place in shaping EU policy priorities and for delivering on policy
commitments and priorities of the Union. R&I are expected to make a crucial contribution to
achieving EU policy priorities, including the Sustainable Development Goals. The impact is
stronger when investments are prioritised in areas where the EU added value is greatest
48
and
aligned with policy needs; when support provides incentives in a highly performing and
dynamic system with supportive framework conditions; and where R&I results have a strong
potential to feedback into the policy-making cycle. Investments in R&I have to better fit into
the full innovation cycle, from societal needs to market deployment, supporting the
implementation of EU, national and regional strategic policy priorities. Uptake of innovative
solutions has been low so far, and more needs to be done to increase end-user involvement,
for demonstrating and scaling up promising solutions and create favourable market and
framework conditions for innovation, including social innovation, while ensuring that
competition in the internal market which drives the innovative efforts of companies and
unlocks their innovative potential is not distorted. This corresponds to the following findings
of the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation:
Variable focus on EU strategic challenges
49
;
Sub-optimal link between R&I and EU policy-making
50
;
Low awareness of innovative solutions and insufficient end-user/citizen involvement
in the R&I process
51
.
3) EU is lacking rapid uptake of innovative solutions.
Around two thirds of EU
manufacturing companies have not recently used any advanced technologies
52
, and
competition from the USA and Asia has intensified. The EU's substantial knowledge assets,
notably in the field of key enabling technologies, need to be more effectively and quickly
turned into innovations, particularly as innovative solutions for global challenges are
increasingly research-intensive. Apart from aiming at high industrial participation in the
programme, a stronger focus is needed on innovators working on breakthrough market-
creating innovations - these are rare in Europe (fast-growing start-ups, so-called
unicorns,
are
45
Scientific quality is concentrated in a group of leading countries, predominantly in North-West Europe, but there are a
number of small universities with a small number of excellent fields in less developed regions (source: Interim Evaluation of
Horizon 2020).
46
Increasingly, expertise and resources are abroad: 75% of knowledge (see European Commission (2016), Science,
Research and Innovation performance of the EU) and 90% of market growth (see European Commission (2015), Trade for
all, Towards a more responsible trade and investment policy) will be outside the EU over the next decade (see also European
Commission (2017), Strengthening European Identity through Education and Culture, The European Commission's
contribution to the Leaders' meeting in Gothenburg, p.4).
47
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p.100.
48
Lab
Fab
App, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group report, p.8.
49
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 59.
50
Ibid.
51
Social awareness is a constraining factor for the full-scale deployment of R&I-driven solutions required for societal
transformation, but new and rapidly evolving technologies like robots and artificial intelligence raise concerns amongst
citizens. In Europe, absence or uncertainty of demand for innovative goods and services are among the most cited obstacles
to innovation, see also JRC Science for Policy Report (2016), Modes of Innovation.
52
Flash Eurobarometer 433, Innobarometer 2016
EU business innovation trends. This figure has increased by 14
percentage points between the last two releases of the Innobarometer (i.e. 2015 and 2016).
14
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five times fewer than in the USA
53
). This corresponds to the following findings of the
Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation:
Slow industrial transformation
54
;
Limited scale-up of innovative SMEs at EU level and lack of venture capital
55
;
Lack of entrepreneurial skills to translate ideas into innovations
56
.
4) There is a need to strengthen the European Research Area (ERA).
While strong
progress was made over the last years
57
, knowledge flows, good working conditions,
effective career development of researchers and other ERA priorities, need to be more widely
spread. Within the EU, scientific excellence is rather concentrated, and EU funding from
Horizon 2020 to low performing R&I countries remains low
58
. The delivery of the
Programme can only be optimised by unlocking the potential of all partners - this means there
is a need for strengthening the EU scientific and technological base and spreading the
benefits of excellence
59
.
2.3
Objectives of the future Programme
The Framework Programme’s general objective is based on Article 179.1 TFEU:
to strengthen the scientific and technological bases of the Union and foster its
competitiveness, including for its industry, deliver on the EU's strategic policy
priorities and contribute to tackling global challenges, including the Sustainable
Development Goals.
As a lesson learnt from the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020 supported by strong
stakeholder feedback, specific objectives are identified for the Programme as a whole (i.e. not
per part or instrument) to improve coherence and linkages among Programme parts. Based on
the challenges identified in section 2.1, the specific objectives are:
1) to support the creation and diffusion of high-quality new knowledge, skills,
technologies and solutions to global challenges;
2) to strengthen the impact of research and innovation in developing, supporting and
implementing Union policies, and support the uptake of innovative solutions in
industry and society to address global challenges;
3) to foster all forms of innovation, including breakthrough innovation, and strengthen
market deployment of innovative solutions;
4) to optimise the Programme's delivery for increased impact within a strengthened
European Research Area.
General and specific objectives will be pursued through an improved Programme structure
(Section 3). The implementation of the Programme will be optimised in terms of delivery
(Section 4) in line with the cross-cutting objectives of the MFF, notably simplification,
flexibility, coherence, synergies and focus on performance. The specific objectives are
Lab
Fab
App, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group report, p.7.
High-Level Strategy Group on Industrial Technologies (2018), Conference Document.
55
Very few European start-ups survive beyond the critical phase of 2-3 years, and even fewer grow into larger mermaids.
Less than 5% of European SMEs grow internationally. Venture capital in the EU is one-fifth the level of the USA.
56
Less than half Europeans believe they have the skills to pursue entrepreneurial opportunities World Economic Forum,
Enhancing Europe’s Competitiveness Fostering Innovation-driven
Entrepreneurship in Europe, p16.
57
European Commission (2017), ERA Progress Report 2016, Report from the Commission to the Council and the European
Parliament, COM(2017) 35.
58
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 119.
59
Ibidem, p. 46.
53
54
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operationalised in the Specific Programme implementing the Framework Programme. All
objectives articulate with each other coherently, so that all actions in each pillar can deliver
on the objectives without risking any inconsistencies or exclusions.
Figure 2: Link between the Framework
Programme’s challenges and objectives.
3
3.1
P
ROGRAMME STRUCTURE AND PRIORITIES
Scope and structure of the new Framework Programme
“An evolution, not a revolution”
60
- building on the positive findings of the Horizon 2020
Interim Evaluation, stakeholder feedback
61
and the Lamy High Level Group report, only a
further refinement of the current Programme is necessary
62
. Therefore, the vast majority of
the parts and features of Horizon 2020 will be continued, albeit with several optimisations
and minor redesigns. As all components of the Framework Programme are necessary to
achieve its objectives, a different level of ambition (including budgetary) would result in an
adjusted level of support across all areas. Moreover, compared to Horizon 2020, Horizon
Europe will invest less in sector-specific projects and partnerships, and focus instead on
systemic transformations.
The Programme’s scope will continue to cover research
63
and innovation
64
in an
integrated manner.
Scientific knowledge, societal challenges and industrial technologies
60
61
LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p.14.
80-90% of stakeholders' position papers echo the Lamy High Level Group, recognise that Horizon 2020 is a success and
do not call for changes to the basic structure of the programme.
62
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final, p.11.
63
Research and experimental development (R&D) comprise creative and systematic work undertaken in order to increase the
stock of knowledge
including knowledge of humankind, culture and society
and to devise new applications of available
knowledge. The activity must be: novel, creative, uncertain, systematic, transferable and/or reproducible. (Frascati Manual,
http://www.oecd.org/innovation/inno/frascati-manual.htm)
64
Innovation is the implementation of a new or significantly improved product (good or service), or process, a new
marketing method, or a new organisational method in business practices, workplace organisation or external relations.
Innovation activities are all scientific, technological, organisational, financial and commercial steps which actually, or are
16
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should complement each other and be mutually reinforcing, bringing industry, academia,
public stakeholders, and citizens closer together, and thereby aligning the processes and the
outcomes of R&I with societal needs, expectations and values, including gender balance. In
close synergies with other EU Programmes, the Framework Programme will continue to
support the whole innovation ecosystem with seamless support from the lab to the market
uptake for high-risk activities that would not be performed without public support.
Box 4: The three-pillar structure of Horizon 2020
Pillar 1 - Excellent Science
aims to raise the level of excellence in Europe's science base and ensure a steady
stream of world-class research to secure Europe's long-term competitiveness.
Pillar 2 - Industrial
Leadership
aims to speed up the development of the technologies and innovations that will underpin
tomorrow's business and help innovative European SMEs to grow into world-leading companies.
Pillar 3 -
Societal Challenges
responds directly to the policy priorities of the Europe 2020 strategy and aims to and
addresses major concerns shared by citizens in Europe and elsewhere.
In addition to the three pillars, Horizon 2020 has two specific objectives: (i) "Spreading
Excellence and
Widening Participation"
and (ii) "Science
With and for Society".
It also includes support for the
European
Institute of Innovation and Technology
(EIT)
with the objective of promoting the knowledge triangle
and for the
Joint Research Centre
(JRC)
with the objective of providing robust evidence for EU policy
making. Furthermore, a number of
cross-cutting issues
are promoted, e.g. the realisation of the European
Research Area (ERA), Responsible Research and Innovation, SMEs and private sector participation, Social
Sciences and Humanities, gender, international cooperation, sustainable development and climate-related
expenditure.
Figure 3: The three-pillar structure of Horizon 2020
The three-pillar structure will be continued and optimised.
It will be redesigned to better
address the challenges described in Section 2.2. With clearly defined and complementary
rationales for intervention, each part will contribute to all the specific objectives. The design
of the three pillars will ensure interconnections leading to mutual reinforcement of activities,
helping meet the Programme's objectives and ultimately boosting the overall impact (see
Figure 4). Support to basic research will remain a cornerstone of the Programme, pursued
primarily under the first pillar (but also in the other two pillars); applied research and
incremental innovation will be the centre of gravity in the second pillar, addressing both
intended to, lead to the implementation of innovations. Innovation activities also include R&D that is not directly related to
the development of a specific innovation. (Oslo
manual,
http://www.oecd.org/science/inno/2367580.pdf)
17
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industrial and societal needs (Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness); innovation
is the focus of the third pillar (Open Innovation). The largest share of resources is needed for
Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness pillar, followed by Open Science and
Open Innovation, whereas Strengthening the European Research Area entails only limited
budget.
The majority of stakeholders commenting on the pillar structure are satisfied with the
current three-pillar structure of Horizon 2020 and wish to see either a complete
replication or some modifications to the exsisting architecture. The main suggestions
for improvements over the Horizon 2020 structure relate to increasing the links between pillars to
improve the coverage of the entire knowledge and innovation chain. Several position papers outline
the increasing importance of the ‘Societal Challenges’ and call for a more prominent
pillar that takes
into account the current socio-economic issues
65
.
The revised pillar structure reflects the nature of the R&I challenges,
which has evolved
compared to Horizon 2020. As highlighted in previous sections, the Programme needs to be
equipped with an innovation-focussed pillar to support breakthrough market-creating
innovations that bring transformational changes. In addition, given the crucial role of Key
Enabling Technologies in the economy and society
66
, the R&I agenda-setting has to integrate
industry’s contribution to societal needs with efforts to tackle global challenges and other EU
political priorities in order to improve the coherence and impact of the Programme.
The overarching mission-orientated approach will provide a sense of direction to all
activities supported by the Programme.
For instance, future missions under pillar 2 (see
section 3.2.2) will be planned in the context of ongoing frontier research under the ERC.
While fully respecting the bottom-up nature of those programme parts, relevant ERC and
MSCA projects might be linked to ongoing missions. The scale and scope of missions can
also inspire new research and innovation proposals elsewhere in the Programme. Promising
projects from either of the first two pillars might produce spin-offs and be scaled-up with
support under the EIC Accelerator under pillar 3 (see section 3.2.1). Similarly, activities
supported through the EIT KICs may be picked up under the EIC Accelerator, or feed into
ongoing missions (see Annex 8).
65
66
Griniece, E. (forthcoming) Synthesis of stakeholder input for Horizon Europe and European Commission analysis
Rüttgers J., and al. (2018), Re-defining industry, Defining innovation, Report of the independent High Level Group on
industrial
technologies. On industry’s contribution and value to society, see also
https://industry-changemakers.ert.eu/
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Figure 4 Main structure of the Framework Programme: "evolution, not revolution"
Pillar 1 - Open Science:
Building on its current successes, the first pillar will
continue to focus on excellent science and high-quality knowledge
to strengthen EU’s
science base through the European Research Council (ERC), Marie-Skłodowska
Curie Actions (MSCA) and Research Infrastructures. A greater emphasis will be
placed on Open Science policy (open access to publications, accessibility and reuse of
scientific data), including in the Research Infrastructures part in support for the
European Open Science Cloud. In view of the largely "bottom-up", investigator-
driven nature of this pillar, the European scientific community will continue to play a
strong role. The Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) part (Pro-active, Open and
Flagships) has, and continues to have, a relevant impact on knowledge production, the
economy and society
67
. The lessons learnt
68
from these essential instruments will be
taken forward and streamlined with other instruments in the Framework Programme
67
Beckert B., et al. (2018), Visionary and Collaborative Research in Europe, Pathways to impact of use-inspired basic
research, Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research, Austrian Institute of Technology.
68
European Commission (2017), Annex 2 of the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 221 final.
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(see section 3.2.1). However, the “FET” label will be discontinued for increased
coherence and user-friendliness, in the interest of rationalising the support landscape.
Pillar 2 - Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness:
The second pillar will
integrate the Horizon 2020 parts
Societal Challenges
and
Leadership in Enabling
Industrial Technologies
to better address EU policy priorities and support industrial
competitiveness. Due to its policy focus, the pillar will be implemented "top-down"
through a strategic planning process ensuring societal and stakeholder involvement,
and alignment with Member States' R&I activities. The pillar will provide robust,
evidence-based support to Union policies, in particular through the Joint Research
Centre (JRC). While maintaining a strong degree of continuity with Horizon 2020, the
main changes will be:
- Societal Challenges and Leadership in Enabling Industrial Technologies of
Horizon 2020 integrated in five clusters to enable more flexibility and
interdisciplinarity, with a specific digital and industry cluster (see Box 5);
- reinforced mission-orientation, with a limited set of highly visible R&I missions
that engage citizens and civil society organisations to help reach ambitious goals
69
(see Annex 8 on missions);
-
higher visibility for industry’s role in solving global challenges (see
Box 6),
including through Key Enabling Technologies.
- simplified forms of partnership initiatives that are open to all (e.g. private sector,
Member States, philanthropic foundations; see Annex 8).
Box 5: Clusters in the Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness pillar
The Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness pillar has five clusters that cover the activities of the
LEIT part of pillar 2 and the seven societal challenges of pillar 3 of Horizon 2020. The clusters are Health;
Inclusive and Secure Society; Digital and Industry; Climate, Energy and Mobility; and Food and Natural
resources. The clusters are derived from specifically commissioned foresight input, including from
stakeholders, and have the Sustainable Development Goals as main reference point. The clusters and their
intervention areas are expected to have more impact since they cut across classical boundaries between
disciplines and address different types of challenge. The integrated clusters of activities will form the basis for
support to collaborative research and innovation projects under the Global Challenges and Industrial
Competitiveness pillar in the implementation of the Framework Programme.
Table 1: Clusters and intervention areas
Health
-
Health
throughout the
life course
-
Environmental
and social health
determinants
-
Non-
communicable
and rare diseases
-
Infectious
diseases
-
Tools,
technologies and
digital solutions
for health
-
Health care
systems
Inclusive and
Secure Society
-
Democracy
-
Cultural
heritage
-
Social and
economic
transformatio
ns
-
Disaster-
resilient
societies
-
Protection
and Security
-
Cybersecurity
Digital and Industry
-
Manufacturing
technologies
-
Key digital
technologies
-
Advanced materials
-
Artificial
intelligence and
robotics
-
Next generation
internet
-
Advanced
computing and Big
Data
-
Circular industries
-
Low-carbon and
clean industries
-
Space
Climate, Energy and
Mobility
-
Climate science and
solutions
-
Energy supply
-
Energy systems and
grids
-
Buildings and
industrial facilities in
energy transition
-
Communities and
cities
-
Industrial
competitiveness in
transport
-
Clean transport and
mobility
-
Smart mobility
-
Energy storage
Food and Natural
Resources
-
Environmental
observation
-
Biodiversity and
natural capital
-
Agriculture,
forestry and rural
areas
-
Sea and oceans
-
Food systems
-
Bio-based
innovation
systems
-
Circular systems
69
Three examples of missions for pedagogical use are described in Mazzucato M. (2018), Mission-Oriented
Research & Innovation in the European Union.
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Pillar 3
Open Innovation:
Whilst innovation will be supported throughout the
whole Programme, an innovation-focussed pillar will offer a one-stop shop for high
potential innovators with the European Innovation Council (EIC). The EIC will offer
a coherent, streamlined and simple set of support actions dedicated to the emergence
of breakthrough ideas, the development and deployment of market-creating
innovations and scaling-up of innovative enterprises. These activities will be largely
defined "bottom-up", being open to innovations from all fields of science, technology
and applications in any sector, while also enabling focused approaches on emerging
breakthrough or disruptive technologies of potential strategic significance. Additional
measures under this Pillar will boost support to the European innovation ecosystem,
notably through co-funding various joint national initiatives that boost innovation
(e.g. joint programme between agencies implementing national/local innovation
policies, joint public procurement actions). In addition to the EIC, financial
instruments implemented under
the InvestEU programme will help bridge the “valley
of death” between research and commercialisation, and will support the scaling-up
of
companies. The European Institute for Innovation and Technology (EIT) and its
Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs) will have an important role in the
Open Innovation pillar, supporting the development of the European innovation
ecosystem through the integration of education, research and entrepreneurship.
