Source: http://docplayer.net/5046344-20-general-annexes-important-notice-on-the-second-horizon-2020-work-programme.html
Timestamp: 2018-05-25 22:49:49
Document Index: 16895589

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 20', 'art 18']

20. General Annexes. Important notice on the second Horizon 2020 Work Programme - PDF
20. General Annexes. Important notice on the second Horizon 2020 Work Programme
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2 Table of Contents A. LIST OF COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR FUNDING... 3 B. STANDARD ADMISSIBILITY CONDITIONS AND RELATED REQUIREMENTS... 5 C. STANDARD ELIGIBILITY CONDITIONS... 7 D. TYPES OF ACTION: SPECIFIC PROVISIONS AND FUNDING RATES E. SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS FOR INNOVATION PROCUREMENT (PCP/PPI) SUPPORTED BY HORIZON 2020 GRANTS F. MODEL RULES OF CONTEST (ROC) FOR PRIZES G. TECHNOLOGY READINESS LEVELS (TRL) H. EVALUATION RULES I. BUDGET FLEXIBILITY J. ACTIONS INVOLVING CLASSIFIED INFORMATION K. ACTIONS INVOLVING FINANCIAL SUPPORT TO THIRD PARTIES Part 20 - Page 2 of 44
3 A. List of countries eligible for funding 1. Legal entities established in the following countries and territories will be eligible to receive funding through Horizon 2020 grants: The Member States (MS) of the European Union (EU), including their overseas departments; The Overseas Countries and Territories (OCT) linked to the Member States 1 : Anguilla, Aruba, Bermuda, Bonaire, British Indian Ocean Territory, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Curaçao, Falkland Islands, French Polynesia, French Southern and Antarctic Territories, Greenland, Montserrat, New Caledonia, Pitcairn Islands, Saba, Saint Barthélémy, Saint Helena, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Sint Eustatius, Sint Maarten, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands,Turks and Caicos Islands, Wallis and Futuna. The associated countries (AC): the latest information on which countries are associated, or in the process of association to Horizon 2020 can be found in the online manual 2. The following countries, except where this is explicitly excluded in the call text 3 Afghanistan, Algeria, American Samoa, Angola, Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Belarus, Belize, Benin, Bhutan, Bolivia, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, Colombia, Comoros, Congo (Democratic People s Republic), Congo (Republic), Costa Rica, Côte d Ivoire, Cuba, Djibouti, Democratic People's Republic of Korea,Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Fiji, Gabon, Gambia, Georgia, Ghana, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Buissau, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jamaica, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kiribati, Kosovo*, Kyrgyz Republic, Lao, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Marshall Islands, Mauritania, Mauritius, Micronesia, Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Palau, Palestine, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Rwanda, Samoa, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Solomon Islands, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Sri Lanka, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Sudan, Suriname, Swaziland, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Entities from Overseas Countries and Territories (OCT) are eligible for funding under the same conditions as entities from the Member States to which the OCT in question is linked Provided that natural or legal persons, groups or non-state entities are not covered by the Council sanctions in force. Please see: the consolidated list of persons, groups and entities subject to EU financial sanctions, available at Part 20 - Page 3 of 44
4 Tanzania, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uganda,, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Uruguay, Venezuela, Vietnam,, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe. If in the meantime one of these countries becomes associated to Horizon 2020, it will immediately be shown in the relevant on-line manual mentioned above. Note that entities from associated countries are eligible to participate according to the conditions set out in annex C. (* This designation is without prejudice to positions on status and is in line with UNSCR 1244/99 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence). 2. International European interest organisations 4 will also be eligible to receive funding from Horizon Legal entities established in countries not listed above will be eligible for funding when such funding is explicitly foreseen in the call. 4. In addition, legal entities established in countries not listed above and international organisations (IOs) will be eligible for funding: When funding for such participants is provided for under a bilateral scientific and technological agreement or any other arrangement between the EU and an international organisation or a third country; When the Commission deems participation of the entity essential for carrying out the action funded through Horizon 2020; For Prizes, any legal entity, regardless of its place of establishment, or international organisation may receive funding These are international organisations, the majority of whose members are Member States or associated countries, and whose principal objective is to promote scientific and technological cooperation in Europe. Provided that natural or legal persons, groups or non-state entities are not covered by the Council sanctions in force. Part 20 - Page 4 of 44
