Public Consultation on 12 proposed Institutionalised European Partnerships under the future Horizon Europe Research and Innovation programme (bijlage bij 22112,nr.2841)

1.

Kerngegevens

Officiële titel Public Consultation on 12 proposed Institutionalised European Partnerships under the future Horizon Europe Research and Innovation programme (bijlage bij 22112,nr.2841)
Document­datum 21-01-2020
Publicatie­datum 22-01-2020
Nummer 2020D01873
Kenmerk 22112, nr. 2841
Externe link origineel bericht
Originele document in PDF

2.

Tekst

Contribution ID: e74ef572-408b-4b11-a7b2-ec5e993efbd8

Date: 05/11/2019 08:59:19

Public Consultation on 12 proposed Institutionalised European Partnerships under the future Horizon Europe i Research and Innovation programme

Fields marked with * are mandatory.

Introduction

With a proposed budget of nearly 100 billion euro from 2021 to 2027, the Horizon Europe i framework

programme represents the largest collaborative multinational research and innovation investment in Europe

and is open to participants worldwide.

The European Parliament and the Council have provisionally agreed on the Horizon Europe i legislative

package (COM(2018)435)[1]. Based on the agreement, Horizon Europe i promotes a more strategic,

ambitious and impact-oriented approach to public-public and public-private partnerships (European

Partnerships), ensuring that they can effectively contribute to the Union’s policies and priorities.

European Partnerships allow to bring together a broad range of actors to work towards a common goal,

develop synergies with EU, national and regional programmes and strategies, and accelerate societal and

market uptake. Different forms of European Partnerships can be implemented depending on specific

needs, type of activities and criteria: Co-funded, Co-programmed or Institutionalised European Partnerships.

Institutionalised Partnerships are implemented only when other parts of the Horizon Europe i programme,

including other forms of European Partnerships (Co-funded or Co-programmed), cannot achieve the

objectives or generate the necessary expected impacts. The preparation of such Institutionalised

Partnerships requires new EU legislation and the setting up of specific legal structures (funding bodies)

based on Article 185 and 187 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU)[2]. As such all

Institutionalised Partnerships must be justified with an impact assessment prior to the preparation of the

legislative proposals.

The European Commission is currently running the impact assessment of 12 candidate Institutionalised

European Partnerships in the following priorities:

  • 1. 
    EU-Africa research partnership on health security to tackle infectious diseases (Global Health)
  • 2. 
    Innovative Health Initiative
  • 3. 
    Key Digital Technologies
  • 4. 
    Smart Networks and Services
  • 5. 
    European Metrology
  • 6. 
    Transforming Europe's rail system 7. Integrated Air Traffic Management
  • 8. 
    Clean Aviation
  • 9. 
    Clean Hydrogen
  • 10. 
    Safe and Automated Road Transport
  • 11. 
    Circular bio-based Europe: sustainable innovation for new local value from waste and biomass
  • 12. 
    Innovative SMEs

This public consultation aims to collect the views of stakeholders and citizens on the need for such

Institutionalised European Partnerships and will feed into the impact assessment process. This consultation

is structured in two parts: Part 1 covering all candidate Institutionalised European Partnerships and Part 2

specific to each candidate. We invite you to provide feedback on any of the candidate Institutionalised

European Partnership.

The questionnaire is available in English, French and German and you can reply in any EU language. You

can pause any time and continue later. Your contribution is downloadable once you have submitted your

answers.

Responses received after the closing date will not be considered. Questionnaires sent by e-mail or on

paper will not be analysed except those due to accessibility needs of people with visual disabilities and their

representative organisations.

A summary on the outcome of the public consultation will be published by the Commission services on the

Have your say’ portal .

We thank you for your participation.

Protection of personal data

Privacy statement on the protection of personal data in EU Survey

[1] Legal texts for Horizon Europe i to be found here: https://ec.europa.eu/commission/publications/research

href="https://ec.europa.eu/commission/publications/research-and-innovation-including-horizon-europe-iter-and-euratom-legal-texts-and-factsheets_en">and-innovation-including-horizon-europe-iter-and-euratom-legal-texts-and-factsheets_en

[2] Following Article 8(1)(c) of the proposed Regulation for Horizon Europe i

About you

  • * 
    Language of my contribution

    Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French Gaelic German

    Greek Greek Hungarian Italian Latvian Lithuanian Maltese Polish Portuguese Romanian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish

