Why does the EU support research and innovation for chemicals and advanced materials?
Chemicals and advanced materials, including nanomaterials, are essential for our well-being and the high living standards of our societies. They are used in all sectors (e.g. health, electronics, energy, mobility and housing), in industrial products and consumer goods such as construction materials, lightweight materials, batteries, packaging, smart phones, cleaning products, cosmetics and many more.
Advanced materials and chemicals have novel or enhanced properties and improved performance, but they have to be safe, sustainable and circular too. Research and innovation is key in achieving all this.
The European Green Deal binds the EU to become climate neutral by 2050 through green growth and innovation, offering opportunities for all citizens and also protecting biodiversity.
Key legislation
- The EU’s Industrial Strategy and the Green Deal Industrial Plan introduced the notion of key enabling technologies, including advanced materials and critical raw materials enhancing the necessary skills for an open, fair-trade and net-zero industry
- The Zero Pollution Action Plan aims to decrease air, water and soil pollution to levels no longer harmful to health and natural ecosystems and that respect the planetary boundaries. In 2022 the Commission published a report on how results from Horizon 2020 projects contribute to the nine flagships of the Zero Pollution Action Plan
- The Chemicals Strategy for Sustainability announced two main research and innovation tools: 1) Safe and sustainable by design criteria for chemicals and 2) Strategic Research and Innovation Plan for chemicals and materials
- The Sustainable Products Initiative aims to make every aspect of the design, production, use and sale of products available on the EU market more environmentally-friendly and circular as well as to address the presence harmful chemicals in certain products
- The Critical Raw Materials Act recognises the importance of advanced materials for materials efficiency and circularity and announces a coordinated plan with EU countries on advanced materials
- The Net Zero Industry Act calls for stronger manufacturing capacities of clean technologies in the EU – requiring also innovative advanced materials
All documents published for the different activities on research and innovation on chemicals and advanced materials can be found in the documents section.
Strategic Research and Innovation Plan for Chemicals and Materials (SRIP)
The SRIP identifies research and innovation areas crucial for boosting the transition to chemicals and materials that are safe and sustainable in their entire lifecycle. It reflects the priorities of authorities, scientists and companies alike. The SRIP provides a comprehensive outlook of research and innovation needs from production to (re)use, disposal, and the decontamination of our environment. The aim of the SRIP is to encourage and guide funders in the EU to support its implementation through national and private financial programmes.
In the first half of 2023 the Commission will publish a report on how Horizon Europe funding contributes to the different areas identified in the SRIP.
Practical guidance - the safe and sustainable by design framework
The safe and sustainable by design (SSbD) framework provides companies, authorities and scientists practical guidance on the design and assessment of safe and sustainable chemicals and materials. The Commission invites EU countries, industry, academia and research and technology organisations to make use of the framework in their research and innovation activities to speed up the development of such chemicals and materials. The framework can be applied to develop new chemicals and materials or to redesign existing ones improving hotspots in their lifecycle.
For an easy overview of the process see this infographic.
With the publication of the Recommendation, a 2-year testing phase of the framework has been launched and will be open for input from May 2023.
Your opinion matters. Join the testing of the framework and share your findings with the Commission.
More details on Safe and sustainable by design
Register as stakeholder, receive news on the progress of SSbD and invitations to future events.
Maintaining Europe as a leader in advanced materials
Europe has a strong position in the development of advanced materials, but continuous innovation is necessary to keep this industrial leadership and ensure technological sovereignty and strategic autonomy across the lifecycle of advanced materials.
The 2023 Communication on Critical Raw Materials announces a coordinated plan with EU countries on advanced materials, including the substitution of critical raw materials.
On 7 February 2022, a Materials 2030 Manifesto was shared by high-level representatives from European research institutes and industries with Commissioner Gabriel. It stresses the importance of EU’s technological leadership, the need for strategic autonomy and invites stakeholders to combine upstream research with industry-driven applications. On 22 June 2022 the stakeholder community published the Materials 2030 Roadmap and on 19 April 2023 the Strategic Materials Agenda. The goal is to pave the way for the engagement of all advanced materials stakeholders and co-create a European materials ecosystem.