5 B. Standard admissibility conditions and related requirements 1. For all actions under this Work Programme (except for ERC actions; see below), proposals/prize applications must comply with the admissibility conditions set out in this Annex, unless they are supplemented or modified in the call conditions or rules of contest. To be considered admissible, a proposal/application must be: (a) submitted in the electronic submission system before the deadline given in the call conditions or rules of contest; (b) readable, accessible and printable. 2. Incomplete proposals/applications may be considered inadmissible. This includes the requested administrative data, the proposal description, and any supporting documents specified in the call/contest. 3. The following supporting documents will be required to determine the operational capacity for grant proposals, unless otherwise specified in the call: A curriculum vitae or description of the profile of the persons who will be primarily responsible for carrying out the proposed research and/or innovation activities; A list of up to five relevant publications, and/or products, services (including widelyused datasets or software), or other achievements relevant to the call content; A list of up to five relevant previous projects or activities, connected to the subject of this proposal; A description of any significant infrastructure and/or any major items of technical equipment, relevant to the proposed work; A description of any third parties that are not represented as project partners, but who will nonetheless be contributing towards the work (e.g. providing facilities, computing resources) 4. Grant proposals must include a draft plan for the exploitation and dissemination of the results, unless otherwise specified in the call conditions. The draft plan is not required for proposals at the first stage of two-stage procedures. 5. In addition, page limits will apply to proposals/applications. Unless stated otherwise in the call conditions, the limit for a full proposal is 70 pages, except for coordination and support actions and ERA-NET Cofund actions, where the limit is 50 pages. The limit for a first-stage proposal is 10 pages. For prize applications, any specific limits will be set in the Rules of Contest. The limits will be clearly shown in the proposal templates in the Participant Portal electronic submission system. Sections which are not subject to limits will be indicated. Part 20 - Page 5 of 44
6 If a proposal/application exceeds the limits, the applicant will receive an automatic warning, and will be advised to re-submit a version that conforms. After the call deadline, excess pages (in over-long proposals/applications) will be automatically overprinted with a watermark. Expert evaluators will be instructed to disregard these excess pages. *** Part 20 - Page 6 of 44
7 C. Standard eligibility conditions 1. All proposals must comply with the eligibility conditions set out in the Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013. Furthermore, for actions under this Work Programme proposals/prize applications must comply with the eligibility conditions set out in this Annex, unless they are supplemented or modified in the call conditions. A proposal/application will only be considered eligible if: (a) its content corresponds, wholly or in part, to the topic/contest description for which it is submitted (b) it complies with the eligibility conditions for participation set out in the table below, depending on the type of action: Eligibility conditions for participation 6,7,8 Research & innovation actions (RIA) Innovation actions (IA) Coordination & support actions (CSA) SME instrument At least three legal entities. Each of the three must be established in a different EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. All three legal entities must be independent of each other. At least three legal entities. Each of the three must be established in a different EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. All three legal entities must be independent of each other. At least one legal entity established in an EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. At least one SME 9. Only applications from for-profit SMEs established in EU Member States or Horizon 2020 associated countries The eligibility criteria formulated in Commission notice Nr. 2013/C 205/05 (OJEU C 205 of , pp.9-11) apply for all actions under this Work Programme, including for third parties that receive financial support under the action (in accordance with Article 137 of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012), notably programme cofund actions. 7 Natural or legal persons, groups or non-state entities covered by the Council sanctions in force are not eligible to participate in Union programmes. Please see the consolidated list of persons, groups and entities subject to EU financial sanctions, available at 8 Given that the EU does not recognise the illegal annexation of Crimea and Sevastopol, legal persons established in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea or the city of Sevastopol are not eligible to participate in any capacity. This criterion also applies in cases where the action involves financial support given by grant beneficiaries to third parties established in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea or the city of Sevastopol (in accordance with Article 137 of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012). Should the illegal annexation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the City of Sevastopol end, this Work Programme will be revised. 9 For-profit SMEs means micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises, as defined in Commission Recommendation 2003/361/EC, that are not 'non-profit legal entities' as defined in the Horizon 2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013 (i.e. legal entity which by its legal form is non-profit-making or which has a legal or statutory obligation not to distribute profits to its shareholders or individual members ). 10 In line with the EU 2020 strategy, the SME instrument is designed to promote competitiveness, growth and job creation of European SMEs through delivering innovations for the market place. SMEs will be supported to enhance their innovation capacity and innovation output with growth potential. As the SME Part 20 - Page 7 of 44
8 actions ERA-NET Cofund actions Precommercial procurement (PCP) & Public procurement of Innovative solutions (PPI) actions European Joint Programme (EJP) Cofund actions No concurrent submission or implementation with another SME instrument phase 1 or phase 2 project. 11 At least three legal entities. Each of the three must be established in a different EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. All three legal entities must be independent of each other. Participants in ERA-NET Cofund actions must be research funders, i.e. legal entities owning or managing public research and innovation programmes. 12 At least three legal entities. Each of the three must be established in a different EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. All three legal entities must be independent of each other. Furthermore, there must be a minimum of two legal entities which are public procurers 13 from two different EU Member States or Horizon 2020 associated countries. Both legal entities must be independent of each other. At least five legal entities. Each of the five must be established in a different EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. All five legal entities must be independent of each other. 