18.10.2023 []

FP9 – EU Commission sketches out the route to its next Framework Programme (2021-2028)

The groundwork for the 2021- 2028 EU research programme is already being laid, with a foresight study in hand, plans to develop new models of how R&D contributes to the economy, and a public consultation due to open next month, Robert Jan-Smits, Director-General for Research at the European Commission told a Science|Business meeting in Brussels yesterday.

Smits outlined the 'process, procedure and timetable' of the successor to Horizon 2020, which - reverting to the previous nomenclature – is called Framework Programme 9 (FP9) for now.

A public consultation will open at the end of the month, with researchers and industry invited to share their experience of Horizon 2020.

In parallel, the Commission has launched a long-term scenario planning exercise called the Bohemia Study, to be completed by the middle of 2017. 'We have asked a group of experts to do a stock take of the different foresight studies by the likes of the OECD and the World Bank', said Smits.

Matthias Weber of the Austrian Institute of Technology, chair of the foresight study group said FP9 should, 'Come up with plans to address the challenges of the 2030s.'

The group has started to work on two scenarios. The more ambitious sees Europe and its research and innovation investment as one of the key global drivers of change in climate and energy policy, urbanisation, digital healthcare and disease prevention, and security and resilience.

The other scenario, with a slightly more pessimistic tone, foresees the 'perseverance' of current trends.

As a third strand to the FP9 preparations, Smits told the audience of 300 industry and research heads that he is tapping top economists to help make a stronger case for the ways in which research and innovation contribute to the competitiveness of member state economies. 'We’re trying to crack open economic models to get research and innovation in there', Smits said.

The Commission is setting up a panel of 12 economics experts, chaired by former director-general of the World Trade Organization and EU trade chief, Pascal Lamy. The group will base its advice on Horizon 2020 interim evaluation results and other evidence drawn from the public consultation that starts next month. It will wrap up its work by June next year.

Smits said evidence for the success of research will give his team an extra edge in budget negotiations. 'Future allocations will be based on the bang for the buck we’ve gotten out of Horizon 2020', he said.

The current programme still has €30 billion left to distribute and there is a request in with member states to get an extra €400 million in the latest EU budget review. This money would be spent on 'four major initiatives', Smits said, declining to go into further detail.

FP9 priorities

The Commission is expected to release its proposal for FP9 early in 2018. It will then take between a year and a half and two years to clear it with the European Parliament and the EU governments, Smits said.

Smits gave some early thoughts on the predominant themes of the new programme, saying, 'Questions we are getting so far include, what are we going to do with defence research?'

Germany’s minister for education and research, Johanna Wanka, has raised this priority with the Commission recently, Smits said.

Currently, EU law bans pure defence research under framework programmes, but grants are available for so-called dual use technology, research into crime prevention, security and disaster preparedness.

Other FP9 issues being chewed over at the moment include: more capacity building research money for Central and Eastern European countries; whether the Commission should continue to fund big companies; and ways to bump up international participation.

Smits said the structure of the next programme is under review as well. Horizon 2020 rests on three pillars: excellent science, industrial leadership and grand societal challenges.

There was also a brief update on the European Innovation Council, which Smits said is being stitched together behind the scenes. The need for the new Council is borne out of the feeling that grants are not always available for risky projects.

'We don’t give sufficient support to the crazy ideas', said Smits.

Source and full article: Science|Business