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Focus on early-stage research urged for Horizon successor

With 10th framework programme likely to live alongside plethora of sector-specific spending pots, EU countries must decide if it should do a bit of everything or go back to basics

Published on
October 25, 2023
Last updated
October 25, 2023
Firing line of the French line infantry reenactment to illustrate Focus on early-stage research urged for Horizon successor
Source: Getty images

Talk in Brussels is聽turning to聽the European Union鈥檚 next research and development programme, which will run from 2028 to聽2034 鈥 and while much remains undecided, a聽consensus is聽forming that it聽needs to聽focus more on聽early-stage research.

For the past 10 months, a聽committee co-chaired by the European Commission and made up of聽directors general from the science ministries of EU and Horizon Europe-associated countries has been debating the next framework programme, currently known as聽FP10.

A committee task force is working on a formal position, due to be debated in spring 2024 and formally adopted in June that year.

The group has agreed a 鈥渧ision鈥 for the programme, which includes its international political context and its overall structure, and they have just began debating the detail, with the 鈥渕ost important鈥 aspect so far being the relative share of fundamental and applied research the programme should fund.

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鈥淭here are a lot of people who say the balance in Horizon Europe is a bit broken, [that] it went a bit too far towards high TRL, towards knowledge exploitation,鈥 a Brussels embassy science attach茅 for an influential EU country told 探花视频, referring to 鈥渢echnology readiness levels鈥, a聽measure of a given technology鈥檚 maturity or closeness to market.

EU research programmes have tended to fund more applied work since they began in the mid-1980s, the attach茅 said, noting that in recent years they had been joined by other sector-specific programmes such as Digital Europe, the European Defence Fund and EU4Health, which also fund research.

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According to the attach茅, the 鈥渇undamental question鈥 was whether the next framework programme should pursue EU goals in these areas, or whether its sister programmes should take on responsibility for sector-specific research.

The European Parliament鈥檚 lead on the programmes, Christian Ehler, has called for a 鈧200聽billion (拢174聽billion) budget for FP10, roughly double that of the current programme.

鈥淓ither we get a framework programme with 鈧500聽billion, and then it can do everything from knowledge creation to knowledge exploitation, or we say, 鈥榃e focus the research programme more on聽research.鈥 That鈥檚 the dilemma,鈥 the attach茅 said.

鈥淚f we solve the interplay between all the programmes, then a lot of pieces of the puzzle will start to fall into place, including the money.鈥

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The most recent iterations of the programme have had three 鈥減illars鈥, with the first funding excellent research, the second collaborative projects and the third innovation.

The directors general committee invited university groups and other lobbyists to a meeting in September to give their take on FP10. Laura Keustermans, who represented the League of European Research Universities, and Sarika Wilson, who represented the Guild of European Research-Intensive Universities, said there had been some consensus between the countries and the guests on Horizon Europe鈥檚 overly high TRL levels, particularly in the programme鈥檚 second pillar.

鈥淭here is no balance any more between research and innovation; it鈥檚 going too much towards the innovation side. To be able to continue to feed this innovation process, it鈥檚 important there is more fundamental research in pillar two,鈥 Ms聽Keustermans said.

In July last year, the commission to compare the funding for early-stage research in Horizon Europe鈥檚 second pillar with that in its predecessor, Horizon 2020, although the officials鈥 response .

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Ms Wilson noted that the second pillar had swollen in Horizon Europe to take up half the programme鈥檚 overall budget, but that it was increasingly focused on short-term goals.

European universities and science ministries also seem united in their frustration over the flexibility of the framework programmes鈥 budgets, citing the commission鈥檚 ability to pinch funds for pet political projects.

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ben.upton@timeshighereducation.com

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