The U.S. comprises 14 percent of all non-EU country participation in Horizon 2020 to date. Click to enlarge.
(Image credit – Jan Smits, European Commission)
On Oct. 27, the European Commission (EC) launched the €30 billion ($35 billion) 2018–2020 Work Program
The program launch follows the State Department’s announcement
The new work program is the final phase of H2020, a seven-year, €77 billion ($88 billion) Research & Innovation (R&I) funding program. H2020, which is the EU’s eighth Framework Program, funds research focused on basic science, industrial leadership, and societal challenges. In addition to supporting these areas, the final work program of H2020 aims to facilitate a smooth transition to any successor program
U.S. researchers and institutions are eligible to participate in H2020, typically through grants, fellowships, or partnerships with EU-based institutions. According to a recently published guide
The U.S. comprises 14 percent of all non-EU country participation in Horizon 2020 to date. Click to enlarge.
(Image credit – Jan Smits, European Commission)
Smits said the theme of the new work program is “all about openness,” reflecting the larger EU R&I policy goals
The work program also identifies five priorities that seek to address common societal concerns, such as sustainable development and climate change, security threats and migration, digitization and innovation, and global research cooperation. It also dedicates €7 billion ($8.2 billion) to integrating common themes across the program priorities through a set of four focus areas that include building a low-carbon, climate resilient future, connecting economic and environmental gains, and digitizing and transforming European industry and services.
Smits identified several research areas where the work program specifically invites U.S. cooperation, including on marine and arctic research through the Transatlantic Ocean Research Alliance and on biomedical research through the existing EC-National Institutes of Health partnership. Other areas of cooperation that have previously been identified in the EU-US Roadmap for S&T Collaboration
Smits emphasized the importance of strengthening international R&I cooperation due to the increasing complexity of global challenges, particularly climate change. Pointing to the assistance EU provided in tracking the recent hurricanes through the Copernicus satellite program, he said that the EU and U.S. “need each other because these effects of climate change are here to stay.”
Continuing U.S. participation in H2020 programs builds on a long history of research collaborations with the EU and its member states. At the event, State Department Office for S&T Cooperation Director Lisa Brodey said that as two of the largest scientific enterprises in the world, the EU and U.S. together spend nearly $800 billion annually on R&D.
Brodey continued, saying, “science and shared research has been the cornerstone of our collaboration since our country was founded,” and pointing out that the partnership has led to numerous high-impact discoveries over the last century.
The U.S. and the EU formally signed an umbrella agreement
Through the agreement, the EU has established
Looking toward the future, Brodey said that the U.S. is “hopeful” the successor to H2020 will build on previous research program successes and that the two parties will continue to look for ways to lower the barriers for transatlantic cooperation.