14 Participants in EJP Cofund actions must be legal entities owning or mandated to manage national research and innovation programmes. 15 instrument aims to bridge the gap between research and development and the commercialisation of innovation, the funding of single company projects is possible. The projects need to have a clear European added value (see Article 9(3) Horizon 2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013). 11 The SME instrument is targeted at companies that need SME instrument funding as core part of their business strategy to launch a high-potential innovation. It is a competitive scheme in which only the best ideas have a chance to succeed. Consequently SMEs with usually limited absorptions capacities, need to focus their applications but have the chance to come back due to the permanently open call. This way it should also be possible to achieve a reasonable success rate. 12 ERA-NET Cofund actions support coordination and collaboration between Member States and their research and innovation programmes. Consequently participation in these actions is limited to entities that can fully participate in joint calls and other actions between national and regional programmes. In this regard programme owners are typically national/regional ministries/authorities responsible for defining, financing or managing research programmes carried out at national or regional level. Programme managers are typically research councils or funding agencies or other national or regional organisations that implement research programmes under the supervision of the programme owners. 13 Public procurers are organisations that are contracting authority or contracting entity as defined in EU public procurement directives 2004/18/EC, 2004/17/EC, and 2009/81/EC and in EU legislation replacing those in particular Directive 2014/24/EU and Directive 2014/25/EU. 14 EJP Cofund actions support coordinated national research and innovation programmes. In line with the objective of transnational integration though a critical mass of resources, the required minimum number of participants is higher than the one provided in the Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/ It is appropriate that core participation in EJP cofund actions is limited to entities that can fully participate through their contribution of national and regional programmes: programme owners, typically national ministries/regional authorities responsible for defining, financing or managing programmes carried out at national or regional level or 'programme managers' (such as research councils or funding agencies) or other entities that implement national or regional research and innovation programmes under the mandate of the programme owners. Beyond the minimum participants, other legal entities may participate if justified by the nature of the action, in particular entities created to coordinate or integrate transnational research efforts, grouping funding from public and private sources. Part 20 - Page 8 of 44
9 Framework Partnership Agreement (FPA) Prizes At least one legal entity established in an EU Member State or Horizon 2020 associated country. See conditions for participation in the Rules of Contest. *** Note: 1. Sole participants formed by several legal entities (e.g. European Research Infrastructure Consortia, European Groupings of Territorial Cooperation, central purchasing bodies) are eligible if the above-mentioned minimum conditions are satisfied by the legal entities forming together the sole participant. 2. The eligibility conditions applying to Marie Skłodowska Curie (MSC) actions are set out under the MSC part of this Work Programme. 3. The eligibility conditions of European Research Council (ERC) actions are part of a separate work programme (see the ERC Work Programme on the Participant Portal). Part 20 - Page 9 of 44
10 D. Types of action: specific provisions and funding rates 16,17 Research and innovation actions (RIA) Description: Action primarily consisting of activities aiming to establish new knowledge and/or to explore the feasibility of a new or improved technology, product, process, service or solution. For this purpose they may include basic and applied research, technology development and integration, testing and validation on a small-scale prototype in a laboratory or simulated environment. Projects may contain closely connected but limited demonstration or pilot activities aiming to show technical feasibility in a near to operational environment. Funding rate: 100% Innovation actions (IA) Description: Action primarily consisting of activities directly aiming at producing plans and arrangements or designs for new, altered or improved products, processes or services. For this purpose they may include prototyping, testing, demonstrating, piloting, large-scale product validation and market replication. A demonstration or pilot aims to validate the technical and economic viability of a new or improved technology, product, process, service or solution in an operational (or near to operational) environment, whether industrial or otherwise, involving where appropriate a larger scale prototype or demonstrator. A market replication aims to support the first application/deployment in the market of an innovation that has already been demonstrated but not yet applied/deployed in the market due to market failures/barriers to uptake. 'Market replication' does not cover multiple applications in the market of an innovation 18 that has already been applied successfully once in the market. First means new at least to Europe or new at least to the application sector in question. Often such projects involve a validation of technical and economic performance at system level in real life operating conditions provided by the market. Projects may include limited research and development activities. Funding rate: 70% (except for non-profit legal entities, where a rate of 100% applies) Eligible costs for all types of action are in accordance with the Financial Regulation No 966/2012 and the Horizon 2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013. In addition, as training researchers on gender issues serves the policy objectives of Horizon 2020 and is necessary for the implementation of R&I actions, applicants may include in their proposal such activity and the following corresponding estimated costs that may be eligible for EU funding: (a) Costs of delivering the training (personnel costs if the trainers are employees of the beneficiary or subcontracting if the training is outsourced); (b) Accessory direct costs such as travel and subsistence costs, if the training is delivered outside the beneficiary's premises; (c) Remuneration costs for the researchers attending the training, in proportion to the actual hours spent on the training (as personnel costs). Participants may ask for a lower rate. A new or improved technology, product, design, process, service or solution. Part 20 - Page 10 of 44