  • * 
    I am giving my contribution as

    Academic/research institution Business association Company/business organisation Consumer organisation EU citizen Environmental organisation Non-EU citizen Non-governmental organisation (NGO) Public authority Trade union Other

  • * 
    First name

    Wilfried

  • * 
    Surname

    DE WAAL

  • * 
    Email (this won't be published)

    w.a.j.dewaal@minez.nl

  • * 
    Scope

    International Local National Regional

  • * 
    Organisation name

255 character(s) maximum Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy

  • * 
    Organisation size

    Micro (1 to 9 employees) Small (10 to 49 employees) Medium (50 to 249 employees) Large (250 or more)

Transparency register number

255 character(s) maximum

Check if your organisation is on the transparency register . It's a voluntary database for organisations seeking to influence EU decisionmaking.

  • * 
    Country of origin

Please add your country of origin, or that of your organisation.

Afghanistan Djibouti Libya Saint Martin Åland Islands Dominica Liechtenstein Saint Pierre and Miquelon Albania Dominican Lithuania Saint Vincent Republic and the Grenadines Algeria Ecuador Luxembourg Samoa American Egypt Macau San Marino Samoa Andorra El Salvador Madagascar São Tomé and Príncipe Angola Equatorial Malawi Saudi Arabia Guinea Anguilla Eritrea Malaysia Senegal Antarctica Estonia Maldives Serbia Antigua and Eswatini Mali Seychelles Barbuda Argentina Ethiopia Malta Sierra Leone Armenia Falkland Islands Marshall Singapore Islands Aruba Faroe Islands Martinique Sint Maarten Australia Fiji Mauritania Slovakia Austria Finland Mauritius Slovenia Azerbaijan France Mayotte Solomon Islands Bahamas French Guiana Mexico Somalia Bahrain French Micronesia South Africa Polynesia

Bangladesh French Moldova South Georgia Bangladesh French Moldova South Georgia

Southern and and the South Antarctic Lands Sandwich Islands

Barbados Gabon Monaco South Korea

Belarus Georgia Mongolia South Sudan Belgium Germany Montenegro Spain

Belize Ghana Montserrat Sri Lanka

Benin Gibraltar Morocco Sudan

Bermuda Greece Mozambique Suriname

Bhutan Greenland Myanmar Svalbard and /Burma Jan Mayen

Bolivia Grenada Namibia Sweden

Bonaire Saint Guadeloupe Nauru Switzerland

Eustatius and

Saba

Bosnia and Guam Nepal Syria

Herzegovina

Botswana Guatemala Netherlands Taiwan

Bouvet Island Guernsey New Caledonia Tajikistan

Brazil Guinea New Zealand Tanzania

British Indian Guinea-Bissau Nicaragua Thailand

Ocean Territory

British Virgin Guyana Niger The Gambia

Islands

Brunei Haiti Nigeria Timor-Leste

Bulgaria Heard Island Niue Togo and McDonald

Islands Burkina Faso Honduras Norfolk Island Tokelau Burundi Hong Kong Northern Tonga

Mariana Islands Cambodia Hungary North Korea Trinidad and

Tobago

Cameroon Iceland North Tunisia

Macedonia Canada India Norway Turkey Cape Verde Indonesia Oman Turkmenistan Cayman Islands Iran Pakistan Turks and

Caicos Islands Central African Iraq Palau Tuvalu

Republic

Chad Ireland Palestine Uganda

Chile Isle of Man Panama Ukraine

China Israel Papua New United Arab

Guinea Emirates Christmas Italy Paraguay United

Island Kingdom

Clipperton Jamaica Peru United States Clipperton Jamaica Peru United States Cocos (Keeling) Japan Philippines United States Islands Minor Outlying Islands Colombia Jersey Pitcairn Islands Uruguay Comoros Jordan Poland US Virgin Islands Congo Kazakhstan Portugal Uzbekistan Cook Islands Kenya Puerto Rico Vanuatu Costa Rica Kiribati Qatar Vatican City Côte d’Ivoire Kosovo Réunion Venezuela Croatia Kuwait Romania Vietnam Cuba Kyrgyzstan Russia Wallis and Futuna Curaçao Laos Rwanda Western Sahara Cyprus Latvia Saint Yemen Barthélemy Czechia Lebanon Saint Helena Zambia Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Democratic Lesotho Saint Kitts and Zimbabwe Republic of the Nevis Congo Denmark Liberia Saint Lucia

  • * 
    Publication privacy settings

The Commission will publish the responses to this public consultation. You can choose whether you would like your details to be made

public or to remain anonymous.