Expert Group on advanced materials
The mission of the group is to deepen the exchange of information between EU countries, Associated countries and the Commission in the field of chemicals and advanced materials by mapping current actions and innovations at regional and national level as well as among Horizon2020 and Horizon Europe projects.
Making it happen - projects and partnerships
Visit the HaDEA website for open calls and future funding opportunities on chemicals and advanced materials.
Horizon Europe Partnership for the Assessment of Risks from Chemicals (PARC)
The European Partnership for the Assessment of Risks from Chemicals (PARC) supports the innovation in chemical risk assessment. PARC is a co-funded Horizon Europe partnership with a total budget of €400 million for 7 years from May 2022.
The aim is to establish an EU-wide research and innovation programme to support EU and national chemical risk assessment and risk management bodies with new data, methods, tools, networks and skills to address current, emerging and new chemical safety challenges.
IRISS Coordination and Support Action
IRISS is a 3-year project that aims to support safe and sustainable by design communities in Europe and globally to embrace an entire lifecycle approach, integrating safety, climate neutrality, circularity and functionality at the early stage of designing and manufacturing materials, products and processes. The IRISS project started in June 2022 and is co-funded under Horizon Europe.
Open Innovation Test Beds
Open Innovation Test Beds (OITBs) address the challenges of the industrial transformation in view of the European Green Deal and the Twin Transition of Europe's industry, by providing support to the scale-up and diffusion of technologies. The core services provided by OITBs are to develop, test and upscale technology to advance from validation in a laboratory to higher Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs) prior to competitive market entry.
OITBs potential users are mainly industrial players, especially SMEs, which seek support to develop and integrate innovative technologies towards commercialisation of new products, processes and services, whilst ensuring feasibility and regulatory compliance. More information can be found in the Explanatory Note on OITBS.
Under Horizon Europe and Horizon 2020 the Commission invested €319 million in supporting Open Innovation Test Beds. Discover the results pack on how Open Innovation Test Beds accelerate European innovation.
Funded projects
In 2021-2022, the Horizon Europe Work Programme funded 4 projects on polymers, 8 projects on coatings, 8 projects on nanomaterials and 4 projects on lightweight materials.
Ongoing topics
In 2023-2024, the work programme had 3 dedicated topics on advanced materials (and nanomaterials) as well as a coordination and support action, all of which refer to the SSbD framework.
- Bioinspired and biomimetic materials for sustainable textiles
- Smart sensors for the Electronic Appliances market
- Advanced (nano and bio-based) materials for sustainable agriculture
- Coordination and knowledge sharing across materials development communities
Moreover, there are 3 dedicated topics for the development of SSbD tools.
- Innovative methods for safety and sustainability assessments of chemicals and materials
- Integrated approach for impact assessment of safe and sustainable chemicals and materials
- Computational models for the development of safe and sustainable by design chemicals and materials
Future topics
In 2024 there will be a call with 2 topics on advanced materials and 1 topic on SSbD.
Horizon 2020 ERA-NET
M-ERA-NET 3 represents an important ecosystem of 49 public funding organisations from 35 countries, issuing joint calls on materials research and innovation. This network is covering various research and innovation thematic priorities, for instance, sustainable advanced materials for energy, health applications, or advanced electronics, among others.
Horizon 2020 EU NanoSafety Cluster and Malta Initiative
The European Commission has also been supporting the safety evaluation of nanomaterials by different actions: the EU NanoSafety Cluster and the Malta Initiative support the work of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development on nanomaterials standardization and risk assessment.
Documents
The SRIP sets out an overarching plan addressing R&I needs across the lifecycle of chemicals and materials to achieve the goals of the Chemicals Strategy for Sustainability (CSS) and the overall societal transition as envisioned by the Green Deal and the related policy initiatives.