Through their focus on key strategic priorities in line with the strategic programming
of the Framework Programme (see section 4.1), KICs will also contribute to the wider
programme objectives, including to deliver on global challenges and missions.
In addition to the three main pillars, the Horizon Europe will strengthen the European
Research Area
through successful elements of Horizon 2020 that will be integrated: (i)
Sharing excellence
(extending the Horizon 2020 Spreading Excellence and Widening
Participation actions Teaming, Twinning, ERA chairs, and COST) to continue supporting low
performing R&I Member States to increase their excellence; (ii)
Reforming and enhancing
the European Research Area,
covering the Policy Support Facility; foresight activities;
Framework
Programme’s monitoring, evaluation, dissemination and exploitation of results;
the modernisation of European universities; and Science, society and citizens (building on the
Horizon 2020 Science with and for Society).
The redesigned pillar structure will improve internal coherence, in particular through:
-
the integration of industrial technologies in Pillar 2, enhancing the contribution of
industry to tackling global challenges, and matching supply with demand for new
solutions
70
;
the rationalisation of the current Societal Challenges into five cross-theme clusters
that will cover the whole innovation chain and that will encourage transdisciplinary
activities, including social sciences and humanities (SSH);
the streamlining of different innovation support instruments through the EIC;
the link of the EIC to the other activities of Horizon Europe, in particular ERC,
MSCA and the EIT-KICs, to help researchers and innovators to deploy their
innovation to the market and scale up.
emphasis on a strong horizontal role of education and training.
-
-
-
-
70
Key Enabling Technologies and digital technologies are instrumental in modernising Europe’s industrial base, to ensure
that industry reduces its carbon footprint and embrace a circular economy approach. Moreover, industry could mobilise
important industrial players and ensure participation of SMEs on social and political priorities.
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Box 6: The reinforced role of industry in Horizon Europe
Industrial Competitiveness
Strengthening the Union's scientific and technological bases and encouraging it to become more competitive,
including in its industry, is an objective enshrined in Article 179 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union. The Union and its Member States support industrial competitiveness by speeding up the
adjustment of industry to structural changes, encouraging a favourable regulatory environment, encouraging
an environment favourable to cooperation and fostering better exploitation of the industrial potential of
policies of research and innovation (Article 173 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union).
Horizon 2020 supports industrial competitiveness, as highlighted by the following facts:
A 20% target exists for the total combined budget to be awarded to SMEs under the "Leadership in
Enabling and Industrial Technologies" and "Societal Challenges" parts of Horizon 2020. By the end of
2017, this has been exceeded with almost 25% of the EU contribution awarded to SMEs
71
.
Private for-profit companies have been awarded 27% of the overall Horizon 2020 budget, amounting
to EUR 6.7 billion.
Building on the strong support to stimulating industrial leadership and competitiveness currently provided,
which will continue (e.g. the single funding rate for industry participants, partnerships with industry), the
following changes in the new Framework Programme will reinforce it:
The whole Programme will contribute to industrial competitiveness.
This reflects the overriding
aims of the Programme, in which industrial technologies reinforce scientific knowledge and tackle
global challenges; in which industry, academia, public stakeholders, citizens and their associations
(CSOs) are brought closer together; and which seamlessly supports the whole innovation ecosystem
from research to innovation and market deployment.
Industry is a core enabler to solve Global Challenges.
Integration of the Leadership in Enabling
Industrial Technologies programme parts, previously under the second pillar in Horizon 2020
('Industrial Leadership'), within the Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness pillar would
provide a higher visibility to the role of industry in solving Europe's major societal challenges, for
instance through Key Enabling Technologies.
The "Digital and industry" cluster
will be dedicated to support innovative, sustainable and digital
industries, including through Key Enabling Technologies for the future. This cluster is expected to
address directly the issue of slow industrial transformation and promote adjustment of industry to
structural changes.Partnerships
with industry will continue.
EU policy-driven R&I partnerships with
industry are important for pooling resources in order to tackle big policy and societal challenges, to
support competitiveness and jobs and to encourage greater private investment in research and
innovation, amongst other things. Public-private collaboration with industry will continue as part of a
simplified and more impact-focussed approach to European Partnerships (see section 3.2.5 below).
Europe’s global leadership in various industries, especially in high value added and technology-
intensive products and services, will hinge on its capacity to master the Key Enabling Technologies, in
which the Framework Programme will continue to invest.
Investing in new technologies through the Programme will enhance EU's industrial competitiveness in
the global transition to circular and low-carbon economy, create new business opportunities including
in export markets, and protect businesses against scarcity of resources or volatile prices.
A broader perspective involving users and society at large (and more generally the demand side) in the
design and development of innovative solutions to address global challenges will ensure ownership and
commitment from industry and other stakeholders, as well as the buy-in from civil society.
Bringing together activities on digital, key enabling, clean and space technologies, the Programme will
allow for a more systemic approach, and a faster and more profound digital and industrial
transformation.
As a result, the expected implications for industry are:
In terms of design structure, some stakeholders
72
have identified the risk that merging the
stand-alone
“industrial leadership” pillar would discourage industry participation. On the
other hand, a higher participation of industry in the Global Challenges and Industrial
71
European Commission (2018), Annual Report on Research and Technological Development Activities of the European
Union and Monitoring of Horizon 2020 in 2017.
72
See Annex 2 on the Stakeholder Consultation.
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Competitiveness pillar could be seen as giving the private sector a disproportionate role in
setting the R&I agenda at the expense of other stakeholder groups. As a mitigation measure,
the strategic planning process (see section 4.1), building on the lessons learnt from the
inclusive programming process of Horizon 2020, will ensure a balanced approach by
involving all stakeholders, including citizens, customers and end-users in agenda-setting. The
Programme will also gain flexibility by a less prescriptive approach to defining R&I
activities. This brings about a higher capacity to adapt to evolving political priorities and to
respond to emerging, unforeseen challenges.
Box 7: Climate mainstreaming
Horizon 2020 legal basis provides a target of investing at least 35% of its budget for climate-related activities.
The EP has asked for a thorough climate mainstreaming and underlined that the EU should not finance
projects and investments that are contrary to the achievement of EU climate goals
73
. The European Court of
Auditors recommends aligning EU spending and investment more closely with the Union's strategic
priorities
74
. 14 Member States have signed a joint letter to the Commission on 5 March 2018 asking for a
climate-friendly EU-budget.
75
Horizon 2020 is a major contributor
to the EU’s target to mainstream climate action and sustainable
development. While the expenditure target for climate action has not been met, the overall success of the
mainstreaming approach has been confirmed by the Commission in the MFF Mid-Term Review
76
, in the
European Court of Auditors Special report 31/2016
77
, in the related council conclusions
78
, and by a targeted
external report
79
.
The EU has signed up to the Paris Agreement on fighting climate change, and has already set itself a target to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 40% by 2030. It also made wider energy transition commitments
as captured in the Energy Union and its implementation packages, such as the the European Strategy for Low-
Emission Mobility
80
and the Clean Energy For All Europeans package
81
.
In continuation with the provision set out in Horizon 2020 and line with the EU’s international commitments,
an ambitious goal for climate mainstreaming across all EU programmes has been set, with a target of 25% of
EU expenditure contributing to climate objectives. To ensure its essential contribution to these objectives,
Horizon Europe will continue contributing to climate action, including to clean energy transition in the EU.
The programme is expected to contribute with 35% of its budget spent to climate objectives.
3.2
Improvements and their expected implications
In addition to the structure optimisations described in section 3.1, the key areas for
improvement identified by the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation (see section 1.2) have been
translated into novel features and enhancements of existing features. These improvements
build on the foundations of the interim evaluations
82
, findings of High Level Groups
83
and the
work of scientific experts
84
. They were developed on the basis of analysis detailed in the
European Parliament (2017), Resolution of 14 March
2018 on the next MFF: Preparing the Parliament’s position on the
MFF post-2020, ref. 2017/2052(INI).
74
European Court of Auditors (2018), Future of EU finances: reforming how the EU budget operates, Briefing Paper.
75
http://www.bmub.bund.de/en/service/details-europe-and-environment/artikel/statement-of-green-growth-group-2/
76
http://ec.europa.eu/budget/mff/lib/COM-2016-603/SWD-2016-299_en.pdf
77
https://www.eca.europa.eu/en/Pages/DocItem.aspx?did=39853
78
Council conclusions 7495/17, adopted by ECOFIN on 21 March 2017,
http://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-
7495-2017-INIT/en/pdf
79
https://publications.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/1df19257-aef9-11e7-837e-01aa75ed71a1
80
European Commission (2016), A European strategy for low-emission mobility, COM(2016)0501 final.
81
European Commission (2016), Clean Energy for all Europeans, COM(2016)0860 final.
82
Among others, the Interim Evaluation of the Joint Undertakings,Interim evaluation of the European Institute of Innovation
and Technology, FET Flagships
Interim evaluation.
83
In particular, the High Level Group on maximising the impact of EU R&I programmes and the Research, Innovation and
Science Policy Experts (RISE) group.
84
For the evidence used in this impact assessment, please refer also to Annex 1.
73
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Annex 8, from among identified alternative ways to address the key challenges identified in
section 2.2.
The significant improvements linked to the design of the programme (see Figure 5) will be
covered in this section, along with their expected implications. While Horizon 2020 is
already excellent, impactful and open, these changes will make the Framework Programme
achieve even more impact (EIC and missions) and more openness (through strengthened
international cooperation, reinforced Open Science policy, and a new policy approach to
European Partnerships). Neither of these changes goes beyond what is necessary at EU level
(proportionality test), and each one aims to increase the overall effectiveness, efficiency and
coherence of the Programme (see Section 3.3 for an overview of how this is achieved). More
details can be found in Annex 8, which also covers more gradual changes, e.g. linked to
Sharing excellence.
Moreover, the lessons learnt linked to simplification have been taken up in the section on
delivery for impact (Section 4 and Annex 9), while those related to synergies with other EU
programmes were included in the upstream design of those programmes (see Annex 7).
Figure 5: Design improvements and novelties in the new Framework Programme
3.2.1
The European Innovation Council (EIC)
Why do we need it?
There is a growing lack of equity funding for risky companies dealing
especially with deep-tech products, in particular young, innovative firms and scale-ups in
Europe. According to a recent study
85
, the total equity funding gap in Europe is estimated at
EUR 70 billion, of which 85% is represented by the so-called
“first valley of death”
86
. The
85
86
Deloitte (2016) Equity funding in the EU.
The “Valley of Death” is commonly known as a market failure. “First valley of death” is associated to pre-commercial
development of a product, with still high technical risks and unproven ability to generate revenue. Companies facing the
“second valley of death” are in a more advanced stage of their lifecycle, and they are mainly looking for growth finance.
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European Investment Bank estimates
87
that it would require around EUR 35 billion a year in
additional venture capital for financing start-ups and growth-stage firms in the EU to match
comparable US levels. Private investors are deterred by the lack of certainty, no cash flow
generation, and unproven ability to scale-up rapidly. Such ventures need a sophisticated
support ancillary to a grant, such as equity, guarantee, or other type of financing (tailor made
blended finance, see section 4.5) to better de-risk them and bring them to a stage where they
can be financed on usual commercial terms by investors.
What do we have now?
Horizon 2020 provides some measures of targeted support to
disruptive technologies and to innovative companies for bringing discoveries close to the
market, with a quarter of Innovation Actions having breakthrough potential
88
. On the one
hand, the FET instrument supports high-risk cutting-edge research projects aiming to bring
about transformational change by opposition to incremental innovation. However it lacks an
instrument to bring these disruptive innovations to the market. On the other hand, the SME
Instrument focusses especially on product, performance, business model innovations and
market uptake, but much less on service, network, and customer engagement innovations and
does not provide for market deployment and scale-up. In Horizon 2020, the SME Instrument
has provided EUR 1,332 million in grants to 3,239 SMEs supporting the technical and
commercial feasibility of a business idea and the development of innovation with
demonstration and scale-up purposes. Majority of the projects emerging from receiving SME
Instrument grants are however still exposed to the "first valley of death" for their subsequent
development, which is not covered by the SME Instrument. These projects still have
investment requirements to fully develop and commercialise their products
89
. Overall,
Horizon 2020 does not provide enough support to innovators, and in particular SMEs, to
develop breakthrough technologies cutting across sectors to access market and scale up
rapidly at EU level.
What did the other EU institutions say?
The European Parliament stresses the importance
of innovation support in general, and of disruptive innovation and scaling up in particular.
Council Conclusions emphasise the importance of supporting the whole innovation value
chain, including high-risk disruptive technologies, while the possible future EIC should
support breakthrough innovations and the scaling up of innovative companies
90
.
The majority of stakeholders commenting on the EIC are supportive and provide
suggestions on its possible role, objectives and implementation. In general stakeholders
expect the EIC to simplify the current support to innovation and act as an European
accelerator. They note that the support to innovative SMEs and start-ups is essential to maximise
Europe’s potential for growth and socioeconomic transformation
91
.
What changes?
The Framework Programme will introduce the EIC under the Open
Innovation Pillar to place the EU in the lead for breakthrough market-creating innovation
92
.
However, private investors are deterred by unproven ability to scale-up rapidly and generate cash flow. In both cases
technologies are seen too risky by private investors, and are, therefore, often not funded.
87
European Investment Bank (2016) Restoring EU competitiveness p.36.
88
European Commission (2017). Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, p.34.
89
European Investment Bank (2018) Improving Access to Finance for Beneficiaries of the SME Instrument,.
90
Ibid.
91
Griniece, E. (forthcoming) Synthesis of stakeholder input for Horizon Europe and European Commission analysis .
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The EIC will support innovators with breakthrough ideas and market creating innovations
that currently face high risks due to the fragmentation of the innovation eco-system, lack of
risk finance and risk aversion
93
. The EIC will integrate, reorganise and expand activities
previously carried out in Horizon 2020, such as in Access to Risk Finance (in synergy with
the InvestEU programme), Innovation in SMEs (notably the SME instrument), Fast-track to
Innovation as well as Future and Emerging Technologies (FET-Open).
The EIC will mainly implement two complementary instruments, offering a seamless support
from research and innovation activities to market deployment and scaling-up of innovative
companies. The Pathfinder for advanced research will be a grant-based instrument for early
stage research on technological ideas that can bring about transformational change, to nurture
spin-offs and potential market creating innovations. The Accelerator will be a financial
instrument operating through tailor made blended finance (advances, reimbursable or not,
equity, guarantees; see also section 4.5) in support of the development and the deployment of
market-creating innovation and the scale-up of innovative companies, until they can obtain
support from the InvestEU programme or be financed on usual commercial terms by
private/commercial investors. The Accelerator will place a particular emphasis on
innovations / spin-offs / start-ups generated within the Pathfinder, as well as from any other
parts of the Programme such as the ERC, the EIT KICs and R&I missions. In de-risking the
operations it supports, the Accelerator will also stimulate private investments in R&I while
preserving competition in the internal market.
EIC business advisory services will complement these instruments in order to connect
innovators with industrial partners and investors and provide them with other support
services. A High-Level Advisory Board composed of entrepreneurs, corporate leaders,
investors and researchers, will assist the Commission in the governance and have an outreach
function with an ambassadorial role. For its launch, the EIC could be implemented with the
support of an executive agency for some tasks. Subsequent development may however lead to
establishment of a fully externalised solution, as one of the possible implementation scenarios
(see Annex 8).
What is the EU added value?
As for the Horizon 2020 Future Emerging Technologies and
the SME Instrument, the continent-wide competition for ideas will ensure excellence and EU-
gains. Moreover, only EU-level action has the capacity to tackle the persistent lack of large-
scale venture capital. EU support will be more effective and more comprehensive (e.g.
common regulation, fostering synergies with other EU programmes) compared to national or
regional support. The EIC will focus on breakthrough innovations at European level, pooling
resources and unleashing the potential of European and global markets for EU innovators
94
.
The EIC will not replace national and private initiatives fostering breakthrough innovation,
but instead it will increase the coherence of the overall innovation ecosystem by establishing
a one-stop shop for high potential innovators and partnerships with national, regional and
local innovation actors.
92
Breakthrough market-creating innovations are defined in Horizon 2020 as radically new, breakthrough products, services,
processes or business models that open up new markets with the potential for rapid growth at European (and global) levels,
in contrast to incremental innovation (improvements to existing products for existing markets).
93
Additional evidence provided in Annex 8 on the European Innovation Council.
94
To this end, a level playing field among competitors is key to unleashing the innovative potential of companies (especially
SMEs) for breakthrough or disruptive innovation to happen.
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Figure 6 EU support to innovation (bottom-up and top-down)
Table 2 Comparing the EIC with the ERC, EIT, and InvestEU
European Innovation
Council (EIC)
Key
principles
Focus on excellence
(attract best innovators)
based largely on
bottom-up approach,
but also high-risk,
breakthrough R&I
activities that create
markets and provide
solutions to global
challenges.
European Research
Council (ERC)
Focus on excellence
(attract best
researchers), based
on bottom-up
approach
European Institute for
Innovation and
Technology (EIT)
Focus on knowledge
triangle integration
(education, research
and innovation) that
empowers innovators
and entrepreneurs to
solve global challenges
through KICs
InvestEU
Focus on
bankable
projects, and
expected return
on investment.