Anonymous Only your type of respondent, country of origin and contribution will be published. All other personal details (name, organisation name and size, transparency register number) will not be published. Public Your personal details (name, organisation name and size, transparency register number, country of origin) will be published with your contribution.

I agree with the personal data protection provisions

Part 1: General questions on European Partnerships

As per the political agreement on Horizon Europe i, an Institutionalised European Partnership shall

be implemented only where other parts of the Horizon Europe i programme, including other forms of

European Partnerships (co-programmed, co-funded), would not achieve the objectives or would not

generate the necessary expected impacts; they should be justified by a long-term perspective and

high degree of integration.

There will be three types of European Partnerships under Horizon Europe i [1].

Co-programmed European Partnerships are based on memoranda of understanding and/or contractual

arrangements between the Commission and private and/or public partners. They are expected to be best

suited to partnerships involving industry, but also Member States, foundations, international partners etc.

They are jointly implemented by the Commission (Union contribution via Horizon Europe i work

programmes) and partners (contributions under their responsibility), with full application of Horizon Europe i

rules for the Union contribution, whereas partners rules apply to their contributions. They allow for more

flexibility over time as regards the composition of partners, objectives and activities and require the

relatively lowest effort for set-up and implementation compared to the other forms of European Partnerships.

Co-funded European Partnerships are implemented under the responsibility of the partners, that receive

a substantial budget contribution from Horizon Europe i (Grant Agreement) to cofound their joint programme

of activities. They are expected to be best suited to partnerships involving Member States, with research

funders and other public authorities at the core of the consortium, and possibility to include foundations and

international partners etc. By default national rules apply to calls launched by the consortium. They require

a relatively moderate effort for their set-up and implementation compared to other forms of European

Partnerships.

Institutionalised European Partnerships are based on the Union participation in and financial

contribution to research and innovation programmes undertaken by several Member States (under Article

185 TFEU) or by bodies established under Article 187 TFEU, for partnerships involving typically industry,

research organisations but also Member States, foundations and international partners. They are expected

to be best suited for long-term collaborations with stable partners and provide only limited flexibility for

adaptation during their implementation. Compared to other forms of European Partnerships, they require a

relatively high and long-term effort for their preparation and set-up, including the establishment of dedicated

entities (funding bodies) for their implementation. By default the rules for participation of Horizon Europe i

apply for the calls launched under Institutionalised European Partnerships.

[1] Article 8 of COM(2018)435

  • * 
    1. Have you been involved in the on-going research and innovation framework programme Horizon 2020 or the preceeding Framework Programme 7?

    Yes No

  • * 
    Please identify in which capacity (multiple answers possible):

    Applied for funding Received funding Expert (evaluator, reviewer, etc.) Participated in governance (programme committee, etc.) Other Participated in governance (programme committee, etc.) Other

  • * 
    Are or were you directly involved in a partnership under Horizon 2020 or its predecessor Framework Programme 7?

    Yes No

  • * 
    Please identify your role in the partnership (select all that apply):

    Partner/Member/Beneficiary in a partnership Representative in the governance of a partnership Member of a committee for a partnership Expert (evaluator, reviewer) in calls for proposals in partnership Applied for funding under a partnership Provided national cofinancing to a partnership Other

  • * 
    Please identify the partnership (select all that apply):

    European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP2) Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 (IMI2) Joint Undertaking Electronic Components and Systems for European Leadership (ECSEL) Joint Undertaking 5G (5G PPP) European Metrology Programme for Innovation and Research (EMPIR) Shift2Rail Joint Undertaking Single European Sky Air Traffic Management Research (SESAR) Joint Undertaking Clean Sky 2 Joint Undertaking Fuel Cells and Hydrogen 2 (FCH2) Joint Undertaking Bio-Based Industries Joint Undertaking Eurostars-2 (supporting research-performing small and medium-sized enterprises) Ambient Assisted Living (AAL 2)

    Partnership for Research and Innovation in the Mediterranean Area (PRIMA)

    European High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC)

  • 2. 
    To what extent do you think that the future European Partnerships under Horizon

Europe need to:

1 (Not

needed 2 3 4 5 (Fully Don't needed) Know

at all)

