HORIZON 2020 - APRE · Work Programme 2016-2017 Call 2016 HORIZON 2020 ... Market with a...
Transcript of HORIZON 2020 - APRE · Work Programme 2016-2017 Call 2016 HORIZON 2020 ... Market with a...
Societal Challenge 2
Food Security, Sustainable Agriculture and Forestry, Marine and Maritime and Inland Water Research,
and the Bioeconomy
Work Programme 2016-2017
Call 2016
HORIZON 2020
Elisabetta Balzi European Commission Research and Innovation DG Bioeconomy Directorate
• Policy Context and Bioeconomy Strategy
• H2020 Societal Challenge 2
• Work Programme 2016-17
• The Calls: SFS, BG, RR, BB
• Practical information and tips
• BioBased Industry Joint Undertaking
• What’s next
• 1. EU Bioeconomy and Strategy
What is the Bioeconomy?
The bioeconomy…
…those parts of the economy that use renewable biological resources from LAND and SEA
… to produce FOOD, BIO-BASED PRODUCTS, MATERIALS and ENERGY.
This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
Bioeconomy – Why?
Europe must hurry to act facing inter-related challenges:
1. Food security
2. Energy security 3. Climate change 4. Re-industrialisation of Europe and modernisation of agriculture 5. Reducing dependence on fossil resources
This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
Bioeconomy – EU Political context
An Agenda for Jobs, Growth, Fairness and Democratic Change
A New Boost for
Jobs, Growth
and Investment
A Deeper and Fairer Internal Market with a Strengthened
Industrial Base
A Resilient Energy
Union with a Forward-
Looking Climate Change Policy
A Stronger Global Actor
A Union of democratic
change
Innovating for a sustainable growth: a bioeconomy for Europe
This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
Stakeholders public & private sectors
EU Institutions
International partners &
organisations
Member States
and Regions
2012 - The Strategy promotes sustainable use of renewable biological resources from land and sea and their conversion into food, bio-based products, biofuels and bioenergy.
Bioeconomy Strategy and Action Plan
ENHANCEMENT OF MARKETS AND
COMPETITIVENESS IN BIOECONOMY
SECTORS
REINFORCED POLICY INTERACTION AND
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
INVESTMENTS IN RESEARCH,
INNOVATION AND SKILLS
This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
• Policy Context and Bioeconomy Strategy
• H2020 Societal Challenge 2
• Work Programme 2016-17
• The calls
• Practical information and tips
• BioBased Industry Joint Undertaking
Policy Research and Innovation
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Policy Research and Innovation
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Societal challenges
1. Health, demographic change and wellbeing
2. Food security, sustainable agriculture and forestry, marine and maritime and inland water research, and the bioeconomy
3. Secure, clean and efficient energy
4. Smart, green and integrated transport
5. Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials
6. Inclusive, innovative and reflective societies
7. Secure societies
Policy Research and Innovation
ACTIVITIES
Agriculture and
forestry
Agri-food sector for a
safe and healthy diet
Aquatic living
resources
Bio-based industries
and bioeconomy
Marine and
maritime research
This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
H2020 Societal Challenge 2
• Policy Context and Bioeconomy Strategy
• H2020 Societal Challenge 2
• Work Programme 2016-17
• The calls
• Practical information and tips
• BioBased Industry Joint Undertaking
WP 2016/2017 - OBJECTIVES
• Ensure food and nutrition security, by fostering resilient and resource efficient primary production and industry as well as sustainable and healthy consumption
• Demonstrate the innovative potential of the oceans, by bringing technology to market
• Foster innovation and business opportunities for rural and coastal areas, through new territorial approaches and business models
• Re-industrialise Europe, through new bio-based value-chains, while securing sustainable biomass
15 This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
Societal Challenge 2: contributing to the Juncker Commission's policy agenda
A new boost for jobs, growth and investment
A deeper and fairer internal market with a strengthened industrial base