Implemented,
through financial
intermediaries
(Banks, Venture
Capital Funds,
and other private
investors)
Focus on entities
that can borrow
money or can sell
shares.
Target
group
Focus on the individual Focus on the
(the innovator), with
individual (the
high-growth potential
researcher)
(researchers,
entrepreneurs, start-ups,
SMEs and mid-caps),
from single
beneficiaries to multi-
disciplinary consortia,
but promote their
incorporation and
growth under late stage
activities
Remove constraints
Remove constraints
(field of innovation) for (field of science,
growth and scale-up
collaboration
partners)
Focus both on
individual entities and
on cooperation of
businesses, education
institutions & research
organisations within
KICs
Rationale
Reinforce R&I
ecosystems in specific
areas (knowledge
exchange and
networks,
entrepreneurship,
skills); support
innovators to start and
accelerate new
businesses; provide
talent through
entrepreneurial
Leveraging
private sources of
finance.
Address market
gaps and sub-
optimal
investment
situations.
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education
Evaluation
and
Selection
Selection by peers
Selection by
(scientists and
scientific peer review
innovators) and
investors based on
excellence, the impact
(marketability), and the
level of risk
Selection of KICs by
EIT Governing Board;
KICs business plans
(i.e., innovation and
education activities,
projects) assessed by
panel of experts
appointed by EIT
Grants to KICs
partnerships +
complementary
activities (incl.
education &
entrepreneurial progra
mmes)
Selection by
financial
intermediaries
through due-
diligence process.
Types
Action
of
Grants (Pathfinder) and Long-term grants
combination of grant-
with guaranteed
type advances and
funding
equity or financial
guarantees
(Accelerator).
Projects may be
amended or terminated
if milestones are not
met, seeking alignment
with private investors
Equity finance,
mainly focusing
on risk-capital
funds and debt
finance in the
form of loans and
guarantees.
What are the risks?
Firstly, in giving priority to potential impact rather than return on
investment, the EIC will promote long-term operations too risky to attract private investors.
In recent years, these risks have increased due to the more multi-disciplinary nature of R&I
and the intrinsic complexity and systems nature of many emerging technologies. If the risk of
failure of projects under the EIC is more pronounced, even higher is the potential benefit of
generating new markets that are essential for the future of the Union and its citizens, e.g.
deep-tech based areas of future growth and jobs such as clean and efficient new energy
sources, block-chain, artificial intelligence, genomics and robotics. Secondly, there is a
potential risk of conflict of interest linked to the involvement of experts, which will also be
innovators and/or investors themselves. Safeguards will be put in place, for example by
preventing them to invest into EIC supported companies, or similar provisions.
Box 8: EU Added Value of mono-beneficiary instruments
The Horizon 2020 interim evaluation showed that the quality of R&I improves through EU-wide
competition. This is an important element of EU added value, notably in areas where mono-beneficiaries
are the norm, like the SME Instrument and the ERC. The EU added value of the ERC from its exclusive
focus on excellence through competition helped it become a global beacon of excellence. Similarly, an in-
depth evaluation study of the SME Instrument
95
positively assessed its EU Added Value: it is unique
compared to similar support schemes at national/regional level (which are only focusing on certain priority
domains; do not have rolling submissions; have significantly smaller project volumes; require project
collaboration with other SMEs or universities).
What are the expected implications?
More innovations that create the new markets of the future.
Giving
more prominence and visibility to breakthrough innovation, the EIC will
attract the Europe’s best innovators. The selection
process by peer-
95
Technopolis (2017), Evaluation of the SME instrument and the activities under Horizon 2020 Work Programme
"Innovation in SMEs".
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scientists and innovators and investors will enable risk-taking, hence
providing support to radically new initiatives in uncharted territories. The
EU could become the home of up to a third of leading innovators in
major areas for breakthrough deep tech innovation
96
such as Artificial
Intelligence, biotech, and augmented/virtual reality and to leading
innovators addressing global challenges.
Scaled up companies and higher SME growth.
The EIC will support
late stage innovation activities and market deployment for the most
promising ideas, resulting in an increase in the number of growing EU
start-ups and SMEs. The EIC will also target innovative companies with
a great potential for scaling up, offering them co-investment to become
larger and increase their markets. The support to innovative companies
and in particular SMEs will increase their market valuation, employment,
and turnover.
Increased complementarities between grant-type funding, financial
instruments, and leverage from private investment.
Under the
Accelerator, blended finance will allow the Union to bear the initial risk
of deploying market breakthrough innovations, with the aim of de-risking
these operations as they unfold, down to a stage where they can be
financed through private capital, hence incentivize private investors.
Combined with activities undertaken by the (InvestEU Programme) this
alignment of interests with private investors will provide improved
access to venture capital and risk finance, hence leveraging the overall
volume of finance available for innovation..
More entrepreneurship and risk-taking.
The EIC will provide
business acceleration services to innovators and will award EIC
Fellowships to the outstanding ones. The EIC will highlight innovators
who can inspire others to set up and grow their own enterprises.
More accessible and user friendly support to innovation.
The EIC
support and services will be provided through a one-stop shop enabling
easy and quick access for innovators to EU support.
3.2.2
Research and Innovation Missions
Why do we need it?
As underlined by the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020
97
, the current
EU research and innovation programme does not fully prioritise investments with the highest
overall impact and added value for Europe, as expected impact is defined only at the level of
individual call topics. This leads to fragmentation and a dilution of impact. The consequent
lack of focus on societal impact also results in a low level of public awareness and
engagement in EU-funded R&I. This implies that current EU investments in R&I are not
sufficiently responsive to, or connected with, the needs of citizens.
96
97
Ibid.
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final, p. 7. See also
the specific recommendation in the Lamy High Level Group report on "adopting an impact-focused, mission-oriented
approach" in future EU research and innovation programmes (LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want,
Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p. 15-16.
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What do we have now?
Horizon 2020 featured over 20 Focus Areas in key domains, where
priorities cut across different parts of the programme (e.g. blue growth, circular economy,
digital security), to concentrate resources and efforts. While focus areas reinforced the
programme's coherence and its capacity to provide interdisciplinary solutions to multiple
societal challenges, their multiplication also resulted in some confusion. Moreover, citizens
were not involved in the process, and limited coordination of the focus areas undermined
their impact. Nor did they set achievable and time-bound goals.
What did the other EU institutions say?
All EU Institutions stress the importance of
involving citizens more profoundly in the co-design and co-creation of R&I contents to
maximise the impact generated by the Framework Programme
98
. The European Parliament
recognises the importance of society playing a more active part in defining and addressing the
problems, and in jointly putting forward the solutions. The Committee of the Regions is
calling for the adoption of a new, complementary approach based on missions and for greater
importance of science-society actions. The European Economic and Social Committee calls
for increased involvement of Civil Society Organisations in the Framework Programme. The
Council Conclusions and the European Research Area and Innovation Committee (ERAC)
point to the need to deliver better and continued outreach to society, and call for exploring a
mission-oriented approach
99
.
Almost all stakeholders referencing R&I missions clearly supported mission-orientation
of Horizon Europe or acknolwedged it as a possible future scenario. In general,
stakeholders consider that tangible missions that underpin the overall political
objectives could enhance visibility and create a more engaging narrative of the Framework
Programme. There is also a widespread acknowledgement on the need to engage wider society in
identifying the most relevant missions within broader societal challenges.
100
What changes?
Horizon Europe will introduce a limited number of highly visible R&I
missions. Missions will replace and build on the Horizon 2020 Focus Areas. They will be
well-defined
101
and self-standing programme parts, as opposed to the Focus Areas. This will
more clearly and directly incentivise cross-sectoral and cross-disciplinary cooperation. Clear
objectives and rationale will be established at the mission's inception (addressing a specific
weakness identified in the focus areas approach) in order to define targets, clear time-bound
goals and expected impact. Finally, missions will be more closely co-designed with end-users
and citizens, thus prioritising public engagement and involvement and "building upon
existing work and prior commitments to bring societal actors together to prioritise R&I
activity"
102
.
Different types of missions can be envisaged, for example missions to accelerate progress
towards a set technical or societal solution, focusing large investments on a specific target
(e.g. accelerate market uptake of post Li-ion energy storage solutions) or missions for
transforming an entire social or industrial system within an established timeframe (e.g.
transformation of the entire energy system or mobility system in cities). Evidence indicates
Democratic Society (2018), "Citizen Participation in FP9: A model for mission and work programme engagement". See
p.18-19 for a more detailed overview.
99
Ibid.
100
Griniece, E. (2018), Synthesis of stakeholder input for Horizon Europe and European Commission analysis.
101
Over 20 Focus Areas were introduced in Horizon 2020, and the interim evaluation found that "their multiplication
resulted in some confusion" (p.149, In-Depth Staff Working Document on Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, SWD(2017)
220 final).
102
Democratic Society (2018), p.18.
98
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that a combination of approaches would be most suited to the scale of EU-level missions and
the complex challenges which they will address
103
.
Missions will be selected (after the launch of Horizon Europe) according to the following
selection criteria
104
:
Bold, inspirational, with wide societal relevance;
A clear direction: targeted, measurable and time-bound;
Ambitious but realistic research and innovation actions;
Cross-disciplinary, cross-sectoral, and cross-actor innovation;
Multiple bottom-up solutions;
Strong EU added value.
At the implementation stage, Mission Boards for each mission will ensure proper
involvement of stakeholders and end-users. Mission Boards will be involved in co-designing
the missions involving stakeholders and the wider public, providing input to the content of
the call for proposals and the evaluation of project proposals and in monitoring missions. A
mission manager will be appointed for each mission with the task of ensuring that the mission
objectives are reached through a portfolio approach. By involving citizens and stakeholders
in the definition, selection and monitoring of missions, a sense of urgency and collective
commitment will be created
105
while also ensuring societal ownership of the missions
106
.
What is the EU added value?
Setting R&I missions at EU level gives them the critical mass
necessary to address global challenges. They will help the EU to better deliver on Sustainable
Development Goals and its strategic policy priorities. Setting R&I missions at EU level
would also facilitate ensuring that the EU regulatory framework fully supports the
achievement of such an EU mission, for instance through applying the innovation principle,
setting standards at EU level, or through joint public procurement at EU level. Missions can
involve end-users and citizens much more closely in EU R&I activities.
What are the risks?
The success of missions hinges on the timely and due dialogue with
stakeholders, to avoid disengagement or weak interest. Moreover, in the implementation
phase, the evaluation and monitoring mechanisms will need to be sophisticated enough to
capture the long-term impacts of missions. Finally, the ultimate uptake and roll-out of
innovative solutions arising from missions will depend on wider framework conditions
this
kind of wider support to uptake can be supported through policy actions in the spirit of the
Inovation Principle, or through Innovation Deals
107
.
What are the expected implications?
"There is much evidence that EU scale R&I missions would be best serves in a hybrid model (including or combining
accelerator and transformer elements), that is flexible in addressing different types of challenges and different levels of
complexity, while at the same coordinating and concentrating the effort and resources towards the commonly agreed
objectives". Joint Institute for Innovation Policy (2018), Mission-Oriented Research and Innovation: assessing the impact of
a mission-oriented research and innovation approach.
104
Mazzucato M. (2018), Mission-Oriented Research and Innovation in the European Union: A problem-solving approach to
fuel innovation-led growth.
105
This is identified as a key characteristic of the most successful mission-like initiatives across the world. See: Joint
Institute for Innovation Policy study.
106
"Missions require to set up specific governance structures with full-time professionals and to keep close contacts with all
stakeholders. A balanced system of separation of powers between steering, strategic and financial decision-making and the
day-to-day management is a must to establish from the outset". Joint Institute for Innovation Policy study.
107
https://ec.europa.eu/research/innovation-deals/index.cfm
103
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Improved cross-sectoral and cross-disciplinary cooperation.
Missions
will require expertise from different sectors and disciplines to come
together. For example, climate action requires meaningful collaboration
across sectors such as urban planning, construction, energy efficiency in
buildings, mobility, behavioural aspects, food, environmental capacity,
and in many other areas. The mission-oriented approach will work across
clusters to promote system-wide transformation.
Increased impact on global challenges and EU policy priorities.
Missions will increase effectiveness in delivering societal impact for end-
users and citizens, by prioritising investments and set directions to
achieve objectives with societal relevance. Missions will set the direction
for the EU regulatory framework, and leverage further public and private
sector R&I investments in Europe.
Reduced gap between science/innovation and society.
R&I missions
will be easy to communicate, in order to mobilise citizens and end-users
in their co-design and co-creation (e.g. through citizen science and user-
led innovation). In turn, this increases the relevance of science and
innovation for the society and it would stimulate the societal uptake of
innovative solutions and leverage business investment.
3.2.3
International cooperation
Why do we need it?
International cooperation in R&I is vital for ensuring access to talent,
knowledge, know-how, facilities and markets worldwide, for effectively tackling global
challenges and for implementing global commitments
108
.
What do we have now?
Association to the programme is limited to countries geographically
close to Europe. Organisations from non-associated third countries can participate in projects
in all parts of the programme, except for mono-beneficiary grants, specific close-to-market
innovation activities and actions for access to risk finance. Except for a few cases, only
participants from low- and middle-income countries are automatically eligible to receive EU
funding. EU funding can be exceptionally granted to third-country entities whose
participation is deemed essential for carrying out an action.
What did the other EU institutions say?
The Council and the European Parliament have
called for strengthening international R&I cooperation in the Framework Programme,
including with associated countriesand emerging countries, as soon as possible through
concrete actions. The Parliament, in addition, has highlighted the value of science diplomacy.
Council Conclusions have also reaffirmed the importance of reciprocity.
A predominant view among stakeholders is that cooperation should be strengthened to
counter the drop in internationalisation activities and participation rates from third
countries that was experienced in Horizon 2020. Some stakeholders also advocate
science as a platform for international diplomacy. A few stakeholders noted that EU could adopt
legislation to encourage exploitation of research and innovation results in Europe first
109
.
108
109
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final, p. 8.
Griniece, E. (forthcoming) Synthesis of stakeholder input for Horizon Europe and European Commission analysis .
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Figure 7: Approach to international cooperation in Horizon 2020 vs the new Framework Programme
What changes?
The Framework Programme will intensify cooperation in line with the
strategy for EU international R&I cooperation and the "Open to the World" R&I priority
110
.
The programme will extend openness for association, beyond EU enlargement, EEA
countries and ENP countries, to include all countries with proven science, technology and
innovation capacities to make cooperation and funding of joint projects as smooth as
possible. The programme should increasingly invite partners from the rest of the world to join
EU efforts as an integral part of initiatives in support of EU actions for sustainable
development; it should provide more support for activities that facilitate the collaboration of
European researchers with their counterparts worldwide, enable international mobility of
researchers and ensure access to research infrastructures globally; and it should extend
support to joint and coordinated funding of global industrial research and innovation
cooperation. The programme should continue to fund entities from low-mid income
countries, and to fund entities from industrialised and emerging economies only if they
possess essential competences or facilities. The programme will intensify support to
international flagships, partnerships, bilateral and multilateral initiatives and joint
programmes and calls, to increase access to researchers, knowledge and resources worldwide
and optimise benefits from cooperation.
Box 9: Third Countries associated to the Framework Programme
The Framework Programme will define which countries will be able to apply for association, what
criteria should be used to assess their applications, and what principles should apply for the terms and
conditions regarding their participation.
Each Association Agreement to the Framework Programme should define the scope, specific terms
and conditions of participation, as well as the rules governing the financial contribution of the
associated country. These rules should ensure a close approximation between payments and returns.
What is the EU added value?
Openness of the Framework Programme to third countries
enhances the EU added value of the Programme itself, allowing EU participants to
110
See Annex 10 on the Implementation of the strategy for international cooperation in R&I.
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collaborate with the best minds in the world. The EU can more effectively shape policy
agendas when represented as a single voice in multilateral fora and international
organisations. The EU has a comparative advantage as compared to single Member States
when negotiating bilateral agreements with third countries regarding framework conditions
such as mutual openness of funding programmes or issues related to Intellectual Property
Rights (IPR) protection. Thanks to the Framework Programme, Member States are enabled to
cooperate with several third countries, including countries with which they do not have
bilateral agreements. Increasing international cooperation does not go beyond what is
necessary to achieve the objectives of the programme.
What are the risks?
The main risk is that the proposed specific objective, priorities for
actions and instruments to be used will not be sufficient for strengthening international
cooperation in the Programme compared to the current situation. Regarding the process, there
is also the risk that European objectives both in terms of global challenges and
competitiveness take less of a driving role in priority-setting when more international partners
are involved. International S&T cooperation policy dialogues and broad consultations should
ensure that international joint actions are strategically designed in line with EU interests and
agreed with international partners based on mutual interest and common benefit.
What are the expected implications?
Improved excellence of the Programme.
Attracting and collaborating
with the world's top researchers, innovators and knowledge-intensive
companies reinforces the EU’s science and technology base. Evidence
shows that international collaboration increases the impact of scientific
publications
111
.
Higher influence of the EU in shaping global R&I systems.
This
approach will enhance the EU leading role in setting the policy agenda,
in particular for addressing common challenges and for achieving the
Sustainable Development Goals. The mutual benefits of international
cooperation strengthen EU leadership in the knowledge-intensive
economy. The Programme will be an effective instrument in Europe's
efforts to harness globalisation by removing barriers to innovation and by
establishing fairer framework conditions with international partners.
More impact from the Programme.