  • * 
    Be more responsive towards EU policy objectives
  • * 
    Be more responsive towards societal needs * Be more responsive towards priorities in national

and regional research and innovation strategies,

including smart specialisation strategies

  • * 
    Make a significant contribution to achieving the UN’

s Sustainable Development Goals

  • * 
    Make significant contribution to the EU efforts to

achieve climate-related goals

  • * 
    Focus more on the development and effective

deployment of technology

  • * 
    Focus more on bringing about transformative

change towards sustainability in their respective area

  • * 
    Make a significant contribution to EU global

competitiveness in specific sectors/domains

  • * 
    Other
  • * 
    (Other) Please specify:

500 character(s) maximum

In general, partnerships should look beyond their own discipline, incorporating (where possible) relevant

social sciences and humanities, technical and medical sciences. The above mentioned statements are

difficult to interpret when we speak about a broad range of partnerships which on itself apply to different

goals of Horizon Europe i. There is no one size fits all approach based on some of these statements, while question two does imply a one size fits all approach.

  • * 
    3. What would you see as main advantages and disadvantages of participation in an Institutionalised European Partnership (as a partner) under Horizon Europe i?

500 character(s) maximum

The main advantage of participation in said partnership is that it supports the creation of a European network

structure for developments and corresponding metrological services. New developments can be handled in a

coordinated and efficient way, without unnecessary doubling of efforts as is already illustrated with the new

kilogram. For maximum effect the cooperation should be extended to the provision of metrological services to industry. A disadvantage can be some loss of sovereignty.

  • 4. 
    For which of the candidate Institutionalised European Partnership(s) would you

like to specifically provide your views through this consultation (you may provide

your views for more than one)?

EU-Africa research partnership on health security to tackle infectious

diseases - Global Health

Innovative Health Initiative

Key Digital Technologies

Smart Networks and Services

European Metrology

Transforming Europe's rail system

Integrated Air Traffic Management

Clean Aviation Clean Aviation Circular bio-based Europe: sustainable innovation for new local value from waste and biomass Clean Hydrogen Safe and Automated Road Transport Innovative SMEs

Part 2 - Questions on problems, objectives, policy options and impact

tailored to each candidate European Partnership

The following questions allow to assess the necessity of a partnership approach, as well as the

need for an Institutionalised Partnership for each candidate partnership.

European Metrology

The European Commission is assessing whether to propose an Institutionalised European Partnership on

Metrology under Horizon Europe i. Its overall objective would be to create sustainable European metrology networks for strategic application areas and for support of emerging technologies. An additional specific

objective relates to the need to maintain and further claim the global lead in state-of-the-art metrology

solutions.

The proposed partnership would build on the experience gained in the existing European Metrology

Programme for Innovation and Research (EMPIR) but would revise its scope, content and implementation

and take account of the strengthened scientific, societal, economic and technological impact criteria of

Horizon Europe i.

The EMPIR initiative, established under Article 185 TFEU, is co-funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 research

and innovation programme and the EMPIR Participating States and its functioning is currently planned until

31 December 2024.

The inception impact assessment outlines an early description of the problems, objectives, options and

likely impact of a candidate European Partnership in this field.

  • 1. 
    To what extent do you think this is relevant for research and innovation efforts at EU level to address the

following problems in relation to metrology?

Research and innovation problems:

1 (Not

relevant 2 3 4 5 (Very Don't

at all) relevant) Know

Lack of understanding of or knowledge about Metrology Innovation gap in the EU in ensuring a Europeanwide metrology system applicable to emerging

technologies and able to support their industrial deployment

Structural and resource problems:

1 (Not

relevant 2 3 4 5 (Very Don't at all) relevant) Know

Limited collaboration and pooling of resources between public actors, such as national metrology institutes, and private actors, such as measurement service providers, device

manufacturers and industry at large

Increasing costs of complex and specialist

metrology infrastructure to meet the increasing scope of metrology requirements i.e. to meet needs of emerging and existing technologies

Problems in uptake of metrology innovations due to:

1 (Not

relevant 2 3 4 5 (Very Don't at all) relevant) Know

Lack of understanding of the benefits metrology brings to emerging technologies

Insufficient consideration of industrial and regulatory user needs when building metrology capacity and the quality infrastructure for emerging technologies

Insufficient digitalisation (data access and analysis, interoperability, and accessibility issues)

to access and use metrology infrastructure and services

  • 2. 
    In your view, how should the specific challenges described above be addressed through Horizon Europe i intervention?