A resilient Energy Union with a forward looking climate change policy
A stronger global actor
Open Innovation Open Science Open to the world
SC2 Topics & Budget change: 2014-15 to 2016-17
17
482 m EUR
715,50 m EUR
49
83
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
2014-15 2016-17
SC2 TOTAL
BUDGET
SC2 TOTAL
N TOPICS
FRAMEWORK CONDITIONS
- for new bio-based markets
(widening regional up-take, sustainability schemes, demand side measures…)
- for rural and coastal development
(skills, new value chains and business models, logistics, on farm demonstrators…)
INTERNATIONAL
CO-OPERATION
tackling key challenges with global partners:
Africa, The Arctic, Mediterranean Countries, China, Asia
INNOVATION, DEMONSTRATION and INVESTMENT
R&I closer to markets:
1/3 of the budget dedicated to SMEs, demonstration and financial
instruments
ERA and ALIGNMENT
Public-Public and Public-Private Partnerships around key objectives:
- Investment in programmes Co-fund
- Complementarity with BBI JU
POLICIES
Modernisation of rural economies, Integrated management of natural resources,
Regionalisation of fisheries policies, Forest ecosystem services…
Responsible R&I, SSH
Stakeholders engagement, reinforced multi-actor approach, mobilisation and mutual learning on bio-based products, interactive Agriculture Knowledge and
Innovation Systems, education…
SC2 Calls 2016-17
TRENDS
The Work Programme responds to three main principles of OPENESS
Open
Science
Open to the
World
Open Innovation
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• Open access to data
• Responsible Research and Innovation, in particular through stakeholders engagement
(e.g. : Mobilisation and
Mutual Learning,
multiactor approach,
thematic networks…)
20 This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
• Bringing research and innovation closer to markets by dedicating 1/3 of the budget dedicated to SMEs, demonstration and financial instruments
• Widening regional uptake
• Boosting private investment
in research and innovation
• © bahrialtay , #59494253, 2015. Source: Fotolia.com
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This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
• Tackling key challenges with
• global partners:
• Africa,
• South-East Asia,
• China, the Arctic,
• the Mediterranean…
22 This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
The challenges and the Calls
©fotomek, #76440810, 2015. Source Fotolia.com
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Societal Challenge 2
Four Calls 2016-17
•
Sustainable food security
Blue Growth
Rural Renaissance
Bio-based innovation
for sustainable goods and services
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Four SC2 calls interact
Sustainable Food Security
Rural Renaissance:
Blue Growth
Bio-Based Innovation
Innovation support topics, networks
Integrated food and non-food approaches
Land-sea interaction
Education, skills
Fisheries, Aquaculture
Seafood safety
Sustainable biomass supply
Markets for bio-based products
Sustainable production Closing loops at regional levels
Cleaning the oceans
Algae biorefineries
SC2 Calls 2016-17
SC2 Calls Interactions
Societal Challenge 2 – Budget 2016-17
SC2 (RTD + AGRI)
(784 M€)
To other
H2020 parts*
115 M€
SC2 other actions
32M€
SC2 calls
637M€
SC2 WP:
4 Calls + other actions
Budget AGRI + RTD + others
747 M€
From other parts
to SC2 calls
+ 78 M€
* IoT, IND Circular Economy, SME
From other parts
to SC2 topics
+ 15 M€
SC2 Calls 2016-17
Policy Research and Innovation
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LEIT- ICT Internet of Things
Industry 2020 Circular economy
1. Health, demographic change and wellbeing
2. Food security, sustainable agriculture and forestry, marine and maritime and inland water research, and the bioeconomy
3. Secure, clean and efficient energy
4. Smart, green and integrated transport
5. Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials
6. Inclusive, innovative and reflective societies
7. Secure societies
Arctic
SME
SC2 contributions to other calls
• SME dedicated call:
• "Agriculture, Forestry, Agri-food and bio-based sectors"- 58M€
Stimulating the innovation potential of SMEs for sustainable and competitive
agriculture, forestry, agri-food and bio-based sectors (SME-Inst07)