Increased international cooperation
will reinforce EU R&I excellence and the creation and diffusion of high-
quality knowledge in the EU. Cooperating internationally is
indispensable as the scope and interconnectivity of global societal
challenges increase and require more international joint action and
coordination of agendas International openness of the innovation eco-
systems will strengthen EU competitiveness by promoting a level playing
field and enhancing supply and demand of innovative solutions. The
association agreements with countries having proven R&I capacities will
facilitate mutual access to European and third-country know-how and
markets, as cooperation with top third country innovators facilitates
access to expertise that is increasingly developed outside the EU.
111
Within the Programme, peer-reviewed publications with at least one associated or third country have a higher impact than
other ones: European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 115.
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3.2.4
Open Science policy
Why do we need it?
The next Framework Programme should fully embrace Open Science as
a way of strengthening scientific excellence, benefiting from citizen participation, achieving
better reproducibility of results and increasing knowledge circulation and the re-use of
research data
112
, hence accelerating the take-up of R&I knowledge and solutions and
increasing the EU policy and societal impact of the Framework Programme.
What do we have now?
There is a shift towards a more open, collaborative, data-intensive
and networked way of doing research and sharing research results, enabled by developments
in ICT and related infrastructures and the increasing proliferation of data. Open access to
publications is mandatory, while open access publishing is encouraged, and relevant costs
eligible. Beneficiaries are encouraged by guidelines to keep enough (copy)right to self-
archive, but are not legally empowered to do so. Participation in the Open Research Data
Pilot is the default for Horizon 2020 projects, and it requires a Data Management Plan and
open access to research data, but there are solid conditions to opt-out from the Pilot at any
stage.
What did the other EU institutions say?
The European Parliament opinion is in favour of
the general principle of Open Access, while the European Research Area and Innovation
Committee (ERAC) regards the 100% Open Access policy of Horizon 2020 as a clear
measure in favour of knowledge circulation. Importantly, the Council Conclusions on the
transition towards an Open Science System give valuable guidance for the future, while the
Council Conclusions on the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020 highlight the role of Open
Science in boosting impact and transparency
113
.
The majority of stakeholders who referred to Open Science note that data and
knowledge produced from EU funded projects should be shared openly. However, some
business representatives underlined the need for the opt-out option to be maintained to
secure confidentiality of market-oriented innovation outputs. Stakeholders also highlight that open
science, open data and open access calls for new principles in citation and academic reward system
and requires attention to the development of skills in research data management
114
.
What changes?
The Framework Programme will fully embrace and support Open Science
policy as the new research
modus operandi
through various requirements in the Work
Programmes. It will go beyond the open access policy of Horizon 2020, requiring immediate
open access for publications and data (with robust opt-outs for the latter), and research data
management plans to support sound data management; it will foster the proliferation of FAIR
data (findable, accessible, interoperable and re-usable). It will support activities that promote
a sustainable and innovative scholarly communications ecosystem; it will foster activities for
the enhancement of researcher skills in open science and support reward systems that
promote open science; it will integrate research integrity in the open science activities and
support citizen science. Lastly, it will also support the introduction of next generation
indicators for the assessment of research.
112
113
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final, p.9.
Ibid.
114
Griniece, E. (forthcoming) Synthesis of stakeholder input for Horizon Europe and European Commission analysis .
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What is the EU added value?
Even while Member States are developing their own policies
for Open Science, the positive effect of EU action is substantial
115
. Horizon Europe will
contribute towards policy alignment across the Member States and thus towards the
development of a better and more unified environment for research collaboration in ERA and
beyond it. Requirements of the Programme have structuring effects that accelerate the
propagation of Open Science policy via collaborative projects in the research community.
Horizon Europe will accelerate the transition towards Open Science by building a European
Open Science Cloud supported by world-class infrastructure that will gradually also benefit
industry and the public sector.
What are the risks?
The main concern on Open Science in Horizon Europe relates primarily
to the requirement for open access to data from research projects. Without clearly explained
safeguards, this policy could be perceived as deterrent for industry and businesses to
participate. This is why, while open access to research data will be the standard, Horizon
Europe will be fortified with robust exceptions to this rule, where access to data needs to be
protected and Intellectual Property Rights protected. The principle that research data has to be
'as open as possible, as closed as necessary' will be emphasised every time it is necessary. A
concern shared also at the time of Horizon 2020 is that the development of open access in
Europe may offer content paid by European taxpayers for exploitation to the entire world,
and therefore advantages other countries for more severe competition in research and
innovation. The Commission is not the only funder with such open access and open science
policy requirements. Funders across the globe are aligned in mandating open access to
publications and data and relevant open science policies. It is not expected that Europe will
set itself into a comparative disadvantage in this way, vis-à-vis other countries across the
world.
What are the expected implications?
Increased availability of scientific output in open access.
A higher
percentage of projects will make their outputs (publications, data,
algorithms etc.) available in open access because of the simplification of
provisions, the stricter formulation of exceptions, and financial support
provided through the Programme.
Higher levels of excellent research and innovation.
Placing high
quality content in the open, and stimulating knowledge circulation and
the reuse of results, improves science communication and enables
interdisciplinary research.
Increased accessibility to high quality digital content.
Data are
increasingly becoming the starting point for innovation, with high
returns
116
. With digitisation, it can be expected that SMEs and other
companies will base new business models on digital content, hence will
reap the benefits of a strengthened Open data environment in Europe and
maximise the exploitation of digital resources through reusability.
115
The effect of emulating or aligning Member States funding policies to match these of Horizon 2020 with respect to open
access is clearly reported by Member States in the National Point of Reference (NPR) report of 2015
)
and can be seen in
many instances, for example in aligning embargo periods (p. 16). Similar trends can be observed in the 2017 NPR report,
where 2/3 of Member States report that the 2012 Recommendation for Open Access to and Preservation of Scientific
Information has had significant impact on national policies.
116
https://ufm.dk/en/publications/2018/preliminary-analysis-introduction-of-fair-data-in-denmark
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Higher societal and policy impact.
Open science policy allows citizens
to be part of the research process (for example through citizen science),
helping lifelong learning and developing an informed society for the 21
st
century challenges. Accessible R&I data and results can be used for
evidence-based policy-making, therefore they contribute to strengthening
the policy role of R&I.
3.2.5
European Partnerships
Why do we need it?
The European R&I partnership landscape grew significantly in size and
complexity over the last decade with an increasing risk of overlap and non-coherence with
the EU framework programme and between the partnerships themselves. In particular, there
is a large number of Public-Public Partnership initiatives (currently close to 100). Still,
Partnerships are key to achieving policy objectives that the Framework Programme alone
cannot achieve. Reforming the current partnership landscape and improving the design and
implementation of future European Partnerships, renewed or newly set-up, should make it
possible to use their full potential in achieving ambitious policy objectives.
117
What do we have now?
Horizon 2020 supports two broad categories of partnerships: those
mainly involving industry, i.e. Article 187 initiatives or Public-Private-Partnerships (PPPs)
and contractual PPPs (cPPPs); and those involving mainly Member States, i.e. Article 185
initiatives or Public-Public-Partnerships (P2Ps), ERA-NET Cofund, European Joint
Programming-Cofund and Joint Programming Initiatives. Moreover, there are other types of
mixed partnerships such as the Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs) of the
European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) (integrating the knowledge triangle)
and the Future and Emerging Technologies Flagships.
What did the other EU institutions say?
The Competitiveness Council Conclusions
stressed that the current R&I ecosystem has become too complex, and that all partnership
initiatives should have an exit strategy from EU funding. The European Research Area and
Innovation Committee (ERAC) considers it particularly urgent to rationalise the funding
schemes, while considering public-to-public partnerships essential for more coordinated
implementation of national and EU R&I. The European Parliament advocates
‘decomplexifying’ the EU funding landscape
118
.
A large share of stakeholders submiting position papers is concerned by the complexity
of the EU R&I funding landscape. A dozen stakeholders explicitly emphasise the fact
that exsisting support schemes should be carefully evaluated, and the discontinuation of
funding should be an option (i.e. sunset clauses).
119
What changes?
An overall European Partnerships strategy based on an objective- and
impact-driven intervention logic will be developed and implemented in order to ensure that
partnerships are established or renewed
120
only in cases where impacts need to be created that
cannot
be achieved by other Framework Programme’s actions or national action alone. All
future European Partnerships will be designed based on the principles of Union added value,
117
118
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final, p. 9.
Ibid.
119
Griniece, E. (forthcoming) Synthesis of stakeholder input for Horizon Europe and European Commission analysis .
120
Specific partnerships, whether new or renewed, are not included in the legal proposal of the Framework Programme.
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transparency, openness, impact, leverage effect, long-term financial commitment of all the
involved parties, flexibility, coherence and complementarity with Union, local, regional
national and international initiatives.
The strategic planning process of the Framework Programme (see section 4.1) will frame the
establishment of European Partnerships. This will ensure that the next generation of
partnerships will support agreed EU priorities and will lead to a rationalised R&I landscape,
with fewer, but more targeted initiatives receiving co-funding/investment from the
Framework Programme.
The design and implementation of future European Partnerships will include an improved
coherence between Framework Programme’s actions and R&I partnerships, as well as among
initiatives. In addition, communication and outreach will be strengthened by a clear, easy-to-
communicate architecture under the umbrella term “European Partnerships”. This
encompasses all Partnerships with Member States, Associated or Third Countries and/or
other stakeholders such as civil society/foundations and/or with industry (including small and
medium sized enterprises), with greater openness to international cooperation. European
Partnerships will only be developed on agreed EU policy priorities in the context of the
Framework Programme, and subject to the criteria set out in the Framework Programme.
They will be limited in time with clear conditions for phasing out from the Framework
Programme funding. There will be only three types of intervention modes (i.e. several
Horizon 2020 labels like P2P, PPP, ERA-NET, FET Flagship and cPPP will be
discontinued): i) co-programmed European Partnerships between the EU, Member States,
and/or other stakeholders, based on Memoranda of Understanding or contractual
arrangements with partners; ii) co-funded European Partnerships, based on a single, flexible
programme co-fund action for R&I activities; iii) institutionalised European Partnerships
(based on Art. 185 or 187 TFEU, and EIT regulation for KICs). Following a life-cycle
approach
121
the legal act will set out the criteria for the selection, implementation,
monitoring, evaluation and phasing out of all European Partnerships.
What is the EU added value?
The main added value derives from the additional private and
public R&I investments on EU priorities (additionality and leverage), the alignment of these
investments towards common objectives (directionality) and the achievement of impacts that
cannot be created by other Framework Programme actions or national action alone. In
addition, the revised policy approach will substantially improve the coherence between
European Partnerships and the Framework Programme in general, based on clear criteria
identified together with Member States and other stakeholders. EU investments in R&I will
be simpler to communicate and understand for stakeholders. The approach will build on, and
bring together, all the on-going and future partnerships.
What are the risks?
The major risk for the new policy approach is considered to be the
expectations from the current partnerships to continue on a business as usual approach and
expect more or less automatic renewal without being in line with the criteria set. It is crucial
to ensure early involvement of Member States and stakeholders, including currently active
initiatives, in the strategic programming process to build trust and ownership on the agreed
future priorities.
What are the expected implications?
121
As proposed by the ERAC ad-hoc working group on partnerships (2018)
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Improved coherence and simplification.
The clear rationale for the use
of R&I partnerships, the elaboration of distinct and clear intervention
logics based on policy objectives and the application of an impact-based
criteria framework along the life cycle of R&I partnerships, including
their phasing-out will guide the establishment of the next generation of
partnerships. This will lead to a smaller number of more coherent
partnerships and improve the overall coherence of the European R&I
ecosystem.
More openness and flexibility.
Partnerships will be open to all types of
stakeholders (Member States, civil society/foundations, industry,
including small and medium sized enterprises) with no entrance barriers
for newcomers and smaller R&I players. Flexibility will be encouraged
with a simplified toolbox, and a lifecycle-based planning and
implementation approach.
Enhanced impact of EU R&I funding.
The new approach to
partnerships will ensure that partnerships will only be established in
cases where desired impacts cannot be created by other Framework
Programme’s actions. As EU co-funding
will be limited to agreed EU
strategic priorities, including EU R&I missions, the overall impact of EU
R&I funding will be increased by leveraging additional investments on
EU policy priorities, by providing 'directionality' to these investments,
and by reaching out to a broader set of stakeholders.
3.3
Overall impact on the new Framework Programme
Impact is expected to be even higher than for the current Programme,
because of
improved programme-design novelties, increased internal coherence between Programme
pillars, with more focus on cross-disciplinary, cross-sectoral and cross-policy activities,
increased synergies with the MFF programmes, rationalisation, more user-friendly
modalities, increased openness to all stakeholders, more flexibility and efficient delivery
mechanisms, including a more effective dissemination and exploitation of R&I results.
The EIC which aims to capitalize on EU science strengths and improve transition from
science to breakthrough innovation, (i.e. innovation with highest impact) is expected to be
particularly effective in assisting companies along their innovation journey by offering
innovators seamless support (from grants to blended finance, from early stage research to
market uptake). Missions which aim to set ambitious goals and channel EU R&I investment
to areas with highest added value (i.e. highest impact) would allow the Programme to deliver
better on EU strategic challenges; support the implementation of EU policy priorities;
improve the contribution to EU policy-making; increase cross-sector and cross-disciplinary
cooperation; and improve the societal uptake of innovative solutions based on better
communication with, and involvement of, citizens. Strengthening international cooperation
would foster R&I by attracting even more of the world's top innovators, knowledge-intensive
companies, scientific organisations and researchers. Strengthening open science policy
should create and diffuse better high-quality knowledge, while better involving and informing
citizens. The integrated approach for partnerships would improve leverage of, and alignment
to, Member State and private investments.
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Table 3: Effectiveness of the changes to the Programme
Changes
Objectives of the Framework Programme
Strengthen the impact of R&I
in developing, supporting and
implementation EU policies
MFF cross-cutting objectives
Optimise the Programme's
delivery for impact within
a strengthened ERA
Support the creation and
diffusion of high-quality
knowledge
Structure
EIC
Missions
International
cooperation
Open Science
policy
Partnerships
0
+
+
++
++
+
0
+
+++
+
+
++
0
+++
+
+
+
+
+
++
++
+
+
++
+
+
+/-
0
0
++
+
++
+
0
0
+
+
+
++
0
+
+
0
+
++
0
0
+
Note: +, ++, +++ correspond respectively to slight, moderate and significant improvement compared to a no-
policy change scenario. +/- correspond to a coexistence of positive and negative impacts. 0 means no
significant change.
Horizon Europe is expected to generate more substantial economic benefits.
Compared
to the baseline (Section 2.1), the improvements will increase the overall impact, with
different possible scenarios depending on how R&I leverage, diffusion and economic
performance will react to these changes. Illustrative results from the NEMESIS model
122
(see
Annex 5) show that the estimated GDP gains for the EU compared to the baseline can range
from +0.04% in a low scenario to +0.1% in a more optimistic scenario (direct and indirect
effect). The total impact of the Programme on EU GDP could range from EUR 30 billion to
EUR 40 billion per year over 25 years (EUR 800 billion to EUR 975 billion in total)
123
.
122
The impacts of the changes were quantified based on the NEMESIS model only. As shown in Annex, 5, the QUEST and
RHOMOLO models provide lower results in terms of GDP gain for the baseline scenario.
123
Seureco (forthcoming) Support for assessment of socio-economic and environmental impacts (SEEI) of European R&I
programme,.
40
Focus on performance
0
++
++
+
0
+
Foster innovation
Simplification
Coherence
Flexibility
Synergies
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Figure 8: Impact of the changes compared to the baseline (GDP gain, compared to a situation without
Framework Programme)
Source: Seureco, Support for assessment of socio-economic and environmental impacts (SEEI) of European
R&I programme.
Horizon Europe will deliver more value for money.
Figure 8 shows that the future
Programme is expected to generate even more economic benefits due to the improvements in
the programme structure and design, which together with more delivery for impact (see
section 4) will ensure that the Programme will be cost-effective.
Table 4 Economic costs and benefits of Horizon Europe
Economic Benefits
124
Leverage of
R&I
investment
GDP gain
EUR 6-7 billion over 2021-2027
Submitting
proposals
Administrative
burden (reporting
obligations)
Management
of
projects
and
proposal evaluation
Costs
125
Cost for beneficiaries:
About EUR 650 million
per year
126
Cost for beneficiaries:
EUR 0.9-2.3 million per
year
127
Cost for administrations:
EUR 500-600 million per
year
128
720 to 975 billion over 25 years
Employment
Direct benefit: Over 100 thousand jobs in
R&I activities around 2027
Indirect benefit: Over 200 thousand jobs
around 2035
124
These benefits are estimated after 2021 based on the NEMESIS model. Source: Seureco (forthcoming) Support for
assessment of socio-economic and environmental impacts (SEEI) of European R&I programme,.
125
Costs are based on Horizon 2020 figures.
126
The Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020 shows that the estimated cost for applicants to write proposals is EUR 1908.9
million or EUR 636 million annually. Of these costs, it is estimated that EUR 1.7 billion would be spent on writing proposals
that do not get funded, including EUR 643.0 million for non-funded high quality proposals alone.