11 Coordination and support actions (CSA) Description: Actions consisting primarily of accompanying measures such as standardisation, dissemination, awareness-raising and communication, networking, coordination or support services, policy dialogues and mutual learning exercises and studies, including design studies for new infrastructure and may also include complementary activities of strategic planning, networking and coordination between programmes in different countries. Funding rate: 100% SME instrument Description: The SME instrument is targeted at all types of innovative SMEs showing a strong ambition to develop, grow and internationalise. It provides staged support covering the whole innovation cycle in three phases complemented by a mentoring and coaching service. Transition from one phase to the next will be seamless provided the SME project proves to be worth further support in a further evaluation. Each phase is open to new entrants. a) SME instrument (phase 1) Description: Feasibility study verifying the technological/practical as well as economic viability of an innovation idea/concept with considerable novelty to the industry sector in which it is presented (new products, processes, design, services and technologies or new market applications of existing technologies). The activities could, for example, comprise risk assessment, market study, user involvement, intellectual property management, innovation strategy development, partner search, feasibility of concept, and the like, to establish a solid high-potential innovation project aligned to the enterprise strategy and with a European dimension. Bottlenecks in the ability to increase profitability of the enterprise through innovation shall be detected and analysed during phase 1 and addressed during phase 2, to increase the return in investment in innovation activities. Funding rate: Funding will be provided in the form of a lump sum of EUR 50, b) SME instrument (phase 2) Description: innovation projects that address a specific challenge and demonstrate high potential in terms of company competitiveness and growth underpinned by a strategic business plan. Activities should focus on innovation activities such as demonstration, testing, prototyping, piloting, scaling-up, miniaturisation, design, market replication and the like aiming to bring an innovation idea (product, process, service etc.) to industrial readiness and maturity for market introduction, but may also include some research. In exceptional circumstances, duly justified by the character of an area, a topic may provide for actions where the research component is strongly present, as an alternative to the innovation actions described above. SMEs can subcontract work and knowledge that is essential for their innovation project in the spirit of the innovation voucher concept. 19 Commission Decision C(2013)8198 authorizing the reimbursement of cost under the form of a lump sum for SME instrument phase 1 actions under Framework Programme Horizon 2020 states that the total eligible cost for a phase 1 project is EUR Applying the co-financing rate of 70%, the amount of the grant is established at EUR Part 20 - Page 11 of 44
12 Proposals should be based on a strategic business plan either developed through phase 1 or another means. Funding rate: 70% (exceptionally, 100% where the research component is strongly present). The single applicable rate is specified under the relevant topic. c) SME instrument (phase 3): Support to commercialisation promotes the wider implementation of innovative solutions and customers and supports financing of growth by facilitating access to public and private risk capital. This stage will not provide for direct funding, but SMEs can benefit from indirect support measures and services as well as access to the financial facilities supported under Horizon d) Mentoring and coaching: Each beneficiary of the SME instrument will be offered business coaching support during Phase 1 (up to 3 coaching days) and Phase 2 (up to 12 coaching days) in addition to the grant offered. This support will be provided through the Enterprise Europe Network (EEN) and delivered by a group of qualified and experienced business coaches. The local EEN office will introduce the beneficiary to the coaching process and propose a selection of coaches from the database managed by the Commission for the beneficiary to choose from. The objective is to accelerate the impact of the support provided through the SME instrument and to equip beneficiaries with the necessary skills, business processes and relevant competencies for long-term growth. Phase 3 does not include individual business coaching, but SME instrument participants will be able to count on continuing EEN support in linking to relevant support services within the Network, regionally or nationally. It is important to note that the objective of coaching is not to support the company in project management or reporting obligations related to Horizon 2020 participation. This stage will not provide for direct funding. ERA-NET Cofund actions Description: ERA-NET Cofund actions under Horizon 2020 are designed to support publicpublic partnerships, including joint programming initiatives between Member States, in their preparation, establishment of networking structures, design, implementation and coordination of joint activities as well as EU topping-up of a trans-national call for proposals. It is based on the merger of the former ERA-NET and ERA-NET Plus actions and is implemented by using programme co-fund actions. It allows for programme collaboration in any part of the entire research-innovation cycle. The main and compulsory activity of ERA-NET Cofund actions under Horizon 2020 is the implementation of the co-funded joint call for proposals that leads to the funding of transnational research and/or innovation projects. The call is normally based on a call for proposals resulting in grants to third parties. In addition to the co-funded call, the consortia may implement other joint activities (including other joint calls without EU co-funding). ERA-NET Cofund actions may also, depending on the research area and the underlying national programmes and their governing principles, target governmental research organisations. The co-funded call for proposals will in these cases be based on in-kind contributions from their institutional funding and the beneficiaries carry out the transnational projects resulting from their call for proposals fully or partially themselves. The in-kind contributions are the resources allocated as direct expenditure in the selected trans-national projects that are not reimbursed by the EU contribution. Part 20 - Page 12 of 44