• "Blue Growth" – 19,5M€
Supporting SMEs efforts for the development - deployment and market
replication of innovative solutions for blue growth (SME-Inst08)
• Other calls :
• Unlocking the potential of urban organic waste (Industry 2020 and the circular economy; CIRC-05-2016 – 3M€)
• Large Scale Pilot on Smart Farming & Food Security (Internet of Things; Iot-01-2016 – Pilot 2 - 30M€)
SC2 Calls 2016-17
Topic- and budget-breakdown by calls
48
13
16
6
10
6
Topics (including other contributions)
SFS
BG
RUR
BB
Others SC2
Other parts
431.5
129
128
27
32
130
Budget (M€) (including other contributions)
SFS
BG
RUR
BB
Others SC2
Other parts
Others parts : SME, IoT, CIRC
SC2 Calls 2016-17
Types of actions
RIA
IA
CSA
SME
EJP COFUND
FPA
SGA for ERANET COFUND
ERANET COFUND
Named beneficiary
Expert group
Pilot
Public Procurement
Prize
RESEARCH AND
INNOVATION ACTIONS
INNOVATION ACTIONS
CO-ORDINATION AND SUPPORT
ACTIONS
CO-FUND
SME
SC2 Calls 2016-17
CALL
Sustainable Food Security (SFS)
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Sustainable Food Security CALL
a global €431,5 million budget to:
Improve farming and food systems' capacity to
sustainably supply sufficient and healthy food while safeguarding natural resources
Ensure global food and nutrition security
• ©M.Maghenzanijpg, #41505274 2015. Source: Fotolia.com
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Why Food and Nutrition Research?
• 9 billion people by 2050
• Estimated need of a 70% increase of global food production
• Nowadays, 1.5 Earths needed for resources. Two Earths by 2030!
• 1.3 billion tonnes of food wasted per year – 100 kg per person in EU
• 795 million adults undernourished
• 1.9 billion adults overweight ; 185.000 people die from diabetes due to overconsumption of sugars
12/1/2015 33
Putting nature-based and resource-efficient approaches at the heart of research investments
Focusing on climate smart agro-food chains
Putting nutritious and healthy food from land and seas on our plates
Going global: joint actions with Africa and China
© Pictures Fotolia.com: Lily #49597552; Alphaspirit #79604123; Altanaka #55413185; Sbirgitkerber #67213489
Sustainable Food Security: our daily bread
Sustainable Food Security focus area at a glance
Consumers, diet & health
Food security
Primary production
and food chain
12/1/2015 35
Sustainable Food Security – 6 AREAS
Sustainable Food
Security EU-China Flagship
Resilient, resource
efficient value chains
Environment/ Climate-smart
primary production
Competitive food industry
Healthy and safe foods and
diets
EU-Africa Partnership
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Sustainable food security TOPICS summary
• Resilient, sustainable and transparent value chains
• Food losses
• Resource efficient processes in food chain
• Food packaging; labelling
• Carbon and nitrogen cycling in agro-ecosystems
• Specific production systems
• Ecosystem services
• Socio-economics, demography and resilience of farms
• Abiotic stresses
• Biotic stresses
• Operationalising the resilience concept
• Optimising use of critical inputs
• Specific actions for organic farming
• Sustainable fisheries and aquaculture
• ERANETs/ SCAR
Resilient, resource-efficient
value chains
EnvironmentClimate-
smart primary
production
Competitive food
industry
• One Health co-fund (zoonoses)
• Dietary choices of children; consumers and food safety;
• Diet/impulsivity/compulsivity; obesity; sweeteners
Healthy food and
diets for all
25 topics 206 M€ 7 topics 64 M€ 3 topics 24 M€ 5 topics 85,5M€ 37
Sustainable food security TOPICS
• Water retention in soils
• Breeding of protein crops
• Urban agriculture
• Livestock production and antimicrobial drug use
• Authentication and traceability
• ERANET Cofund
• Innovation for promoting food and nutrition security and sustainable agriculture in Africa
• Earth observation services for the monitoring of agricultural production in Africa
EU-Africa Partnership
EU-China Flagship
3 topics – 25 M€ 5 topics – 27 M€ 38
CALL
Blue Growth (BG)
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Blue Growth CALL € 129 million from different parts of Horizon 2020 to:
• Demonstrate the innovative potential of the
• oceans by bringing technologies to the market
•
• Ensure a healthy ocean for healthy people