127
The administrative burden of reporting obligations were estimated based on the standard cost model. The total burden is
obtained by multiplying: (1) Average personnel cost per hour: based on data from the R&D surveys (Eurostat), the average
cost of R&D personnel per FTE R&D staff is EUR 4927 per month in the EU. Based on this, a gross salary range of EUR
4000-6000 per month is assumed for the calculations (20% around the EU average). This corresponds to an hourly wage of
EUR 25 to 37.5 per hour. In line with the better regulation guidelines, the hourly pay to be used in the standard cost model
corresponds to this gross salary plus overhead costs (25%). This gives a range of EUR 31.25 to 46.88 per hour. (2) Time
required per reporting obligation: the duration of the tasks required to fulfil a reporting obligation is estimated to range
between 4 and 8 hours. (3) Number of projects: about 11,100 projects were launched during the first three years of Horizon
2020. This corresponds to 25,900 over 7 years. (4) Number of reporting obligations: based on data from Horizon 2020
projects, an average of two reporting obligations per project is assumed.
128
The administrative expenditure related to the evaluation of proposals and the management of projects is below 5% of the
budget. More extensive use of executive agencies since 2014 (REA, ERCEA, INEA and EASME) promoted economies of
scale and increased synergies. As a result, administrative expenditure was drastically reduced (compared to 6% in FP7). At
the same time, the level of client satisfaction is very high. Therefore, a rate of 5% is a reasonable assumption for the next
Framework Programme. This corresponds to an estimated cost of EUR 500 to 600 million per year.
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Lastly, these effects will be amplified by strengthened synergies and complementarities
with other EU Programmes
(see Annex 7). This will entail for example stronger alignment
of priorities; clearer complementarities; more flexible co-funding schemes to pool resources
at EU level; common strategic planning processes to allocate funding; greater alignment
between applicable rules; and eligibility of R&I high-quality proposals for funding by other
EU programmes (e.g. Seal of Excellence, co-funded European Partnerships), stronger
involvement of existing networks at EU level (e.g., the Enterprise Europe Network).
Portfolios of R&I results will be made available for EU regions for potential uptake based on
their specific needs, thus maximising the benefits coming from synergies with EU initiatives,
for increasing regional competitiveness and innovation. This will maximise the impact of
investments, speed up market uptake and the development of a comprehensive R&I
ecosystem. Moreover, the Framework Programme will deepen links with EU policy priorities
by bringing R&I results into policy-making, with full involvement of sectoral policy-makers.
Box 10: Market uptake
Improving market uptake of innovative solutions is a broad concept encompassing various activities, which
help R&I-driven innovation to succeed on the market and create new value for market players and
consumers/citizens alike. However, market uptake goes beyond R&I. Therefore, activities under the
Framework Programme alone cannot suffice to incentivise broad market uptake and dissemination of
innovative solutions. Other EU programmes need to also play a key role (see Annex 7 on Synergies).
What does Horizon 2020 currently do for market uptake?
Supports the development of innovative solutions until demonstrators and pilots (introduction of a first-
of-its-kind innovation in the EU).
Speeds up the introduction of innovations on the market and supports coaching and mentoring of
companies.
Provides support to closer-to-market activities, including the launch and scale-up of innovative
companies, without distorting competition within the EU.
Supports public demand for innovative solutions, through Public Procurement for Innovation and Pre-
Commercial Procurement. This support is limited to the coordination costs between procurers.
Develop standards for innovative products and services, but with limited progress so far.
What can the Framework Programme do more for market uptake?
Ensure market uptake is considered at the phase of proposal development, fostering applicants to co-
create/experiment their research and solutions with users from the outset, to ensure improved fit to the
final needs, including within the KICs co-location centres;
Support innovation actions and the demonstration of technological and non-technological innovative
solutions of a first-of-a-kind nature in Europe with potential for replication;
Establish pipelines of innovative solutions (originated from R&I projects) targeted to public and private
investors, including the EIC’s Accelerator and other EU programmes;
Support to roll out and replication of innovative solutions with cross-border and transnational dimension;
Support to pre-commercial procurement and public procurement of innovation is maintained;
Support with the EIC the deployment of market-creating innovations and the scale-up of start-ups,
innovative SMEs and mid-capital firms with breakthrough potential to create new markets by blended
finance of grants and financial instruments under the EIC;
Improved monitoring and dissemination of R&I results including through initiatives such as the
Dissemination and Exploitation Boosters and the Innovation Radar
also directed to other EU
programmes for further implementation
Support non-technological innovations (social innovation, business model innovation, public sector
innovation etc.) including innovative delivery mechanisms.
Put in place a comprehensive go-to-market package to incentivise the exploitation of Framework
Programme’s results by helping beneficiaries to find the most appropriate instruments and channels for
the market uptake of their innovations.
Provide holistic support throughout the dissemination and exploitation lifecycle to ensure a constant
stream of innovations stemming from the Framework Programme.
Put in place an ambitious and comprehensive dissemination and exploitation strategy for increasing the
availability of R&I results and accelerating their uptake to boost the overall impact of the Framework
Programme and the European innovation potential.
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3.4
Critical mass
Achieving critical mass is key for the efficiency and effectiveness of the Programme
129
.
Horizon Europe cannot work effectively if it is not able to fund a sufficiently broad portfolio
of relevant technologies and a sufficiently large range of complementary R&I projects that
can build on each other and contribute to the objectives of the Programme. Reaching critical
mass means that the Programme should be able to fund projects large enough to bring
together across countries, sectors and disciplines, all partners and resources required to
achieve the targeted objectives. Critical mass is also needed to support large-scale initiatives,
preparing full market deployment of solutions in areas like batteries, infectious diseases,
smart and clean buildings and vehicles, low-emission technologies, circular economy,
solutions for plastic waste, and connected/automated cars. Ambitions will have to be scaled
back equally across the Programme if critical mass would not be available.
Over the first three years of Horizon 2020, only 11.6% of the proposals could be funded.
This low success rate can be explained by the high attractiveness of the Programme, which
has led to a sharp increase in the number of eligible proposals compared to FP7
130
. Moreover,
in the first years of Horizon, only 1 in 4 high quality proposals could be funded - an
additional EUR 62 billion would have been needed to fund all proposals independently
evaluated above the stringent quality threshold.
131
. This underfunding represents an
opportunity cost for Europe's promising R&I potential, since it undermines the critical mass
needed to tackle global challenge; constitutes a waste of resources for the applicants (who
spent an estimated EUR 636 million a year preparing proposals
132
), deters excellent R&I
players from applying, and deprives the EU of the full potential of the Programme. Based on
the steady trend observed over the last decade, the number of proposals should be larger than
in Horizon 2020. If the resources allocated to the Programme would remain similar to those
of Horizon 2020 (in constant prices), the success rate would likely decline, or at best be
maintained at ~12%, with only 20% -25% of high-quality proposals funded. This success rate
is too low for the Programme to be efficient - a success rate of 15-20% (comparable to FP7),
and funding for at least 30% of high quality proposals would be ideal
133
.
Alternative measures to increase the success rate are not expected to be fully effective.
Using financial instruments through the InvestEU programme and enhancing
complementarities with other MFF programmes, including the European Regional
Development Fund, would allow funding more R&I projects. More use of two-stage calls
would filter proposals at an early stage
134
. However, financial instruments are not appropriate
for all projects
135
, and two-stage calls will not solve the problem for unfunded high quality
proposals. Likewise, decreasing the size of projects would imply abandoning larger scale
projects, mainly affecting collaborative projects, which are an intrinsic part of the EU added
value of the Programme. More strict eligibility criteria can improve overall success rate
136
,
however will not address the issue of low success rate for high-quality proposals. Lastly,
129
130
European Commission (2017), The Grand Challenge. The design and societal impact of Horizon 2020.
The success rate in Horizon 2020 is 11.6%, compared to 18.5% under the previous framework programme (FP7).
131
Proposals that passed all thresholds in the independent evaluation process (from Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation).
132
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 83.
133
LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p.10.
134
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 87-88.
135
European Commission (2017), Reflection paper on the future of finance, p. 26.
136
In calls under the Horizon 2020 Societal Challenge 7 "Secure Societies", the success rate reached 20% by imposing strict
eligibility criteria.
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decreasing the funding rate would lower effectiveness because applicants, including those
with high-quality proposals, would need to find complementary funding, and could be
discouraged from applying or taking risks.
Figure 9 EC contribution requested in proposals (EUR billion)
Source: DG Research and Innovation. NB: the "increase" scenario assumes an increase in proposals'
requested contribution from Horizon 2020 to the new Framework Programme that is similar to the increase
experienced from FP7 to Horizon 2020.
4
D
ELIVERY FOR
I
MPACT
Efficient delivery is essential for reaching all the
Programme’s objectives.
This section
will describe the improvements made in order to better reach the cross-cutting objectives of
the MFF: simplification, flexibility, coherence, synergies and focus on performance. These
improvements are based on recommendations for optimising delivery from the Horizon 2020
Interim Evaluation
137
and the Lamy High Level Group report
138
. The changes are presented
in a structured way along the typical lifecycle of EU R&I support. When changes represent a
significant departure from Horizon 2020 (see Table 6 for lessons learnt from Horizon 2020),
they will be assessed qualitatively and, where possible, quantitatively. More details can be
found in the Annex 9 on the Rules for Participation.
137
138
European Commission (2018), Communication on the Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation, COM(2018)2 final, p.5.
LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p.18.
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Table 5: Mapping of continued, discontinued and new features in Horizon Europe
Continued without
Continued with changes
Discontinued
changes
Design
Priorities
Industrial
Excellent Science:
becomes
Open
Leadership as a
Science pillar and does not include the
separate pillar
FET specific objective
Societal Challenges:
becomes
Global
Challenges and Industrial
Competitiveness pillar and covers the
LEITs specific objective of the
Industrial Leadership pillar and the
EIT, which was a separate specific
objective
New
Open Innovation
pillar
Strengthening the
European Research
Area : covers Science
With and for Society,
and Spreading
Excellence and
Widening
Participation, which
are Horizon 2020
specific objectives
European
Innovation
Council (building on EIC
pilot)
Design - Specific objectives
European Research
Leadership in enabling and industrial
Future and
Council
technologies (becomes cross-cluster,
Emerging
though in particular in Digital and
Technologies as
Marie Skłodowska Curie
Industry cluster)
separate label,
Actions
but activities
Innovation in SMEs, (included in
Research Infrastructures
included in other
European Innovation Council)
Direct Actions (Joint
parts
Societal Challenges 1-7 (becomes
Research Centre)
Fast Track to
Clusters in the Global Challenges
Support to the European
Innovation
pillar)
Institute of Innovation
Science with and for Society (becomes
Access to Risk
and Technology
Finance
intervention areas within ERA
(covered under
foundation
InvestEU
Spreading Excellence and Widening
programme)
Participation (becomes Sharing
Excellence, within ERA foundation)
Implementation - instruments
Research and Innovation
Pre-commercial procurements (PCP)
Actions
and Public procurement of innovative
solutions (PPI) (becomes Coordinated
Innovation Actions
innovation procurement)
ERC frontier research
SME Instrument (integrated into EIC
Training and mobility
Accelerator and transition activities)
actions
Future and Emerging Technologies
Programme co-fund
(FET)Open (becomes EIC Pathfinder)
actions
coordination and support
Future and Emerging Technologies
(FET)Flagships (incorporated within
actions
mission concept)
inducement prizes
Support to Joint Programming
recognition prizes
Initiative, ERA-NET, Contractual
public procurements
Public Private Partnerships,
ERA Chairs
Institutionalised public-private
Twinning
partnerships (Art. 187) and
Teaming
Institutionalised public-public
Policy Support Facility
partnerships (Art. 185): incorporated
within European Partnerships, with
strong criteria
Implementation
concepts
Key Enabling
International cooperation (new criteria)
Technologies
Strategic planning
widened to include
Gender Equality
R&I activities from other funding
programmes
Ethics standards
Governance
Missions
EIC pathfinder
EIC accelerator
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Optimising delivery is also key to achieve higher impact and further simplification
139
.
When properly designed, the Rules for Participation ensure legal certainty for participants
and contribute to overall coherence in terms of implementation. Simplification remains a
continuing endeavour in Horizon Europe, building on the achievements of Horizon 2020,
which reduced the administrative burden and costs for applicants, and made it more attractive
for newcomers and SMEs through new elements like its funding model (single
reimbursement rate and a flat rate for indirect costs), the Participant Portal, and e-signatures.
Beneficiaries and stakeholders have reacted very positively
140
.
Impact depends ultimately on the dissemination and exploitation of R&I data and
results, and it needs to be effectively captured and communicated
141
. An ambitious and
comprehensive dissemination and exploitation strategy will increase the availability of R&I
data and results and accelerate their uptake to boost the overall impact of the Programme. The
strategy will move from a focus on individual projects to analyses of portfolio of R&I results
in key policy areas and will further endorse Open Access policy to incentivise the
exploitation of R&I results. In particular, clusters of mature R&I results will be exploited in
synergy with other EU programmes to foster their uptake at national and regional level,
maximising the European innovation potential. This will be complemented by effective R&I
communication and outreach campaigns that build trust and engage citizens.
Table 6 Lessons learnt from the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020 and from the Stakeholder Consultation
What do we have now?
What did we learn?
The priority-setting process is defined in
multiannual Work Programmes
142
(WP). The WPs
identify the priorities in calls for proposals. They
allow some flexibility to respond to new
developments
143
. The strategic planning process
builds on: Scoping Papers developed by the
Commission; foresight; targeted consultations of
industry, academia and civil society; and input
from experts (Advisory Groups). The WPs are
adopted by Commission Decision, in consultation
with Member State representatives in the 14
configurations of the Programme Committee.
The strategic planning process improved the
intelligence base underpinning priority-setting,
and made the focus of the programme more in
line with stakeholders needs. Nonetheless, the
translation of high-level challenges and objectives
into specific calls and topics is not always clear,
while the transparency in the WP formulation
process and the participation of stakeholders/and
citizens/CSOs in agenda-setting were identified as
areas for improvement.
See also Annex 11 on the simplification checklist.
European Commission (2016), Report on the Horizon 2020 Simplification Survey.
141
LAB-FAB-APP, Investing in the European future we want, Lamy High Level Group Report (2017), p.22.
142
This is complemented by separate Work Programmes for the European Research Council, the Euratom, the Joint
Research Centre, and the Strategic Innovation Agenda for the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT).
143
For instance, an emergency procedure to swiftly allocate funds to a particular purpose can be activated through WP
updates, as happened in Horizon 2020 to tackle the outbreaks of Ebola and Zika.
140
139
Strategic planning
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What do we have now?
The single set of rules (i.e. the Rules for
Participation and dissemination of results) implies
that the same rules are applied in all parts of the
programme, regardless of the implementing body
(Commission,
Executive
Agencies,
Joint
Undertakings). Only a very limited number of
derogations from the Rules for Participation exist,
when duly justified, e.g. for specific operating
needs of public-to-public partnerships (Art. 185
TFEU) and public-private partnerships (Art. 187
TFEU)
144
. The Common Support Centre (CSC)
harmonises implementation of the rules across all
implementing actors.
The rules concerning the contribution of the EU to
eligible costs do not differentiate between
organisation categories or types of activities (in
contrast to the FP7 funding model, which used a
complex matrix of organisation categories and
activity types). Its main features are a single
reimbursement rate for direct costs (up to 100% of
eligible costs for Research and Innovation Actions,
and up to 70% for Innovation Actions
147
) and a
single flat rate for indirect costs (25% is applied to
the direct eligible costs
148
).
Horizon 2020 features a simplified cost
reimbursement system with enhanced use of unit
costs
152
, flat-rates and lump sums, while actual cost
reimbursement (i.e. costs actually incurred by
beneficiaries) is used still for the majority of the
budget. Unit costs are used for specific types of
personnel costs (i.e. for average personnel costs
and SME owners without a salary) and other direct
costs (i.e. internal invoices), while indirect costs
are covered by a single flat-rate. Lump sums, at the
start of Horizon 2020, were used for small-sized
projects (e.g. Phase 1 of the SME Instrument). In
the 2018-20 Work Programme, pilot actions were
launched for testing lump sum project funding for
"mainstream" collaborative R&I projects.
What did we learn?
The single set of rules and its harmonised
implementation via the CSC are widely seen by
beneficiaries as advantageous, contributing to
increased legal certainty, coherence and
simplification of the rules, though some partners
perceived it as a loss of flexibility compared to
FP7
145
. Moreover, Member States have repeatedly
expressed their wish to include Art. 185 TFEU
initiatives under the the Participant Guarantee
Fund
146
, which does not currently cover them.
The single set of rules
The funding model
The funding model has not led to a significant
change in funding intensity
149
. The funding model
is a simplification measure that allows for
flexibility and that has mobilised and largely
satisfied stakeholders
150
. The overall funding rate
is on average 70% of total project eligible costs
(both direct and indirect). In a simplification
survey
151
, 78% of respondents appreciated the
single reimbursement rate.
While beneficiaries express preference for
actually incurred costs, a number of financial
complexities are inherent to this model (e.g.
calculation of the monthly hourly rate, additional
remuneration). Moreover, reimbursement of
actual costs focuses attention on justification of
costs, and not on the expected impact as in the
case of lump-sum funding. Further simplification
of the actual cost reimbursement system is
necessary, in particular for personnel costs. The
European Court of Auditors
153
also proposed that
the post 2020 Framework Programme assesses
the need for further use of simplified cost options
such as lump sum project funding and prizes.
144
At the request of the European Parliament during inter-institutional negotiations, the scope of derogations were set out in
the RfP for Art. 187 TFEU initiatives while for Art. 185 TFEU initiatives, these are laid down in the respective basic acts.
145
Interim Evaluation of the SESAR Joint Undertaking (2014-2016) operating under Horizon 2020, p. 53.
146
Since 2007, two Participant Guarantee Funds were created (EU and Euratom) to protect from non-recovery of sums due
to the Union and to allow ongoing projects to continue in case of default of one of the beneficiaries.