13 The participation of programme managers including governmental research organisations has to be mandated by the national/regional authorities in charge (normally the responsible Ministry). The minimum conditions for participation have to be fulfilled by the entities participating in the joint trans-national call for proposals. Only in addition to the minimum conditions, and if justified by the nature of the action, programmes funded by other entities (international programmes, foundations or other nonpublic programmes) may participate. Sole participants 20 may be eligible if the above-mentioned specific conditions for eligible ERA-NET Cofund partners are satisfied. A sole participant forming a sole legal entity must explicitly indicate which of its 'members' are either programme owners or programme managers in the proposed action, and indicate for these members the respective national/regional programmes which are at the disposal of the proposed ERA-NET Cofund action. Funding rate: The EU contribution will be limited to a maximum of 33% of the total eligible costs of the action. The EU contribution to the costs for support to or implementation of transnational projects is limited to one call per grant agreement. Other information: In accordance with the H2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013, Article 137(1)(c) of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012 and Article 210a of the Rules of Application Regulation No 1268/2012, do not apply to financial support provided by the participants in the ERA-NET Cofund actions (since this financial support is the primary aim of the action and necessary to achieve its objectives). The contributions of (other) national or regional programmes which are not part of the consortium to the costs of trans-national projects cannot be considered for the calculation of the EU contribution. No costs are eligible for activities related to the preparation, implementation and follow-up of the co-funded call. The consortium may however choose to use part of the EU contribution to support their activities as long as the corresponding costs are not declared as eligible and the EU contribution does not exceed 33% of partners' funding of trans-national projects and unit costs for additional activities. This means in practice that they have to replace any EU contribution that is used to support their activities with additional national contributions to the funding of trans-national projects. The total EU contribution to the costs of providing support to or implementation of transnational projects is calculated as a percentage of their total eligible cost. Therefore, if the actual eligible costs for support to trans-national projects are lower than the original amount defined in the grant agreement, the EU contribution will be reduced accordingly. The following categories of costs are eligible direct costs (if they comply with the general conditions and the specific conditions set out in the grant agreement): A. Costs related to trans-national projects A.1 Direct costs of providing financial support to third parties implementing transnational projects A.2 Costs for the implementation of trans-national projects by the beneficiaries 20 See Article 199 of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012. Part 20 - Page 13 of 44
14 The consortium must provide financial support to trans-national projects or implement such projects (partially or fully) themselves in accordance with the following conditions: The projects must be trans-national projects involving at least two independent entities from two different EU Member States or Associated Countries. The projects must be selected following a joint trans-national call for proposals. The consortium must publish the joint call on a dedicated webpage and promote it at national/regional level via their usual channels of communications to potential proposers. The joint call must remain open for the submission of proposals for at least 60 days. The consortium must formally notify the Commission of the call and its content at least 30 days before the expected date of publication. The consortium must make the joint call through a two-step procedure: Step 1: review at national or trans-national level Step 2: single international peer review. Only entities that are eligible for funding under the national programmes involved in the joint call may be invited to step 2. In step 2, the consortium must evaluate proposals with the assistance of at least three independent experts, on the basis of the following award criteria: (a) excellence; (b) impact; (c) quality and efficiency of the implementation. Proposals must be ranked according to the evaluation results. The selection must be made on the basis of this ranking. The consortium must take all lawful steps to ensure confidentiality of information and documents obtained during the evaluation and selection procedures of the joint call. After the end of the evaluation the consortium must submit to the Commission the following: (a) (b) (c) (d) the ranking list(s) of the projects; the observers' report on the evaluation; the joint selection list of the projects to be funded, and from each consortium partner participating in the joint call, a formal and duly signed commitment on availability of funds for the selected projects. The consortium must furthermore submit to the European Commission after the end of the evaluation information on each project selected for funding, including data on each participant and abstracts of the project proposal, in a format specified by the European Commission, for publication and evaluation purposes. This information must be updated at the end of the action (information on each funded project, including data on each participant and overview of the results). B. Coordination costs for additional activities, as a unit cost per year, if the beneficiary carries out activities that go beyond the co-funded call An ERA-NET Cofund consortium may carry out other activities in addition to the call receiving top-up funding. Where appropriate, additional partners might be involved which do not participate in co-funded calls under section A. The activities have to be related to the coordination of public research and innovation programmes and should focus on the Part 20 - Page 14 of 44