• Seize the opportunities of
• integrated sea basin Strategies (the Mediterranean and the Arctic)
© Photographies, #19215944, 2015. Source Fotolia.com
•
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Blue Growth
Boosting Innovation
for emerging Blue Growth
activities
Linking healthy oceans and seas
with healthy people
The Arctic Dimension
Valorising the Mediterranean
Sea basin
Blue Growth – 4 AREAS
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Blue Growth TOPICS summary
• An integrated
Arctic observing system
• Impact of Arctic changes on the weather and climate of the Northern Hemisphere
• Climate impacts on Arctic permafrost and its socio-economic impact, with a focus on coastal areas
• Interaction between people, oceans and seas:
• Blue green innovation for clean coasts and seas
• Innovative sustainable solutions for improving the safety and dietary properties of seafood
• Large-scale integrated algae bio-refineries
• High value-added specialised vessel concepts
• Multi-use of the oceans marine space, offshore and near-shore:
• Legal and environmental issues
• Enabling technologies
• ERANET cofund on Marine technologies
Boosting
innovation for
emerging Blue
Growth activities
Linking healthy oceans and seas with healthy people
The Arctic Dimension
• Towards an integrated Mediterranean Sea Observing System
• Support to the BLUEMED Initiative: Coordination of marine and maritime research and innovation activities in the Mediterranean
Valorising the Mediterranean
Sea basin
5 topics 57 M€ 3 topics 21 M€ 3 topics 40 M€ 2 topics 11 M€ 56
CALL
Rural Renaissance (RUR)
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• Grasp promising opportunities to boost rural growth and jobs
• Develop rural and coastal areas through new territorial approaches and business models
•
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© Pictures Fotolia.com: Celeste Clochard 65506455
A global € 128 million budget to:
Key facts and figures: rural-urban typology
• EU territory: • 50% rural
• 38% intermediate
• Rural & intermediate:
• 55% EU jobs
• 46% GVA
Key facts and figures: business development opportunities
• Opportunities:
• Higher demand for "biomass" for food and non-food uses
• New energy agenda, space for renewable energy
• Renewed interest from consumers in local/regional products
• Demand for ecosystem services, possibility for better remuneration
• International trade of high-value added products
• Lifestyle migrants
• Services for new rural inhabitants
Rural renaissance: our territories € 128 million to grasp promising opportunities
to boost rural growth and jobs
Invest in businesses:
new business models, new value chains and better connectivity
Invest in people:
boost innovation, co-creation and exploitation of knowledge by improving skills and innovation
systems
Invest in better decision-making:
modernize policies and governance to make the most out of our resourceful territories
sustainably 68
Rural Renaissance - areas
Rural Renaissance
New approaches towards Policies and governance
New value chains and business models
Innovation and skills
development
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Rural renaissance TOPICS summary
• Thematic networks
• Experimental and demonstration farms:
• Building a future science and education system
• Advisors' role in AKIS
• Working together in EU countries where cooperation level is low
• Optimising interactive innovation projects and policies for innovation
• Crop diversification systems for delivery of food, feed, industrial products and ecosystem services
• Resource-efficient and profitable industrial crops on marginal lands
• Demonstration of integrated logistics for food and non-food applications
• Business models for modern rural economies
Territorial interactions: enhance synergies, adapt policies, foster cross-sectorial cooperation
• Rural-urban • Land-sea
• 'Towards 2030': policies
and decision tools for an integrated management of natural resources
• Economic benefits from ecosystem services:
• Farming & drinking water
• Forest ecosystem services (IA)
Policies & governance
New Value chains & business models
Innovation and skill
development
•
71 5 topics 32 M€ 4 topics 47 M€ 7 topics 49 M€
CALL