147
Non-profit organisations are reimbursed 100% also in Innovation Actions.
148
Except subcontracting financial support to third parties, and in-kind contributions not used on the beneficiary's premises.
149
The following types of actual costs can be declared as eligible: personnel costs, sub-contracting, purchase of goods,
services or works (incl. travel costs), financial support to third parties and costs incurred by third parties.
150
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017)
151
European Commission (2016), Report on Horizon 2020 simplification survey.
152
The Marie Skłodowska Curie Actions are fully funded by a set of unit costs.
153
The European Court of Auditors (2018) “A
contribution to simplification of EU research programme beyond Horizon
2020”
Simplified forms of grants
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What do we have now?
More than 90% of the Horizon 2020 support is
grant based, while the rest is provided with
financial instruments (i.e. debt or equity) through
the European Investment Bank (InnovFin)
154
. Pre-
commercial public procurement (PCP), public
procurement for innovation (PPI) and inducement
prizes represent only a limited share of the Horizon
2020 budget.
What did we learn?
Only a small number of firms receiving Horizon
2020 grants benefitted from Horizon 2020
financial instruments. Extremely few companies
taking part in Horizon 2020 obtained investments
for scaling up from InnovFin. This points to a
potential lack of integration between the grant and
non-grant based instruments at different stages of
the innovation cycle but also to limitations of
intermediated risk-sharing mechanism where the
initial risk is to be fully borne by the Union due to
market risk-aversion
155
.
The Horizon 2020 proposal evaluation and
selection process is generally highly regarded.
Still, some stakeholders asked for more
transparency, found the quality of evaluation
feedback received uneven, and considered that the
evaluation experts sometimes appeared to lack the
appropriate expertise
157
. To increase efficiency in
relation to over-subscription, two-stage calls for
proposals were identified as good practice.
The Common Support Centre strengthened the
corporate approach in implementing the
programme and in auditing projects. However,
some Joint Undertakings expressed the need of
additional direct audit coverage and considered
the common representative sample as not
sufficient enough for their needs, leading to a
potential increase of audit burden towards the
Horizon 2020 beneficiaries.
Grants and financial
instruments
Proposal evaluation and
selection
Ex-ante and ex-post audits
Major investment decisions are taken at the stage
of evaluation and selection of proposals. The
system, based on independent expert judgement
ensures that the selected projects are the best. The
approach ensures maximum coherence across the
different implementing bodies, based on three
award criteria against which proposals are
evaluated: Excellence; Impact; and Quality and
efficiency of the implementation
156
.
The general rules related to the management and
implementation of projects are detailed in the
Model Grant Agreement. Beneficiaries are bound
by the grant agreement they sign with the
Commission. The audit and control system seeks
an appropriate balance between trust and control,
taking into account administrative burden for
participants. The Horizon 2020 audit strategy is
based on the financial audit of a representative
sample of expenditure, and is complemented by a
selection based on risk assessment
Throughout Horizon 2020, specific calls for
proposals, coordination and support actions and
public procurement provide targeted assistance to
projects in order to optimise the dissemination and
exploitation of their research results. To further
assist project consortia, the Commission provides
tailor-made support services, e.g. the Common
Exploitation Booster, the Common Dissemination
Booster and the Innovation Radar.
Beneficiaries develop activities for better
dissemination and exploitation but results are still
not fully accessible to all relevant stakeholders
and this represents a barrier to knowledge
circulation and to innovation uptake. The uneven
exploitation capacity among beneficiaries hinders
market uptake. Moreover, feedback from R&I
projects
into
policy-making
must
be
158
strengthened .
154
155
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 140.
Ibid. p. 84.
156
For the ERC, only the Excellence criterion applies. Under Innovation Actions in Horizon 2020, Impact has a higher
weight.
157
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 236.
158
Ibid., p.200
Dissemination and
exploitation
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What do we have now?
To ensure a more modern, effective and dynamic
implementation, while reducing staffing by 5%
over 5 years
159
, 75% of Horizon 2020 budget is
delegated to other EU bodies: Executive Agencies
(55%), Public Private Partnerships (Art. 187 TFEU
initiatives, 10%), the European Investment Bank
(4%), the European Institute of Technology (EIT,
4%) and Public-Public Partnerships (Art. 185
TFEU initiatives, 2%). The remaining 25% is
managed "in house" by the Commission.
What did we learn?
The delegation to implementing bodies allows
Commission services to focus on policy-making
and strategic planning, while maximizing the
effective and efficient use of EU funding.
Executive Agency evaluations confirmed their
effectiveness and high value for money, with
administrative costs well below 5%
160
.
4.1
Delegation
The strategic planning process
Towards a strategic, impact-oriented and collegial planning process.
The strategic
planning process will provide multi-annual strategic orientations for the Framework
Programme. It will be co-created in synergy with other EU programmes and policies, with the
intention of giving coherence to the entire portfolio of actions supported by the EU under the
MFF. The process will be streamlined into a single Commission document
161
, applying to all
Programme components
162
, including missions
163
, European Partnerships, and the EIT
Strategic Innovation Agenda
164
. This draft Strategic R&I Plan will be open for public
consultation, providing more involvement of EU Institutions and citizens than previously.
The Work Programmes will then be developed on the basis of the finalised Strategic Plan.
In addition, a simpler governance structure with ad-hoc and flexible advisory mechanisms
and Programme Committee configurations will improve the rationalisation and simplification
of the planning process, hence delivering results more efficiently and transparently.
What are the expected implications?
Increased co-creation with other EU Institutions and citizens.
While
in Horizon 2020 the priority setting was defined mostly with targeted
consultations, the new Strategic R&I Plan will be more open for general
public consultation, involving citizens, customers and end-users in
agenda-setting (co-design) for the Programme. In particular, the public
will have a say in the definition of R&I missions.
Higher coherence within the Programme and enhanced synergies
with other EU Programmes.
By bringing together all Commission
services and implementing bodies, the Strategic R&I Plan will ensure a
Commission’s proposals for the 2014-2020
Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF).
PPMI (2016), Evaluation of the operation of ERCEA (2012-2015), final report; and PPMI (2016), Evaluation of the
operation of REA (2012-2015), final report.
161
This could also become a formal Commission document such as a Communication or Staff Working Document.
162
While the focus would be on the programmable Global Challenges and Industrial Competitiveness pillar, the relationship
between this and the bottom-up parts such as the EIC, including the results from these, would feed into the planning process.
163
This will reflect the expected impact of missions of up to 15 years, as appropriate.
164
In the case of the ERC, the Scientific Council will continue to establish the overall strategy, the Work Programme and the
proposal evaluation and selection. The JRC will also continue to establish its own Work Programme and strategy and receive
opinions from Member States through its Board of Governors. The EIC will also develop its own Work Programme. As
regards the EIT, the specific priority fields, financial needs, time schedule, selection process and implementation of KICs
will be defined in the EIT Strategic Innovation Agenda (SIA) as a separate legal base arising from the EIT founding
regulation. Proposals for future EIT KICs indicated in the EIT Strategic Innovation Agenda (SIA) should take into account
the outcomes of the strategic planning process.
159
160
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stronger and more inclusive agenda-setting process, whereby the linkages
between EU Programmes would be strengthened, promoting faster
dissemination and uptake of R&I results.
Better alignment of national and EU policies.
Involvement of Member
States at early stage in the discussion on the strategic planning and in
consequences in the work programme preparation will help to build
better alignment between national and EU R&I activities.
4.2
The single set of rules
The principle of a single set of rules will continue with further improvements.
In line
with the corporate approach towards a
single-rule book
and the preparation of the MFF, the
new EU Financial Regulation
165
will be used as a common reference under which the rules
applicable to all EU funding programmes will be aligned. Derogations to the Financial
Regulation are kept to the minimum, but maintained in order to strike the right balance
between full harmonisation and specific needs of individual initiatives. The new Rules for
Participation allow other funding bodies, in particular bodies implementing Article 185 or
187 TFEU initiatives, to establish limited derogations in their basic acts in cases duly
justified by their specific needs. Furthermore, the Participant Guarantee Fund (renamed
Mutual Insurance Mechanism) will be extended to article 185 TFEU institutionalised
European Partnerships.
What alternatives were considered?
Keeping Horizon 2020 status quo was considered for
predictability, but this would have been a missed opportunity to streamline the approach
taken on derogations (e.g. by maintaining the scope of the derogations for Art. 187 TFEU
initiatives separate from other institutionalised European Partnership Initiatives) and for
further simplification. Returning to FP7 Rules would provide more flexibility (e.g. by
allowing different funding bodies to adopt rules as they see fit), but this would result in
diverging rules, undermining simplification, legal certainty and hampering participation.
What are the expected implications?
More simplification and reduced costs.
The single set of rules
contributes to the rationalisation of the new Framework Programme. It
further harmonises and streamlines implementation methods, hence
simplifying the burden e.g. for preparing and submitting proposals. It
increases the accessibility and attractiveness of the programme, in
particular for applicants with limited resources, such as SMEs.
Improved synergies with other EU programmes.
As the number of
derogations to the Financial Regulation is reduced, EU programmes are
more likely to share common rules. This increases the possibility for
more targeted multi-faceted EU support, for instance through missions.
Increased flexibility while maintaining legal certainty.
The
Framework Programme will further improve the balance between
flexibility and legal certainty e.g. by allowing funding bodies to establish
rules that depart from those laid down in the Financial Regulation or in
165
European Commission (2017), Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of the Union and its rules of
application, available at:
http://ec.europa.eu/budget/library/biblio/documents/regulations/financial_regulation_2017_en.pdf
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the Rules for Participation, in order to accommodate their specific
operating needs of individual initiatives in duly justified cases.
4.3
The funding model
Rules on funding rates will be maintained.
Given the largely positive assessment of the
Horizon 2020 funding model, Horizon Europe will maintain the single reimbursement rate
for direct costs (up to 100% of the total eligible costs for Research and Innovation Actions
and up to 70% for Innovation Actions) and the single flat rate for indirect costs (25% is
applied to the total direct eligible costs)
166
. Similarly, the funding rate will be a maximum -
this ceiling can be reduced for implementing specific actions, where duly justified (e.g. for
Euratom, or specific close-to-market calls).
What alternatives were considered?
Alternatives to the continuation were considered,
mainly to reduce oversubscription
167
, but maintaining attractiveness (i.e. broad involvement
from all sectors and disciplines) is more important. A lower funding rate for all projects (e.g.
75%) would allow a larger number of beneficiaries to benefit from EU support. However,
such an approach would decrease the overall attractiveness of the programme, especially for
non-profit entities and SMEs, hence affecting the principle of excellence. Different levels of
funding for industry compared to other types of beneficiaries were also considered, but this
approach would have a negative impact on industry participation, on simplification and on
time-to-grant. Alternative ways to address oversubscription are also identified in section 3.4
on critical mass.
What are the expected implications?
Maintained programme attractiveness.
Continuity in the funding
model enhances predictability, legal certainty, attractiveness and ease of
access to the Programme. Administrative burden would not increase. On
the contrary, a significant departure from the Horizon 2020 model would
force beneficiaries to adapt once again to a new system.
Further simplification and more flexibility.
The benefits of the current
funding model have already largely materialised
168
: simple financial
management of projects; reduced complexity of the financial rules;
reduced financial error rate; acceleration of the granting processes.
Reduced oversubscription.
Extending the use of flexibility to establish
lower funding rates in the Work Programme can contribute to reducing
oversubscription for targeted calls or topics. The level of co-investment
will increase or at least remain the same as in Horizon 2020.
166
Except for subcontracting, financial support to third parties and unit costs for internally invoiced goods and service are
calculated in accordance with the usual cost accounting practices of the beneficiaries. Such unit costs shall be determined on
the basis of actual eligible direct and indirect costs.
167
As shown in the Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, too much oversubscription could cause disillusionment and
dissatisfaction, leaving good proposals unfunded and to be resubmitted.
168
European Commission (2017), Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020, SWD(2017) 220, book, p. 79.
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4.4
Forms of funding, including simplified cost options
The cost reimbursement scheme will be further simplified.
The two current unit costs
(average personnel costs and internally invoiced goods and services) calculated in accordance
with the beneficiary's practices
169
will be maintained. In addition, in view of simplification,
the unit cost for internally invoiced goods and services will allow for a higher acceptance of
the usual cost accounting practices. Beneficiaries will be able, under certain conditions
170
, to
calculate such unit cost based on ‘actual direct and indirect costs', provided those costs are
recorded in their accounts. The need to further align programme provisions with
beneficiaries’ accounting practices was
also a recommendation from the European Court of
Auditors
171
. In order to lower administrative burden, an increased use will be made of lump-
sum project funding against fulfilment of activities
building on the experience from the
lump-sum pilot in Horizon 2020
as well as other simplified forms of funding provided by
the new Financial Regulation, including other incentives based on contributions not linked to
costs, where appropriate.
As regards actual costs, the calculation of personnel costs will be further simplified and
aligned to the Financial Regulation.
The distinction between basic and additional
remuneration will be removed and the Horizon 2020 capping on the additional remuneration
abolished. For beneficiaries with project-based remuneration
172
, costs of personnel will be
eligible up to the remuneration that the person would be paid for the time worked in projects
funded by national schemes.
The system of in-kind contributions provided by third parties to beneficiaries will be
further aligned to the Financial Regulation:
in-kind contributions against payment will be
treated and reimbursed under other budget categories according to the eligibility criteria for
actual costs. In addition, the calculation of in-kind contribution free-of-charge will be further
simplified: no distinction will be made if these resources are used on the premises of
beneficiaries or third parties and beneficiaries will no longer need to declare them, under
specific conditions, as receipts.
What alternatives were considered?
Alternative simplified costs options were assessed
regarding rules for personnel costs, such as optional unit cost (hourly rate) or contributions
not linked to costs but were not found feasible. Fully relying on the Financial Regulation was
also considered, but such an approach would imply a significant departure from current
practices (lack of continuity) and would be negatively perceived by beneficiaries.
What are the expected implications?
Lower administrative burden.
The broader acceptance of beneficiaries’
usual cost accounting practices, the abolition of the additional
remuneration scheme, and the extended use of lump sum and output-
based funding significantly contributes to simplification, as they improve
and simplify reimbursement of actual costs, while providing flexibility.
In particular, the use of lump sums reduces substantially the reporting
requirements from beneficiaries during the lifetime of the project,
169
170
The acceptance of other cost items will be further defined in the model grant agreement, as in the current system.
These conditions (e.g. beneficiaries must be able to identify their actual eligible indirect costs) will be further developed
in the model grant agreement.
171
The European Court of Auditors (2018) “A contribution to simplification of EU research programme
beyond Horizon
2020”
172
Project-based remuneration means remuneration that is linked to the participation of a person in projects, is part of the
beneficiary’s usual remuneration practices and is paid in a consistent manner.
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shifting the focus of project monitoring from financial checks to
performance and content.
Lower error rate.
The further acceptance of the
beneficiaries’ usual cost
accounting practices will reduce the error rate on issues that have
generated recurrent and repetitive errors under FP7 and Horizon 2020.
For example, the abolition of the additional remuneration scheme will
allow the beneficiaries to report their personnel cost with respect to their
usual accounting practices, whilst the current experience on auditing
lump sums has confirmed the low error rate on such transactions.
More coherence with the Financial Regulation.
An alignment of the
rules with other EU funding programmes will also allow the beneficiaries
to apply even more widely their usual accounting practices, as this
reduces the need to amend reporting models to the various (and
sometimes diverging) needs of each EU programme. This harmonisation
and further acceptance of the beneficiaries’ usual accounting practices
will reduce the administrative burden of the beneficiaries.
4.5
Grants, financial instruments and blended finance
Blended finance will help companies to scale up.
The supply of flexible and agile funding
schemes is essential for innovators. Grants will continue for projects that are far from the
market, for example for basic research
173
. Yet, projects that are closer to market may still
present a too high-risk profile, preventing them access to risk finance. Through the European
Innovation Council (EIC), the new Framework Programme will offer large-scale blended
funding (grants or reimbursable advance with equity or guarantees) to companies undertaking
such projects, for late stage innovation activities, but also for market deployment activities
such as pilot manufacturing, large trials or ensuring regulatory compliance
174
, tailored to their
risk level and technological maturity. The overall purpose of blended finance shall be to
support high-risk innovations beyond the usual limits of grant-based research, where the risks
whether technological, market or regulatory
cannot be borne by the market alone. By
combining grant-type funding with equity or guarantees under the EIC, the Programme will
hence bridge the financing gap between late stages of R&I and market uptake and
deployment, and will encourage investors and lenders to support innovative high-risk
projects, with a greater propensity to co-invest or to offer lower interest-rates and less
onerous requirements for collateral.
What alternatives were considered?
While innovation at large will be reinforced by the
InvestEU single fund - providing indirect financial instruments carried out through the
European Investment Bank Group or other implementing partners, with a dedicated window
for R&I investments and specific products for innovative companies - financial
intermediaries (banks and investors) may remain averse to the residual risk they bear when
investing in high-risk innovative projects. To date, available private and corporate financing
remains small
175
for late stage of innovation activities and market take-up for high-risk
breakthrough innovations, as financial institutions must limit their risks to maintain their
173
174
European Commission (2017), Reflection paper on the future of EU finances, p.26.
High-Level Group of Innovators (2018), Europe is back: accelerating breakthrough innovation.
175
Europe's innovators struggle to access risk finance above the €10 million range. PwC/CB Insights, Money Tree
Report Q4
2017, p. 93. Funding rounds of companies above $100 million are five times higher in the US and Asia than Europe (p. 92).