15 preparation and implementation of joint activities including additional calls without EU top-up funding. The conditions for call implementation in section A do not apply to additional calls without EU top-up funding. The coordination cost for the other activities takes the form of a unit cost per year and is limited to those beneficiaries that carry out activities that go beyond the co-funded call. Proposers have to demonstrate the appropriateness of the overall coordination costs for the proposed additional activities. Beneficiaries that carry out trans-national projects partially or fully themselves cannot declare coordination costs for additional activities. The unit costs for coordination is fixed to EURO per year per beneficiary 21. Indirect costs for the coordination costs must be declared on the basis of the flat rate. 22 The EU contribution to coordination costs should not exceed 20% of the total EU contribution to the action. The total duration of the action should normally not exceed 5 years. European Joint Programme (EJP) Cofund actions Description: The European Joint Programme ('EJP') Cofund under Horizon 2020 is a programme cofund action designed to support coordinated national research and innovation programmes. The EJP Cofund aims at attracting and pooling a critical mass of national resources on objectives and challenges of Horizon 2020 and at achieving significant economies of scales by adding related Horizon 2020 resources to a joint effort. The EJP Cofund does not promote types of activities or forms of coordination, but relies on modalities and processes agreed by the coordinated national programmes and related actors. Eligible participants: The minimum number of participants in EJPs is five independent legal entities from different Member States or associated countries owning or managing national research and innovation programmes: (a) Programme owners, typically national ministries/regional authorities responsible for defining, financing or managing programmes carried out at national or regional level. (b) Programme 'managers' (such as research councils or funding agencies) or other entities that implement national or regional research and innovation programmes under the supervision of the programme owners. The participation of programme managers has to be mandated by the national/regional authorities in charge. In addition to the minimum conditions, other legal entities may participate if justified by the nature of the action, in particular entities created to coordinate or integrate transnational research efforts, grouping funding from both national and private sources Commission Decision C(2013)8200. The reimbursement rate for the action applies also to the unit costs. This would result in a maximum Union contribution per beneficiary per year of EURO ,50. Part 20 - Page 15 of 44
16 Sole participants 23 may be eligible if the above-mentioned specific eligibility conditions for EJP Cofund partners are satisfied. A sole participant forming a sole legal entity must explicitly indicate which of its 'members' are either programme owners or programme managers in the proposed action, and indicate for these members the respective national/regional programmes which are at the disposal of the proposed EJP Cofund action. Justification for additional eligibility criteria: In line with the objective of transnational integration though a critical mass of resources, the required minimum number of participants is higher than the one provided in the Horizon 2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2012. In addition, such participants must be established in different Member States or associated countries in order to further establish an appropriate level of cooperation and integration. Finally, EJP Cofund actions support coordination and future integration of national research and innovation programmes. It is appropriate that core participation in these actions is limited to entities that can fully participate through their contribution of national and regional programmes. Funded activities: The main activity of the action is the implementation of a joint programme of activities to attain objectives common to Horizon 2020, ranging from research to coordination and networking activities, including training activities, demonstration and dissemination activities, support to third parties etc. The Horizon 2020 funding can be used to enhance and expand the activities of existing coordinated programmes or create new ones, provided they aim at attaining the objectives of a European transnational joint-programme established by the EJP Cofund consortium. The EJP Cofund will identify the objectives, work and the schedules of activities to be carried out in this context. It will be necessary to provide a detailed description of these activities for the initial and each successive twelve-month periods of the EJP Cofund, as the joint programme develops in line with the initial objectives. An annual work programme, combined with a progress report on previous achievements will be a key deliverable for the implementation of the EJP Cofund action on a rolling basis. It will be submitted and approved by the Commission before the beginning of activities for each reporting period: at proposal submission: a description of the overall objectives and schedule of proposed activities, together with the 1 st annual work programme; before the periodic reports: an update to the annual work programme must be submitted three months before the end of the each reporting period (and after evaluation and possible revision further to Commission comments the annual work programme will be agreed before the start of the next reporting period). The Horizon 2020 contribution takes the form of a grant consisting of a reimbursement of the eligible costs related to the action, in accordance with the conditions set out in the grant agreement and relevant Commission decisions, including reimbursement of actually incurred costs, lump sums, unit costs or flat rates. Financial support provided to third parties as part of 23 See Article 199 of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012. Part 20 - Page 16 of 44