European Partnerships may take any of the following forms:

  • a) 
    Co-programmed European Partnerships: based on memoranda of understanding and/or contractual arrangements between the

Commission and private and/or public partners; b) Co-funded European Partnerships: based on participation in and financial contribution to a programme of R&I activities, using a

Programme co-fund action; or

  • c) 
    Institutionalised European Partnerships: based on participation in and financial contribution to R&I programmes undertaken by

several Member States (under Article 185 TFEU) or by bodies established under Article 187 TFEU (Institutionalised European

Partnerships)

Traditional calls under Horizon Europe i work programmes Co-Funded partnership Co-Programmed partnership Co-Funded partnership Co-Programmed partnership Institutionalised Partnership

  • * 
    Please explain briefly your choice:

500 character(s) maximum

Access to metrological standards and metrological services on the basis of these standards should in any

case and under all circumstances be guaranteed. When it comes to international specialization, this

guarantee can only be delivered by an institutionalized partnership. Any other form can help in gaining

efficiency by cooperation (e.g. the new kilogram), but cannot provide any certainty in the long run. Not having a partnership would be a setback compared to the current situation.

  • 3. 
    In your view, how relevant are the following elements and activities to ensure that the proposed

European Partnership would meet its objectives?

Setting joint long-term agenda with strong involvement of:

1 (Not

relevant) 2 3 4

5 (Very Don’t relevant) Know

Member States and Associated Countries

Industry

Academia

Foundations and Non-Governmental

Organisations

Other societal stakeholders

Pooling and leveraging resources (financial, infrastructure, in-kind expertise

etc.) through coordination, alignment or integration with:

1 (Not 5 (Very Don’t

relevant) 2 3 4 relevant) Know

Member States and Associated Countries

Industry

Academia

Foundations and Non-Governmental

Organisations

Other societal stakeholders

Partnership composition:

1 (Not Don’

relevant) 2 3 4

5 (Very

relevant) t Know

Flexibility in the composition of partners over time

Involvement of a broad range of partners,

including across disciplines and sectors

Implementing the following activities:

1 (Not

relevant) 2 3 4

5 (Very Don’t relevant) Know

Joint R&I programme

Collaborative R&I projects

Deployment and piloting activities

Input to regulatory aspects

Co-creation of solutions with endusers

  • 4. 
    In your view, how relevant is to set up a specific legal structure (funding body) for

the candidate European Partnership to achieve the following?

1 (Not

relevant at 2 3 4 5 (Very

Don’

all) relevant)

t know

Implement its activities more effectively

Implement activities faster to respond to sudden market or policy needs

Implements activities more transparently

Increase financial leverage

Ensure better links to regulators

Ensure better links to practitioners on the ground

Obtain more buy-in and long-term commitment from other partners

Ensure harmonisation of standards and approaches

Facilitate synergies with other EU and national programmes

Facilitate collaboration with other relevant European Partnerships

  • 5. 
    What is your view on the scope and coverage proposed for this candidate

institutionalised European Partnership, based on its inception impact assessment?

Too narrow Right scope & coverage Too broad Don't know

Technologies covered

Research areas covered

Geographical coverage

Types of partners covered

Range of activities covered

Sectoral coverage

Please provide any comment you may have on the proposed scope and coverage for this candidate Institutionalised Partnership:

500 character(s) maximum

Coverage should be as wide as possible.

  • 6. 
    In your view, would it be possible to rationalise the candidate European

Institutionalised Partnership and its activities, and/or to better link it with other comparable initiatives?

Yes No

(Yes) Please explain why? Which other comparable initiatives could it be linked with?

500 character(s) maximum

This partnership underpins developments in other clusters 1, 3, 5 and 6. It should be linked to activities and partnership under these clusters as much as possible.

  • 7. 
    In your view, how relevant is it for the candidate European Institutionalised Partnership to deliver on the

following impacts?

Societal impact:

1 (Not

relevant 2 3 4 5 (Very

Don’ t

at all) relevant) know

Reliable and trusted data exchange and in the

fields of health, environment, social protection and cultural heritage

Economic/technological impact:

1 (Not 2 3 4 5 (Very Don’

relevant relevant) t at all) know

Increased employment in sectors developing and deploying new technologies

Accelerated adoption of, and trade in, new technologies through trusted validation and product performance

More innovative and competitive technologybased businesses

Improved quality assurance for innovative commercial products

Higher added-value for innovative commercial products

Scientific impact:

1 (Not Don’

relevant at 2 3 4 5 (Very t

all) relevant) know

New scientific knowledge and reinforcement of EU scientific capabilities

New measurement techniques and protocols for emerging technologies

More accurate and precise calibration services for any scientific discipline

Contact

RTD-A2-SUPPORT@ec.europa.eu


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