HORIZON BLOG: European R&D policy newsbytes

08 Sep 2025 | Live Blog

This live blog is tracking the latest developments in European research and innovation programmes, including the broader debate on the future of R&D policy and funding in the next multiannual budget due to start in 2028. Beyond that, we look at other EU policies with significant research and innovation components in climate, digital, agriculture and regional development. In addition, national governments often come up with new R&D policies, decide to fund new research avenues, and set up international cooperation deals. This blog aims to keep you informed on all of that and more.

If you have any tips, please email them at [email protected].

You can read the full archive of this blog here.

 

EU research Commissioner Ekaterina Zaharieva and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz have inaugurated Europe’s first exascale supercomputer, known as JUPITER. 

Designed by the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) and funded through the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking, JUPITER is the first supercomputer of the continent to be capable of performing one exaflop, which is equivalent to one billion times one billion calculations per second. 

“The most complex AI models can now be trained and applied – something that was not possible without JUPITER,” said Thomas Lippert, director of the JSC. 

More details here. 

 

The German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) has published the KIWi Knowledge Security Checklist, a tool for researchers and universities to weigh up security-related issues in cross-border cooperation projects. 

“In times of growing geopolitical tensions, questions of opportunities, risks and security in international scientific cooperation are becoming increasingly important,” said Joybrato Mukherjee, president of the DAAD. “With the new KIWi checklist, we are responding to the latest recommendations of the Science Council for strengthening knowledge security in Germany.” 

The checklist looks into partners and financing, export control regulations, the use of results and intellectual property rights, and scientific ethics issues in academia. 

More details here. 

 

As part of its new quantum strategy, the EU must work on attracting private capital, building a competitive industrial base, developing sovereign capabilities and global standards, and investing in talent, the European Quantum Industry Consortium (QuIC) said on behalf of over 210 quantum stakeholders. 

“The Commission’s strategy sets an ambitious vision for Europe’s role in quantum technologies,” Thierry Botter, executive director of QuIC, said in a position paper. “Success will depend on adequate means as well as fast, coordinated and determined implementation.” 

Read the full position paper here.

 

The European Research Council (ERC) has awarded €761 million in starting grants to 478 early-career researchers, who will carry their projects at universities and research centres across 25 European countries. 

The ERC received 3,928 proposals, up 13% from last year’s starting grant call. 

“Yet, we could do more!” ERC president Maria Leptin said in a statement as just over 12% of all proposals will be funded. “More investment in this type of science is needed for Europe to reach its full potential.” 

Read the full statement here. 

 

The European Health and Digital Executive Agency (HaDEA) has opened new calls for proposals as part of efforts to strengthen the EU’s crisis preparedness and response to health emergencies. 

Under the 2025 EU4Health Work Programme, the funding calls will focus on the development of innovative medical countermeasures for chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats, advanced diagnostics for vector-borne diseases, and crisis preparedness.  

More details here. 

 

The European Commission has announced senior leadership changes at its Directorate-General for Research and Innovation (DG RTD), which is responsible for shaping and implementing EU research and innovation policy.

James Morrison, former director of the European Commission Regulatory Scrutiny Board, has been appointed director of Directorate B, Healthy Planet, which focuses on sustainability, climate, and environmental research. He succeeds John Bell, who retired earlier this year.

Maria Pilar Aguar Fernandez, former Director for Health and Food Audits and Analysis at the Directorate-General for Health & Food Safety, has been appointed Director of Directorate D, People: Health & Society. In her new role, she will oversee programmes on health research and life sciences, bridging science with societal needs. She succeeds Irene Norstedt.

See DG RTD organigramme here.

 

More than 200 former EU ambassadors and senior officials are calling in an open letter for the “immediate implementation” of the measures the EU proposed in July against Israel. 

The proposed measures include restrictions for certain companies to access funds under Horizon Europe and the newly announced Security Action for Europe programme for defence. 

“We express our profound disappointment that, in response to the deteriorating situation in Gaza, no substantive measures have been taken by the EU to pressure Israel to end its brutal war, to resume vital humanitarian assistance by mainstream providers, and to dismantle its illegal occupation of both Gaza and the West Bank,” the signatories wrote. 

Read the full open letter here.

 

All European Academies (ALLEA), the European Federation of Academies of Sciences and Humanities, has joined the newly created international coalition for science, research and innovation in Ukraine, which aims to strengthen the country’s research and innovation ecosystem as it recovers from the war. 

The coalition was launched in July by the European Commission Italy, Germany, Poland and other EU countries with the goal of raising money and know-how to put science, research and innovation at the core of Ukraine’s reconstruction and long-term development. 

Read the full statement here. 

 

Europe should promote stronger strategic coherence across member states, better access to financing and harmonised market conditions in order boost its bioeconomy sector, says EU-funded project ShapingBio. 

“Fragmented strategies and uneven innovation capacities hold us back,” said Sven Wydra, coordinator of ShapingBio. “To stay globally competitive and deliver on sustainability goals, we need coherent policies that promote stronger collaboration across all member states, better financing, and the securing of Europe’s leadership in sustainable biomanufacturing.” 

The European Commission, which closed a public consultation in June, is set to present its new EU Bioeconomy Strategy by the end of 2025.  

Read the full statement here.

 

In line with its new Ocean Pact, the European Commission has granted €116 million to 13 projects under the latest EU Mission Ocean and Waters calls. 

The projects, which focus on preserving offshore marine protected areas, reducing the environmental impact of fisheries on marine species and strengthening citizen science in the marine sector, will be implemented across various sea basins, including the Black Sea, the Danube River and the Mediterranean Sea. 

More details here. 

 

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