17 the joint programme implementation, for example through calls for proposals or under otherwise defined conditions (cascade grants), is also eligible for reimbursement. In accordance with the H2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013, Article 137(1)(c) of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012 and Article 210a of the Rules of Application Regulation No 1268/2012 do not apply to financial support provided by the participants in the EJP Cofund actions to third parties, when the financial support to third parties is a primary aim of the action or necessary to achieve its objectives. Funding rate: The Horizon 2020 contribution will be limited to 70% of the total eligible costs of the action, unless otherwise specified in the call conditions, in line with the objective of achieving a balanced funding of the EJP Cofund from Horizon 2020 and participating public programmes. Pre-Commercial Procurement (PCP) actions Description: PCP actions aim to encourage public procurement of research, development and validation of new solutions that can bring significant quality and efficiency improvements in areas of public interest, whilst opening market opportunities for industry and researchers active in Europe. It provides EU funding for a group of procurers ( buyers group ) to undertake together one joint PCP procurement, so that there is one joint call for tender, one joint evaluation of offers, and a lead procurer 24 awarding the R&D service contracts in the name and on behalf of the buyers group. Each procurer in the buyers group contributes its individual financial contribution to the total budget necessary to jointly finance the PCP, enabling the procurers to share the costs of procuring R&D services from a number of providers and comparing together the merits of alternative solutions paths from a number of competing providers to address the common challenge. The PCP must address one concrete procurement need that is identified as a common challenge 25 in the innovation plans of the procurers in the buyers group that requires new R&D and is described in the common specifications of the joint PCP call for tender. Eligible participants: The buyers group must contain minimum two legal entities which are public procurers that are established in two different Member States or associated countries. Both legal entities must be independent of each other. The procurers in the buyers group must be responsible for the acquisition and/or regulatory strategy for the targeted innovative solutions and aim to obtain ambitious quality and efficiency improvements in the area of public interest addressed by the PCP, or be entities with a mandate from one or more of such procurers to act on their behalf in the procurement (e.g. central purchasing bodies). Other entities (e.g. end-users, certification bodies, private/ngo procurers that provide services of public interest and share the same procurement need) whose participation is well justified may participate in additional activities that clearly add value to the action and The lead procurer is a public procurer and is the beneficiary appointed by the buyers group to coordinate and lead the procurement. It can be either one of the procurers in the buyers group or another beneficiary in the action that is established or designated by the procurers in the buyer group to act as lead procurer. A PCP that addresses a challenge that consists of several facets (sub-challenges or building blocks) is considered one joint PCP procurement as long as all procurers in the buyers group share the need for - and are willing to co-finance - all the facets of the common challenge. Part 20 - Page 17 of 44
18 support the preparation and execution of the PCP or embed the PCP into a wider set of demand side activities. Sole participants 26 must indicate which of its 'members' are the procurers contributing to the budget of the proposed joint procurement that satisfy the participation requirements and which are the respective procurement budgets of each of these members that are at the disposal for carrying out the procurement. A sole participant acting as buyers group must have a mandate based on a well-defined procurement need and budget from its procurers to act on their behalf. Funded activities: Preparation and implementation of the joint PCP (as described in General Annex E). Eligible costs include the price of the R&D services procured via the joint PCP and the costs of the eligible coordination and networking activities and may include in-kind contributions of third parties linked to grant beneficiaries. Funding rate: The EU contribution will be governed by the Rules for Participation, unless otherwise specified in the relevant call conditions. The requested reimbursement of the estimated eligible costs of coordination and networking activities should not exceed 30% of the requested grant. Indirect eligible costs are calculated as a flat rate of 25% of direct eligible costs, excluding direct eligible costs for subcontracting (e.g the price of the PCP procurement) and costs of resources made available by third parties which are not used on the premises of the beneficiary (e.g test equipment). Public Procurement of Innovative Solutions (PPI) actions Description: The objective of PPI actions is to enable groups of procurers to share the risks of acting as early adopters of innovative solutions, whilst opening market opportunities for industry. It provides EU funding for a group of procurers ( buyers group ) to undertake together one joint PPI procurement, so that there is one joint PPI call for tender launched by the lead procurer 24 and one joint evaluation of offers 27. Each PPI focuses on one concrete unmet need that is shared by the participating procurers and requires the deployment of innovative solutions that are to a significant extent similar across countries and are therefore proposed to be procured jointly. This means that the innovative solutions procured by all procurers in the buyers group must have the same core functionality and performance characteristics (described in the common specifications for the joint call for tender), but may have additional 'local' functionality due to differences in the local context of each individual procurer (if framework contracts/agreements are used, this can be reflected in the specific contracts for procuring specific quantities of goods/services for each procurer). Funded activities: Preparation and implementation of the joint PPI (as described in General Annex E). Eligible costs include the price of the innovative solutions procured via the joint PPI and the costs of the eligible coordination and networking activities and may include inkind contributions of third parties linked to grant beneficiaries. Cost for procurement of R&D are not eligible See Article 199 of the Financial Regulation No 966/2012. No matter whether the lead procurer only does the procurement/tendering or also the contracting for the public procurement of innovative, in any case the evaluation of all tenders must be carried out based on common specifications and common evaluation criteria defined jointly by all procurers in the buyers group. Part 20 - Page 18 of 44
