
The EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation - Horizon 2020 - is the most important instrument for the implementation of the Innovation Union. This flagship initiative of the Europe 2020 Strategy aims to strengthen Europe's ability to compete. The November 2011 commission proposal for the programme is to be adopted by both the Competitiveness Council and the European Parliament by the end of 2013. The EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation is the world's largest funding programme for research projects. The BMBF supports national efforts to ensure excellent research at a European level. Various advisory services are offered to German applicants, for example, by the Federal Government's National Contact Points for the Research Framework Programme (NCPs).
European research ministers in Copenhagen ©Danish EU Council Presidency 2012Following an invitation from the Danish council presidency, research ministers from across Europe met in Copenhagen in early February 2012 in order to discuss the future European Framework Programme for Research "Horizon 2020". The council is responsible for the internal market and for securing the best framework conditions for industry and research. Horizon 2020 is to start on 1 January 2014 and aims to strenghten Europe for global competition.
The further implementation of the European Research Area (ERA) and the development of the future EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation "Horizon 2020" are currently on the agenda of European research ministers. Europe must implement the ERA and meet the growth expectations of the Europe 2020 Strategy through forward-looking research and innovation policies - only then will Europe be able to compete globally. The German Federal Government views the future framework programme as the central strategic instrument in this process.
Important social and economic challenges of the 21st century include areas such as energy, climate, resources, health, nutrition, and demographic change. Answers and solutions can only be found through European or worldwide cooperation in education, research, and science. Simultaneously, the global competition for technologies and markets is constantly growing. We must strengthen the competitiveness of European companies by advancing key technologies while expediting and improving the implementation of research findings into new products, processes, and services. The humanities and social sciences play an essential role in interdisciplinary efforts to meet the key challenges faced by European society. In Germany and Europe, institutions of higher education are the central medium for this kind of research.
The European research ministers in Sopot, Poland ©Polish EU Presidency 2011Research ministers from across Europe met in Sopot on 20 and 21 July 2011, following an invitation from the Polish Council Presidency, in order to discuss the European Research Area (ERA) and the future EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation.
On the basis of the Treaty of Lisbon, all measures taken in the field of research funding and technological development are pooled in a collective Framework Programme for Research.
The primary goal of the Framework Programme for Research is to strengthen the scientific and technological basis for European industry and to foster its international competitiveness, in addition to supporting all research efforts which are considered necessary for other EU policies.
The EU Research Framework Programme is administered centrally from Brussels. Topics and calls for proposals are determined and issued by the EU, meaning they follow a top-down approach. Research cooperation in Europe is also advanced and practically supplemented by programmes such as COST and EUREKA, both of which take a bottom-up approach, meaning topics are determined by the applicants.
The seventh EU Framework Programme (FP7) has an overall budged of €54.4 billion. Of this total, €4 billion are designated for Euratom.
FP7 is divided into four specific programmes:
€1.7 billion are allocated to the Joint Research Centre (JRC), which provides customer-driven scientific and technical support in the conception, development, implementation, and monitoring of EU policies. The JRC also serves as a reference centre for science and technology for the EU.
For the first time, procedures within the framework programme will be more flexible and more rationally designed ("Simplification"). In addition, the "Risk-Sharing Finance Facility" (RSFF) will be introduced as a new financing system in cooperation with the European Investment Bank (EIB).
The sixth EU Framework Programme (FP6) expired at the end of 2006. It had a budget of approximately €20 billion (including the Euratom Framework Programme) for a period of four years. The main goal of FP6 was the implementation of the European Research Area.
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National Contact Point in Germany
2011, 2 pages
Order No: 30574
Download [PDF - 751,1 kB] (URL: http://www.bmbf.de/pub/flyer_europaeischer_forschungsrat_en.pdf)

2010, 12 pages
Order No: 30591
Download [PDF - 1,09 MB] (URL: http://www.bmbf.de/pub/germany_inspires_innovation.pdf)

2009, 10 pages
Order No: 30496
Download [PDF - 210,3 kB] (URL: http://www.bmbf.de/pub/1_ZEW-Endbericht_en.pdf)
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