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market rating. There is hence a necessity for direct Union intervention. Providing only for
grant allows to start de-risk operations and attract private or corporate finance, but partially,
as some activities too close to market, including deployment and scale-up, may not be
covered by grants. Furthermore, the classical alternative of awarding blended finance to a
project by allocating grant-type funding (through the Framework Programme) and financial
instruments (through InvestEU) might not be fully adapted to the needs of risky breakthrough
innovators, who need to proceed to the market quickly.
Box : Examples of blended finance
National innovation agencies such as Vinnova, BPI France, Innovate UK and CDTI operate blended
finance in the form of grants in combination with soft loans and venture investments:
A loan combined with a grant: the proportion of grant to loan depends on an assessment of the
riskiness of the innovation whose development the funding will support: the higher the risk, the
greater the grant component. This approach can be combined with the whole or partial write-off of
the loan if the development of the innovation fails for technical or commercial reasons; or the
reimbursement of part of the grant if the innovation succeeds.
A conditional grant combined with a loan or equity: the payment of all or part of the grant is
conditional on the grantee obtaining at least a matching amount as a loan or an equity investment
(such as venture capital) from a lender or investor.
What are the expected implications?
Raise availability of large-scale risk finance in Europe
by providing
large tailor-made investments that combine EU support through grants
and blended finance, in addition to investment through support to equity
or guarantees.
Increase leverage through active measures put in place for EU R&I
funding to stimulate private finance.
For instance, proposals may also
be submitted by investors including public innovation agencies looking
for co-investment.
A set of actions to improve ‘investment-readiness’ and
‘bankability’ will continue from the Horizon 2020 EIC Pilot in term of
coaching (InvestHorizon), and the EIC events aimed at matching
investor/investee and awareness raising.
Increase risk taking for breakthrough innovation
by de-risking
technical or financial failure.
4.6
Proposal evaluation and selection
The key elements of the proposal evaluation and selection system will be maintained,
including the use of independent experts, and the use of three award criteria (based on
excellence, impact and quality and efficiency of the implementation) across the board, with
differentiation for the proposals for ERC frontier research actions, which will continue to
apply only the excellence criterion and for the EIC’s Accelerator whose evaluation will
include valuation of risk. Small improvements in order to address lessons learnt from the
Horizon 2020 Interim Evaluation (e.g. to improve quality of feedback to applicants,
differentiated expert panels, and multi-stage and multi-step procedures, gender balance in
evaluation panels and the integration of the gender dimension in R&I content) can be ensured
throughout the implementation of the Work Programmes. To increase the societal relevance
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and applicability of proposals, greater use of civil society expertise should be encouraged in
appropriate evaluation panels
176
. In particular for missions and the EIC, the Commission may
select proposals based not only on the merit of individual proposals, but also in relation to the
overall coherence of the portfolio of projects and other Union policy objectives. While the
main principles would be spelled out in advance in the Rules, the Work Programmes will
provide further details on the application of the award criteria depending on the objectives of
the calls and instruments (e.g. the aspects to be taken into account under the evaluation
procedures).
Box 11 Access conditions to the Framework Programme
For collaborative projects, the consortium must include at least three independent legal entities established in a
different Member State or associated country, and with at least one of them established in a Member State,
unless otherwise provided for in the work programme. For other specific activities (i.e. EIC, ERC, co-fund, or
MSCA training and mobility actions), different minimum conditions apply. Additional eligibility criteria may be
laid down in the work programme. In case of actions carried out outside the Union using and/or generating
classified information, a security agreement have to be concluded between the Union and the third country in
which the activity is conducted.
What alternatives were considered?
A possible alternative was the exclusion from the
Rules for Participation of these provisions, relying instead on the full flexibility offered by
the Financial Regulation (leaving the criteria and other provisions for the Work
Programmes). Although this would maximise flexibility, it risks a divergence of rules in
practice, jeopardise smooth business processes, and lead to unpredictability for applicants.
Specifying in full detail the criteria for evaluation and selection of proposals in the Rules
would ensure a high degree of coherence across the programme and a measure of stability for
applicants but would represent a significant loss of flexibility.
What are the expected implications?
Achieve a balance between flexibility and coherence.
The current
system has been shown to work well, and there is no evidence for the
need for a fundamental change. However, missions and the EIC require a
proactive portfolio management to reach their objectives, calling for
flexibility to ensure overall consistence. Providing the main ground rules
in the legislation, while permitting adaptability via the Work Programme,
has proven in the current and previous programmes to ensure coherence
across the board, predictability for applicants, and smooth business
processes, while maintaining a strong degree of flexibility and the
possibility for experimentation.
Maintain a strong focus on excellence and performance.
Streamlined
but adaptable rules will help applicants design well-focussed proposals,
and will lead to processes in which the best proposals are identified and
selected as quickly as possible.
4.7
Ex-ante and ex-post audits
A wider cross-reliance on audits and assessments
including with other EU
programmes
is envisaged.
The increased alignment to the Financial Regulation provide an
176
Martinuzzi, A. et al. (2016), Network Analysis of Civil Society Organisations’ participation in the EU Framework
Programmes, Vienna and Leicester.
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opportunity for audit synergies via Systems and Processes Audit. Indeed Systems and
Processes Audit avoid duplication of audits, since there will be a common audit approach on
common financial rules and hence a more harmonised and simple audit approach. By cross
relying on audits of beneficiaries among the various EU programmes, the need for additional
auditing will gradually be reduced. In addition, cross-reliance has been explicitly considered
in other elements of assurance (e.g. Systems and Processes audits and audit on transactions)
resulting into a reduced need for financial audits on beneficiaries with positive results in their
Systems audits. Moreover, cross-reliance could be part of the conditions under which the
obligation for the beneficiary to submit a certificate on the financial statement can be waived.
Further efforts in the area of ex-ante controls through implementing additional automated
checks and tools for simpler entry of the data, will have a positive impact where beneficiaries
need to submit information to Commission. Integration of ex-post audit support into the
Participant Portal will enable better view on the progress of the audits to the beneficiaries,
allow completely electronic exchange of documents and notifications, all that can anticipate
additional reduction of burden and costs to beneficiaries.
What alternatives were considered?
The concept of cross-reliance on other audits or
assessments with other EU programmes was considered, however its effectiveness depend on
the homogeneity of the rules between programmes. Identifying possible common benchmarks
/ principles or best practises for a broader acceptance of usual cost accounting practices of
beneficiaries from different sectors and different countries can be further explored as a
second alternative in view of moving a step forward from a ‘rule-based’ approach towards a
‘principle-based’ one. However, it should be noted that such a challenging alternative would
be possible only once having taken into account the eligibility criteria of the different
programmes, in the particular context of the absence of any international standard in that
matter.
What are the expected implications?
Reduce administrative burden.
Compared to Horizon 2020, the
Systems and Processes Audit (SPA) will lead to a reduction of the audit
burden of the beneficiary that has been positively assessed. A beneficiary
which is positively assessed via a Systems and Processes Audit, receives
a long term assurance that their usual accounting practices are compatible
with the Horizon Europe’s eligibility requirements, whilst the need for
further auditing ceases to exist. The introduction of Systems and
Processes Audit is a holistic audit approach, resulting into an overall
assurance which when achieved, results into a significant reduction of the
audit burden.
Increase simplification for beneficiaries of EU funds.
The Systems
and Processes Audit (SPA) allows for more synergies with the Audits
carried out under the shared management mode (e.g. especially those
performed under the European Regional Development Fund). With this
cross-reliance between audits, the Commission increases efficiency and
effectiveness, avoids duplication of audit efforts and initiates a process
where auditors within the Commission can exchange data and reviews.
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4.8
Policy and rules regarding Dissemination and Exploitation
Horizon Europe will provide dedicated support to dissemination
(including through open
access to scientific publications), exploitation and knowledge diffusion actions. Strong
emphasis will be placed on portfolios of research results for targeted diffusion to end-users,
citizens, public administrations, academia, civil society organisations, industry and policy-
makers, including through the use of data intelligence tools for harvesting knowledge and
providing innovative data uses and visualisation.
More emphasis is put on to promoting the exploitation of R&I results, in particular in
the EU.
Horizon 2020 provides for a "best effort" to exploit results and, if indicated in the
Work Programme, for additional exploitation obligations. In Horizon Europe, the "best
effort" approach to exploit must have a particular focus on the EU. As in Horizon 2020, the
Work Programme can specify additional obligations if justified. The beneficiaries must
include in their proposals a dissemination and exploitation plan that must be updated during
and after the end of the project, to ensure a continued focus on the exploitation of results.
What alternatives were considered?
Alternatives for better exploitation of R&I results that
were considered range from not having specific rules at all, to having more stringent rules
across the board. Having a more stringent general rule was considered unjustified, as there
may be valid reasons why exploitation occurs elsewhere (the EU often still benefits from
such exploitation). Moreover, such a broad approach would deter industrial and international
participants. Having no rules at all, and leaving the full choice of exploitation location to
market forces was considered insufficent to safeguard the appropriate exploitation of results
for the benefit of the Union.
What are the expected implications?
More economic and societal impact.
By fostering better exploitation of
R&I results, a more EU-focussed exploitation increases the accessibility
of high quality content, while ensuring that the benefits serve the EU.
They aim at better ensuring the right balance between the pursuit of EU
strategic interests in terms of competitiveness and job creation on one
hand, and attractiveness for industry and openness to international
participation on the other. This will assist market uptake, boost impact,
and increase the innovation potential of results supported by EU funding.
Some additional reporting requirements.
The possibility of additional
reporting specifically on exploitation or impact demonstration and related
administrative burden will be weighed against the need to have accurate
information regarding the exploitation of results beyond the lifetime of
the projects.
Higher market uptake, impact and innovation potential.
Union
support will ensure a constant stream of knowledge and innovations
towards the scientific community, industry, policy-makers, and the
public. Dedicated support services developed by the Commission,
combined with the strengthened exploitation plans of the beneficiaries,
will satisfy both the legitimate interest of beneficiaries and the interest of
the public.
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4.9
Delegation to Executive Agencies
The Commission will increase the share of the budget delegated to Executive Agencies,
subject to positive outcome of the mandatory Cost Benefit Analysis. Given the new elements
in the scope of the new Framework Programme (e.g. missions and the EIC) and the increased
budget to be delegated, the reshaping of the portfolios of the existing Executive Agencies will
be needed along with exploring the possibility of establishing additional ones. Activities with
substantial policy content will be excluded from delegation to Executive Agencies while, in
parallel, the effective feedback of R&I data and results from Executive Agencies to the
Commission will be reinforced, in line with the dissemination and exploitation strategy, to
strengthen the inputs for policy-making.
What alternatives were considered?
For the implementation of the new Framework
Programme, the following alternative options were considered: an 'in-house' scenario
(reintegration of part of the programme management in the Commission); maintaining the
current status as in Horizon 2020; and full delegation of all programme's activities. The in-
house scenario would imply returning to previous management modes that entailed
comparably higher administrative costs
177
. Specific scenarios for the implementation of the
EIC activities through a dedicated Executive Agency are described in the Annex 8 on the
EIC.
What are the expected implications?
Reduce administrative costs.
Independent evaluations
178
show that
delegation to Executive Agencies brings substantial savings in
administrative expenditure. The administrative costs of the programme
implementation by Executive Agencies in Horizon 2020 are around 2-3%
of the operational budget, which is well below the target of 5%.
Improve synergies with other programmes.
Executive agencies
manage parts of different programmes that complement each other
179
:
rationalising their portfolio can help aligning and integrating objectives
of different programmes, for instance better linking R&I results to
market deployment.
Enhance focus on performance.
Executive Agencies have reached and
maintained very high levels of satisfaction among their beneficiaries
180
,
while at the same time successfully managing a larger number of projects
than in FP7. This consistent high performance allows the Commission to
focus on strategic priorities.
177
The administrative expenditure in FP7 represented 5.16% of the total budget of the programme (indirect actions). The
Interim Evaluation of Horizon 2020 shows that, over the first three years, its administrative expenditure is below the 5%
target and is particularly low for the executive agencies.
178
PPMI (2016), Evaluation of the operation of ERCEA (2012-2015), final report; and PPMI (2016), Evaluation of the
operation of REA (2012-2015), final report.
179
For example, INEA implements the Connecting Europe Facility Programme (large energy, transport, digital
infrastructures projects) as well as Horizon 2020 Societal Challenges.
180
Up to 82% for REA and up to 93% for ERCEA of the beneficiaries are satisfied with the performance of the agencies.
See PPMI (2016), Evaluation of the operation of ERCEA (2012-2015), final report; and PPMI (2016), Evaluation of the
operation of REA (2012-2015), final report.
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4.10 Overall impact on the objectives of the MFF
The delivery tools of the Framework Programme will contribute to the cross-cutting
objectives of the Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), notably simplification, flexibility,
coherence, synergies and focus on performance. Overall, the Framework Programme is
expected to deliver large benefits that outweigh costs, in particular for the Programme's focus
on performance, its flexibility, as well as its internal coherence and its synergy with other
programmes (see Table 8).
Other MFF Programmes are closely linked to the new EU R&I Programme:
synergies
and complementarities between them should be enhanced (see Table 7 and Annex 7). Current
Horizon 2020 beneficiaries also benefited from other EU programmes, e.g. the European
Structural and Investment funds, EU Health Programme, and COSME
181
.
Table 7 Synergies and complementarities with other MFF proposals
MFF Programmes
Links to new Framework Programme
Common
Agricultural Policy
(CAP)
A key priority for the ‘second pillar’ of the post-2020
CAP
182
is an increased focus
on fostering innovation, in particular through wider diffusion of innovation, better
access to new technologies and investment support. This will involve strengthening
the links between agricultural and rural development policies and R&I in support to
the development of knowledge and innovation systems. The development of an
ambitious, integrated Strategic Research and Innovation Plan will define priorities of
the Framework Programme in the area of food, nutrition security and sustainable
management of natural resources with a view to develop synergies between the
Framework Programme and the CAP. The latter will promote the use,
implementation and deployment of innovative solutions, including those stemming
from R&I projects funded by Horizon Europe.
The post-2020 European Maritime and Fisheries Fund will provide important support
to the implementation of the Common Fisheries Policy and the Maritime Policy. This
programme will focus on creating the conditions for boosting competitiveness in the
blue economy, especially through close-to-market innovation, access to marine
knowledge and by ensuring a safe and secure maritime space. Strong and sustainable
blue growth requires enhanced synergies with wider EU intervention. The
Framework Programme is of particular relevance in this respect as it strengthens the
knowledge base from which new, innovative products, processes and services can
emerge in the maritime economy. The EMFF will support the rolling out of novel
technologies and innovative products, processes and services, in particular those
resulting from Horizon Europe in the fields of marine and maritime policy.
The post-2020 CEF will prioritise the large-scale roll-out and deployment of
innovative new technologies and solutions which result from projects in transport,
energy and telecommunications funded by the Framework Programmes. Horizon
Europe will support all stages in the R&I chain, including non-technological and
social innovation, and closer-to-market activities with innovative financial
instruments. Through the Strategic Research and Innovation Plan, Horizon Europe
will support R&I on transport, energy and mobility, in particular through the Climate,
Energy and Mobility cluster, as well as digital technologies. The exchange of
information and data between Horizon Europe and CEF projects will be facilitated,
for example by highlighting technologies from the Framework Programme with a
European Maritime
and Fisheries Fund
Connecting Europe
Facility (CEF)
181
A total of 86% respondents to the cluster-based public consultation on EU funds in the area of investment, research &
innovation, SMEs and single market reported having experience with the Horizon 2020 program. From this sample, the
respondents reported having experience also with European Structural and Investment funds (22%), EU Health Programme
(9%), COSME (8.%).
182
The ‘second pillar’ of the CAP focuses on rural development and complements the system of direct payments to farmers
and measures to manage agricultural markets (the so-called
‘first pillar’)
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high market readiness that could be further deployed through CEF.
Digital Europe
Programme (DEP)
DEP focuses on large-scale digital capacity and infrastructure building in High
Performance Computing, Artificial Intelligence, Cybersecurity and advanced digital
skills aiming at wide uptake and deployment across Europe of critical existing or
tested innovative digital solutions. While several thematic areas addressed by both
programmes converge, DEP will mainly focus on roll-out and deployment activities
outside research and innovation, whereas the Framework Programme will focus on
investing in the entire spectrum from research to market. R&I needs related to digital
aspects are identified and established in Horizon Europe strategic R&I plan, while
DEP capacities and infrastructures are made available to the research and innovation
community, including for activities supported through Horizon Europe such as
testing, experimentation and demonstration across all sectors and disciplines.
The post-2020 Erasmus will continue to support mobility, cooperation and policy
initiatives in the field of higher education. This includes support for integration of
education, research and innovation, development of competences and inter-
disciplinary, transferable, digital and entrepreneurial skills in forward-looking fields
or disciplines and support to higher education institutions, research centres,
businesses and civil society to contribute to innovation. The Framework Programme
will continue to invest in the people behind research and innovation, strengthening
their skills, training and career development and fostering the transfer of knowledge
and cooperation between research-performing organisations and providing incentives
for universities embracing open science policy. Horizon Europe will complement the
Erasmus programme's support for the European Universities initiative, in particular
its research dimension, as part of developing new, joint and integrated long-term and
sustainable strategies on education, research and innovation based on trans-
disciplinary and cross-sectoral approaches to make the knowledge triangle a reality.