Bio-based innovation for sustainable goods
and services
(BB) 75
Boost bio-based markets (ex: to create over
3% growth/year in the bio-based chemistry sector)
Re-industrialise the EU through new • bio-based value chains, securing • sustainable biomass
Activities of this call are complementary to the
Joint Technology Initiative on Bio-based Industries
2016-17 Indicative Budget €300 million"
© stockWERK, #58226285, 2015.Source Fotolia.com
•
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A global €27 million budget to:
BioB
Bio-based innovation
Political framework
Strategy
Bio-based Markets
Regional and local investment Cities, regions Widening
Raising awareness Engaging citizens Mutual learning
Environmental evaluation LCA Wood value chains
Raw material Forest Organic waste
Biomass Supply
Data for policy and decision tools Data on bio-based products Sustainability criteria
SC2 – WP2016/17
Bio-based innovation – 2 AREAS
Bio-based innovation
for sustainable goods and services
Securing sustainable
biomass supply
Building the bio-based markets of the future
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Bio-based innovation TOPICS summary
Securing Sustainable
biomass supply
Building the bio-based markets of
the future
• Circular economy –Potential of urban waste 79
4 topics 23 M€ 2 topics 4 M€
ERA-Net COFUND
Public-Public Partnerships in the Bioeconomy
• OPEN TO INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATION 82
ERA-Nets
ERA-Nets
ERA-Net co-fund 2016 - WP Topics
- Public-Public Partnerships in the Bioeconomy
A. – Organic farming and food production
B. – Sustainable food production and consumption
C. – A knowledge platform for the intestinal microbiome
– Marine Technologies
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ERA-Net co-fund 2014-2015 2014: ERA-FACCE-Surplus (sustainable agriculture and climate change)
2015: ERA-GAS (green-house gasses) and ERA-HDHL (healthy diet and healthy life)
Practical information
©fotomek, #76440810, 2015. Source Fotolia.com
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SC2 Calls 2016 - DATES
Publication
Submission Deadlines Information
to applicants
Grant
Agreements
14 OCT 2016
two-stage
submission
(RIA with some
exceptions)
1st stage 17 Feb 2016 May 2016 -
2nd stage 13 Sept
2016 Nov 2016 May 2017
single stage
submission
(IA, CSA, ERA Net)
Single
stage 17 Feb 2016 May 2016 October 2016
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Horizon 2020 Open to the World
General opening
Horizon 2020 is fully open to participation
of entities from across the globe
Targeted opening
Many topics are flagged as being specifically relevant for
international cooperation, identifying upfront the targeted
area and partner country or region
86 This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
Automatically eligible for EU funding
• - EU Member States including their overseas departments
• - Overseas Countries and Territories linked to the MS
• - Countries Associated to Horizon 2020:
• Iceland, Norway, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia , Montenegro, Serbia, Turkey, Israel, Moldova, Switzerland (partial association), Faroe Islands, Ukraine
• - International European interest organisations
• - Exhaustive list of countries identified in Annex A to the work programme ('developing countries')
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This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
Not automatically eligible for EU funding • Entities in non-EU/non-Associated/non-'developing countries' may only be granted
EU funding when:
• Provision in the work programme; or
• Provision under a bilateral S&T agreement; or
• Commission deems participation essential for carrying out the action (project case-by-case assessment, based on proposals evaluations )
• A number of Third countries (= non-EU/non-Associated countries) make funding available for their participants in Horizon 2020 actions:
• Republic of Korea, Mexico, Russia, China, Japan, etc.* – some cover all topics – others selected topics
• See http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/docs/h2020-funding-guide/cross-cutting-issues/international-cooperation_en.htm#countries
* Also Switzerland makes funding available for their participants in those parts of Horizon