19 Eligible participants: the same as for PCP actions described above. Funding rate: The EU contribution will be governed by the Rules for Participation, unless otherwise specified in the relevant call conditions. The requested reimbursement of the estimated eligible costs of coordination and networking activities should not exceed 50% of the requested grant. Indirect eligible costs are calculated as a flat rate of 25% of direct eligible costs, excluding direct eligible costs for subcontracting (e.g. the price of the PPI procurement).and the costs of resources made available by third parties (e.g. test equipment) which are not used on the premises of the beneficiary. Prizes Description: Prizes are financial contributions given as rewards following the publication of a contest. A recognition prize is used to recognise past achievements and outstanding work after it has been performed, whereas an inducement prize is used to spur investment in a given direction, by specifying a target prior to the performance of the work. The Rules of Contest lay down the conditions for participation, the award criteria, the amount of the prize and the arrangements for the payment of the prize to the winners after their award. Model Rules of Contest are set out in Annex F. Prize amounts: The amount of the prize is specified in the contest. It is not linked to the costs incurred by the winner. *** Note: 1. Where duly justified the above types of actions may be implemented in the context of a framework partnership agreement (FPA). An FPA establishes a long-term cooperation mechanism between the Commission/Agency and the beneficiaries of grants ( partners ). The FPA specifies the common objectives, the procedure for awarding specific grants, rights and obligations of each party under the specific agreements. The specific grant agreements (SGA) awarded in the context of an FPA may in principle correspond to any of the above types of action. The Work Programme will specify the type of action required for a given FPA, and the relevant conditions. 2. The Horizon 2020 risk finance instruments ( financial instruments ) are described in Section 6 of the Work Programme. Part 20 - Page 19 of 44
20 E. Specific requirements for innovation procurement (PCP/PPI) supported by Horizon 2020 grants This annex applies to PCPs and PPIs for which the tender preparation and/or the call for tender implementation is supported by Horizon It applies to PCP/PPI actions (General Annex D) and other types of actions with PCP/PPI subcontracting activities. (i) Specific requirements for Pre-Commercial Procurement (PCP) The following requirements apply to ensure that the definition and requirements for PCP in the Horizon2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2012 and the conditions for the R&D services exemption of the EU public procurement directives 28 are respected, that the sharing of IPR rights in PCP takes place according to market conditions and that the Treaty principles 29 and competition rules 30 are fully respected in the PCP process: Definitions PCPs must comply with the Horizon 2020 definitions: 'Pre-commercial procurement' means procurement of R&D services involving riskbenefit sharing under market conditions, and competitive development in phases, where there is a clear separation between the procurement of the R&D services procured from the deployment of commercial volumes of end-products 31. 'Risk-benefit sharing under market conditions' refers to the approach in PCP where procurers share with suppliers at market price the benefits and risks related to the IPRs resulting from the R&D. 'Competitive development in phases' refers to the competitive approach used in PCP by procurers to buy the R&D from several competing R&D providers in parallel, to compare and identify the best value for money solutions on the market to address the PCP challenge. To reduce the investment risk for the procurer, reward the most competitive solutions and facilitate the participation of smaller innovative companies, the R&D is also split in phases (solution design, prototyping, original development and validation / testing of the first products), with the number of competing R&D providers being reduced after each phase subsequent to intermediate evaluations. 'Separation from the deployment of commercial volumes of end-products' refers to the complementarity of PCP, which focuses on the R&D phase before commercialisation, and PPI, which does not focus on R&D but on the commercialisation/diffusion of solutions. Procurers can but are not obliged to procure at market price R&D results from a PCP. Eligible activities: A. Preparation stage Article 16f of Directive 2004/18/EC, Article. 24e of Directive 2004/17/EC (and the EU legislation replacing those, i.e.article 14 of Directive 2014/24/EU and Article 32 of Directive 2014/25/EU), Article 13(f)(j) of Directive 2009/81/EC. In particular the fundamental Treaty principles on the free movement of goods and workers, the freedom to provide services, the freedom of establishment and the free movement of capital, as well as the principles deriving there from, such as the principles of non-discrimination, transparency and equal treatment See in particular Article 2.3 of the 2014 R&D&I State aid framework See Horizon 2020 Rules for Participation Regulation No 1290/2013 and PCP Communication COM/2007/799 and associated SEC(1668)2007. Part 20 - Page 20 of 44
19. General Annexes. Revised
EN HORIZON 2020 WORK PROGRAMME 2014 2015 19. Revised This Work Programme was adopted on 10 December 2013. Following the introduction of a new Part 18 relating to the Fast Track to Innovation action, this