Defence
Complementarity and synergies with the European Defence Fund will be ensured, so
that results under civil R&I also benefit defence R&I and vice-versa.
The post-2020 European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) will provide an
important part of EU funds for R&I. The post-2020 ERDF may feature increased
funds dedicated to the take-up of results and the rolling out of novel technologies and
innovative solutions from past Framework Programme and Horizon Europe. It will
continue to invest in actions that build R&I capacities of actors aimed at participating
in the Framework Programme or other internationally competitive R&I programmes.
Holders of Seal of Excellence
183
labels from the Framework Programme may be
funded by Member States and regions, where relevant to the local context and smart
specialisation strategies, including with resources from any Union shared-
management programme. The same applies for national funding of joint programmes
co-funded under the Framework Programme. In addition, budget from share
management could be voluntary transferred for implementation to central managed
programmes. Part of the Framework Programme will continue to support low-
performing countries in R&I, in the context of strengthening the European Research
Area. Smart specialisation strategies will continue to promote innovation based on
the strengths of each region and be a basis for ESI Funds investments in R&I and the
innovation eco-systems.
The post-2020 European Social Fund will continue to invest in human capital and
skills development, as well as in social innovation. The ESF+ can mainstream and
scale up new and innovative curricula for education and training programmes
developed in R&I projects under the Framework Programme. Holders of the Seal of
Excellence may be funded by the ESF+ to support activities promoting human capital
development in research and innovation with the aim of strengthening the European
Research Area. The Health strand of the ESF+ will mainstream innovative
Erasmus
European
Fund
European Regional
Development Fund
(ERDF)
European Social
Fund+ (ESF)
183
The Seal of Excellence scheme, launched in 2015, is a quality label recognising proposals submitted to Horizon 2020 calls
which were evaluated as high-quality but were not funded due to lack of available budget. The holder of a Seal of Excellence
can approach other sources of funding (regional, national, private, public) with this quality label.
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technologies and new business models and solutions, in particular those resulting
from the Framework Programmes.
Neighbourhood,
Development and
International
Cooperation
Instrument
The future Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument
will merge several EU external instruments existing in the 2014-2020 period
184
. The
broad instrument will include a prominent neighbourhood window, strong focus on
migration including a 20% unallocated envelope and provisioning for Macro-
Financial Assistance.
There are inherent complementarities between Horizon Europe and the future
Instrument, for example in so far as they both contribute towards the EU's
international commitments such as the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
185
,
the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, or the renewed EU-Africa Partnership
among others. The Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation
Instrument will continue to complement the Framework Programme by building
research and innovation capacity (at individual, organisational or institutional levels)
including through research infrastructures in third countries and regions. It will
support the diffusion and uptake of innovations, the development of human capital
and market access for technological solutions developed through collaborative
research and innovation.
Innovation Fund
under the EU
Emissions Trading
System
The Innovation Fund under the EU ETS will support low-carbon technology
demonstration projects in the EU. It has been established by the revised EU ETS
Directive and it will use the proceeds from the auctioning of at least 450 million
allowances under the EU ETS, as well as leftovers from the current NER 300
programme. It will specifically target innovative low-carbon technology
demonstration projects in industry, renewable energy, energy storage, carbon capture
and storage (CCS) or industrial carbon capture and use (CCU) to be developed via
the R&I window of the (InvestEU Programme) in addition to resources deployed
therein. Horizon Europe will fund the development and demonstration of
technologies that can deliver on the EU decarbonisation, energy and industrial
transformation objectives.
The future Security and Border programmes will contribute to ensuring a high level
of security in the Union, inter alia by tackling terrorism and radicalisation, organised
crime and cybercrime, and by supporting the effective implementation of the
European Integrated Border Management system. The programmes will support
Member States’ efforts
in these areas, including by incentivising Member States to
take up and apply R&I results from the Framework Programme. The Framework
Programme will support R&I in the area of security, including border management,
in particular though the cluster on Resilience and Security. Potential complementary
actions can also be considered under Horizon Europe regarding research and
innovation for customs control equipment in view of the Union instrument for
financial support for customs control equipment (CCE).
The InvestEU Fund will include financial instruments in four separate policy
windows. An R&I thematic window will bundle financing activities that are closely
linked to the objectives of the R&I Framework Programme, and dedicated products
for innovative SMEs and mid-caps will be deployed through SME window. Blended
finance in the Framework Programme will be provided by the EIC to high-risk
market-creating innovations. Appropriate synergies with the new InvestEU
programme shall be established, in particular regarding budgetary guarantees and
leveraging Venture Capital funds supported by InvestEU.
The post-2020 LIFE programme will continue to act as a catalyst for implementing
EU environment and climate policy and legislation, including by taking up and
Internal Security
Fund and
Integrated Border
Management Fund
InvestEU Fund
Programme for
Environment and
184
The future External Instrument will merge the following instruments: European Development Fund, Development
Cooperation Instrument; European Neighbourhood Instrument; Partnership Instrument for Cooperation with Third
Countries; European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights; Instrument contributing to Stability and Peace;
Instrument for Nuclear Safety Cooperation, and the Common Implementing Rules post-2020.
185
See https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/post2015/transformingourworld
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Climate Action
(LIFE)
applying R&I results from the Framework Programmes and help deploying them at
national and (inter-) regional scale. LIFE will continue to incentivise synergies with
Horizon Europe through the award of a bonus point during evaluation for proposals
which feature the uptake of Framework Programmes’ results.
Horizon Europe will
contribute to tackling environmental challenges in particular through the clusters on
Health, Climate, Energy and Mobility and Food and Natural Resources by defining
relevant R&I activities in the Strategic Research and Innovation Plan.
The post-2020 COSME will address market failures that affect all SMEs and will
promote entrepreneurship and the creation of growth of companies. Under the
Framework Programme, the European Innovation Council (EIC) will directly support
the activities and scale-up of high-risk profile innovative start-ups, SMEs and mid-
cap firms, while the InvestEU programme will more broadly focus on R&I-driven
innovative companies. The Enterprise Europe Network as a corporate tool with its
Key Account Managers will continue to play a role in Business accelerator services
of the EIC aiming at providing beneficiaries with access to partners, investors, and
assistance (coaching, training, technical support).
Single Market
Programme,
including the
Competitiveness of
Enterprises and
SMEs Programme
(COSME)
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Continued simplification will enhance user-friendliness.
User-friendliness will mainly be
enhanced by maintaining the single set of rules, continuity of funding rates and new
simplifications such as the new simplified cost options, and the increased cross-reliance on
certified accounting systems. Moreover, the European Innovation Council will also act as a
one-stop-shop for innovators looking for funding, while also rationalising existing funding
schemes for innovation, and will be clearly and visibly branded as such. European
Partnerships will be opened up for all interested stakeholders. The Research Participant Portal
is already highly appreciated by stakeholders (as well as other Commission services,) and we
will further improve its design for the new Programme. Finally, a "toolbox" will be created to
provide a comprehensive overview of all available funding tools in the legal proposal.
Synergies
will be enhanced through the revamped strategic planning process, which will
allow for identifying common objectives and common areas for activities (such a partnership
areas or mission areas) across different Multi-Annual Financial Framework programmes. It
will be open for public consultation, involving EU Institutions and citizens and end-users in
agenda-setting (co-design) for the Work Programme.
Internal coherence
will be strengthened through a redesigned pillar structure. The
Framework Programme will not set objectives per pillar but at Programme-level. Each pillar
and programme part is expected to contribute to those objectives albeit to different degrees.
This will in turn ensure that each euro invested in one area will generate multiple impacts.
The Programme has the flexibility to easily adapt to emergencies or new priorities.
The
strategic flexibility in the programming process will allow the Commission to react to urgent
needs and new priorities well beyond its start date in 2021. The Programme will be able to
shift budget allocations within and between pillars. Similarly, the strong cross-disciplinary,
cross-sector and cross-border nature of the Programme allow it to produce R&I results
relevant to changing circumstances.
Table 8 Contribution of Horizon Europe to the MFF cross-cutting objectives (compared to Horizon 2020)
Delivery for impact
MFF cross-cutting objectives
Simplification
Strategic planning
Single set of rules
Funding model
Forms of funding
Blended finance
Proposal evaluation
Ex-ante and ex-post audits
Dissemination & exploitation
Delegation
0
0
0
++
-
-
+
-
0
0
+
0
+
++
+
0
0
0
++
+
0
0
0
+
+
0
0
+
+
0
0
+
0
+
+
+
Note: +, ++, +++ correspond respectively to slight, moderate and significant improvement compared to a no-
policy change scenario. +/- correspond to a coexistence of positive and negative impacts.
indicates a slight
negative impact. 0 means no significant change.
63
Focus on
performance
+
0
0
0
+
+
0
++
+
Coherence
Flexibility
Synergies
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5
H
OW WILL PERFORMANCE BE MONITORED AND EVALUATED
?
The monitoring and evaluation framework of the new Framework Programme
186
will have
three main building blocks:
Annual monitoring of the programme performance:
tracking of performance
indicators in the short, medium and longer-term according to key impact pathways
towards Programme objectives, based on baselines and targets where possible;
Continuous collection of programme management and implementation data;
Two fully-fledged (meta)-evaluations
of the programme at mid-term and ex-post
(upon completion).
Figure 10 Tracking performance of the programme along key impact pathways towards impact categories
translating the Programme's general objectives
1. Creating high-quality new knowledge
2. Strengthening human capital in R&I
3. Fostering diffusion of knowledge and Open Science
Scientific
Impact
Create and diffuse high-quality new
knowledge, skills, technologies and
solutions to global challenges
4. Addressing EU policy priorities through R&I
5. Delivering benefits and impact through R&I missions
6. Strengthening the uptake of innovation in society
Societal
Impact
Strengthen the impact of research
and innovation in developing,
supporting and implementing EU
policies, and support the uptake of
innovative solutions in industry and
society to address global challenges
7. Creating more and better jobs
8. Generating innovation-based growth
9. Leveraging investments in R&I
Economic
Impact
Foster all forms of innovation,
including breakthrough
innovation, and strengthening
market deployment of
innovative solutions
Impact pathways, and related key impact pathway indicators, will structure the annual
monitoring of the programme performance
(see Annex 6) towards its objectives. The
objectives translate into three complementary impact categories (each being tracked along
several pathways), which reflect the non-linear nature of R&I investments:
1.
Scientific impact:
related to supporting the creation and diffusion of high-quality
new knowledge, skills, technologies and solutions to global challenges;
2.
Societal impact:
related to strengthening the impact of research and innovation in
developing, supporting and implementing EU policies, and support the uptake of
innovative solutions in industry and society to address global challenges;
3.
Economic impact:
related to fostering all forms of innovation, including
breakthrough innovation, and strengthening market deployment of innovative
solutions
The impact pathways will be time-sensitive:
they will distinguish between the short
(typically as of one year, when the first projects are completed), medium (typically as of three
years, and for the interim evaluation) and long term (typically as of five years, and for the ex-
post evaluation). The impact pathway indicators will contain both qualitative and quantitative
information, the availability of which will depend on the state of implementation of the
Programme. These indicators serve as proxies to report on the progress made towards each
type of impact at Programme level. Individual programme parts will contribute to these
indicators to a different degree and through different mechanisms. Additional indicators
186
Including Missions and European Partnership Initiatives
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might be used to monitor individual programme parts when relevant and commensurate.
These indicators proposed (see Annex 6) reflect the lessons learnt from the interim evaluation
of Horizon 2020: all Horizon 2020 indicators related to outputs, results and impacts are
maintained but streamlined and further specified to cover the whole programme. The
management and implementation data is still collected but is separated from the key
performance indicators, as illustrated in Table 9.
Table 9 Monitoring and Evaluation Frameworks
Horizon 2020
The new Framework Programme
3 headline indicators not directly attributable
to the programme
187
55 Horizon 2020 Key performance and Cross-
Cutting issues indicators:
27 are related to management and
implementation data (e.g. funding,
participation)
28 are related to outputs, results or
impacts, out of which:
o
none is related to the programme
as a whole (covering only
programme parts)
o
9 relate to publications
o
7 relate to intellectual property
rights and innovations
o
4 relate to leveraged funding
o
4 relate to researchers’ mobility
and access to infrastructures
All Horizon 2020 indicators related to outputs,
results and impacts are maintained but streamlined and
further specified to cover the whole Programme
Management and implementation data are still
collected and made available in close-to-real time through
Dashboard but are not part of “performance indicators”
Key indicators are set at Programme level
according to the Programme objectives and are attributable
to the Programme
Key indicators are classified according to 9 key
impact pathways, for tracking impact through short,
medium and long term indicators
for more accurate
reporting over time
Higher reliance on external data sources, qualitative
data and automated data tracking to minimise burden on
beneficiaries
Possibility for programme part or action specific
indicators (but not in the legal base)
The micro-data behind the key impact pathway indicators will be collected in a
centrally managed and harmonised way, with minimal reporting burden.
This will be
achieved, for example, by collecting at proposal stage the unique identifiers of applicants, by
sourcing data automatically from existing external public and private databases also after
project’s end (e.g. data on publications, patents, employment and turnover), by adopting new
ICT tools (e.g. text mining) and by using alternative primary data sources (e.g. expert
reviews). Longer-term impact indicators may be estimated based on dedicated studies. The
data collected will allow tracking disaggregated indicators and be analysed per type of action,
type of organisation, type of collaboration, sectors, disciplines, calls, countries (including
associated and third countries).
Baselines,
targets, and benchmarks will be established prior to the Programme’s
launch.
External experts will help establish accurate and timely baselines, and propose
targets with appropriate benchmarks, where relevant. To the extent possible data will also be
collected for control groups to allow counterfactual evaluation designs:
Propensity score matching- based on pairing with similar researchers/companies and
the development of panel data;
Regression discontinuity design based on the comparison of the performance between
successful and unsuccessful applicants (pending their approval on data use);
Difference-in difference based on the comparison of the performance of beneficiaries
before/after the Programme.
187
Share of GDP invested in research and development; evolution of the Innovation Output Indicator, share of researchers as
part of the active population.
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Management and implementation data for all parts of the Programme and all delivery
mechanisms
188
will continue to be collected in close to real-time.
This data will be
collected in a centrally managed and harmonised way through the Common Support Centre.
It will also continue to be publicly available on a dedicated on-line portal in close to real-time
allowing extraction per programme parts, types of actions and types of organisations
(including specific data for SMEs). This will include inter alia proposals, applications,
participations and projects (number, quality, EU contribution etc.); success rates; profiles of
evaluators, applicants and participants (partly based on unique identifiers, and including
country, gender, turnover, role in project etc.); implementation (including time-to-grant, error
rate, satisfaction rate and the rate of risk taking etc.); and financial contribution to EU climate
and environmental objectives and other mainstreaming targets. A yearly analysis of progress
on
key dimensions of the Framework Programme’s management and implementation will be
carried out.
The evaluations of the new Framework Programme will ensure coherence of
methodologies and comprehensiveness of coverage (i.e covering all programme parts
and all delivery mechanisms).
Evaluation of individual programme parts can continue to
make use of specific indicators that complement relevant the Programme-level indicators.
The evaluation of the Framework Programme will build on the coordinated evaluations of
each programme part, type of actions and delivery mechanism according to common
evaluation criteria and standard methodologies (incl. counterfactual analysis and qualitative
approaches such as case studies). The comprehensive interim evaluation of the entire
Framework Programme is foreseen by 2024, to draw the first lessons from the changes
introduced in the new Framework Programme. A full-scale ex-post evaluation is planned by
2030 to provide a full assessment of the new Programme and report on the longer-term
impacts of previous ones.
Lastly, evaluations will better account for the coordinated impact of R&I support
at EU,
national and regional level, building on existing work to better track the impact of EU R&I
Programmes at national level
189
. The European RTD Evaluation Network
190
will provide the
basis for a substantially increased cooperation with Member States and Associated States.
Including European Partnerships.
European Research Area and Innovation Committee (2017), Final Report of the ERAC Ad-hoc Working Group on
Measuring the Impact of EU Framework Programmes for Research and Innovation at National Level. Available at:
http://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-1206-2017-INIT/en/pdf.
190
More information available at:
https://ec.europa.eu/research/evaluations/index.cfm?pg=network.
189
188
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Figure 11 Intervention logic of Horizon Europe
BROAD LINES OF
ACTIVITIES
HORIZON EUROPE
GENERAL OBJECTIVE
Pillar 1 - Open Science
- European Research
Council
-
Marie Skłodowska-Curie
actions
- Research Infrastructures
Scientific impact
Pillar 2 - Global
Challenges and Industrial
Competitiveness
5 Clusters:
- Health
- Inclusive & secure
societies
- Digital & Industry
- Climate, Energy &
Mobility
- Food & natural resources
Non-nuclear direct actions of
the Joint Research Centre
-
Pillar 3 - Open
Innovation
- European Innovation
Council
- Support to innovation
ecosystems
- European Institute of
Innovation and
Technology
Societal impact
Deliver
scientific,
societal
and
economic
impact
from the Union’s
investments in
research and
innovation:
strengthen the
scientific and
technological bases
of the Union, foster
its
competitiveness,
including for its
industry;
deliver on the
EU's
strategic priorities
and contribute to
tackling global
challenges, including
the Sustainable
Development Goals.
Economic impact
Strengthening the European
Research Area
- Sharing excellence
- Reforming and enhancing the
European R&I system
Synergies and
complementarities
with
other programmes at EU,
national and regional level
for maximised impacts
Source: European Commission, DG Research and Innovation
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