2020 where Switzerland is not associated
Matching funds for international partners
88 This presentation shall neither be binding nor construed as constituting commitment by the European Commission
The Multi-actor approach under WP2016-2017
• Investment X 2,5 371,5 Million euros
• 38 topics in 3 calls: SFS, RUR, IoT
0
5
10
15
20
25
SFS RUR IoT
Number of multi-actor topics in WP2016-2017
2016-2017 2016 2017
€ 221.500.000
€ 120.000.000
€ 30.000.000
Distribution of budget for multi-actor projects
SFS
RUR
IoT
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The multi-actor approach under WP2016-2017: Key elements
• Description now in WP introduction p. 9-10
• Multi-actor projects are about interactive innovation
• Beyond dissemination requirement and stakeholders' board
• Genuine and sufficient involvement of various actors all along the project, from planning to demonstration
• Demonstrate how project will respond to end-users needs
• Substantial practical knowledge easily accessible and understandable
• Contribution to EIP-AGRI (for EIP-AGRI related areas)
• Practice abstracts respecting the common EIP format
• Strong recommendation to connect with operational groups
Learn from first Horizon 2020 multi-actor projects
• Workshop "Interactive innovation in motion: multi-actor projects and thematic networks under Horizon 2020" 24/11/2015:
• Event page (presentations to be on-line end of the week): https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/en/news/interactive-innovation-motion-multi-actor-projects-and-thematic-networks-under-horizon-2020
• Recordings: https://scic.ec.europa.eu/streaming/workshop-on-multi-actor-approach-and-thematic-networks-under-horizon-2020
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Lessons learnt from 2014 and 2015 calls (1)
No negotiation - impact on evaluations: • Consistency between task and budget allocation
is essential • Any shortcoming (other than minor and obvious
clerical errors) are reflected with lower scores • Proposal is evaluated and funded as it is
submitted
TIPS
TIPS - Lessons Learnt
• Start in time:
• register in the Participant Portal
• Submit a draft (overwriting)
• Respect the page limits
• Be concise, less can be more
• Excellent science is not enough:
• Consider all the criteria
• Consider sub-criteria
Before you start
• Look at the Work Programme and general annexes
• Address the topic & objectives
• Specific requirements
• Cross Cutting Issues
• Multi-actor Approach
• Gender Dimension
• Dissemination – important
TIPS - Lessons Learnt
• Get impartial colleagues to read it before
• Check on consistency between Part A and Part B
• Put yourself in the shoes of a reviewer
• Speak with your NCPs
• Subscribe as expert reviewer (but not for your topic)
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Success rates: new rule for two-stage calls
• In 2014- 2015 calls, low success rates at second stage level
• Introduction of dynamic threshold in the first stage evaluation (see General Annexes of Work Programme 2016- 2017):
Intention: to get a number of proposals which
represent approximately 3 times the available budget to second stage.
• Policy Context and Bioeconomy Strategy
• H2020 Societal Challenge 2
• Work Programme 2016-17
• The calls
• Practical information and tips
• BioBased Industry Joint Undertaking
• What’s next
Policy Research and Innovation
100
BBI Bio-Based Industry
JU
SC2 Food security, Sustainable Agriculture, Marine, Maritime and Inland Waters Research and the Bioeconomy
PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
• Policy Context and Bioeconomy Strategy
• H2020 Societal Challenge 2
• Work Programme 2016-17
• The calls
• Practical information and tips
• BioBased Industry Joint Undertaking
• What’s next
EXTERNAL ADVICE and SOCIETAL ENGAGEMENT
EC
MEMBER
STATES
Strategic Programme
WorkProgramme
Horizon Group (Policy DGs)
RTD & AGRI
WORK PROGRAMME
Design
Calls
EXTERNAL STAKEHOLDERS
ADVISORY GROUP
Programme Committe
Article 12
Horizon 2020 Regulation
110
QIV 2016 QIV 2016
Thank you for your attention!
Find out more:
www.ec.europa/research/horizon2020
SC2 Work Programme 2016-2017 http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/wp/20
16_2017/main/h2020-wp1617-food_en.pdf
HORIZON 2020