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Call updates
09 December 2024
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE
EVALUATION results, STAGE 2
Published: 07.12.2022
Deadline stage 1: 07.02.2024, Deadline stage 2: 24.09.2024
Available call budget: EUR 37,000,000
The results of the evaluation for each topic are as follows:
|
|
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01 |
|
Number of proposals submitted (including proposals transferred from or to other calls) |
19 |
|
Number of inadmissible proposals |
0 |
|
Number of ineligible proposals |
0 |
|
Number of above-threshold proposals |
19 |
|
Total budget requested for above-threshold proposals, EUR |
94,989,235.52 € |
|
Number of proposals retained for funding |
5 |
|
Number of proposals in the reserve list |
2 |
|
Funding threshold 1 |
13.5 |
|
Ranking distribution (above-threshold proposals): |
|
|
Number of proposals with scores lower or equal to 15 and higher or equal to 14 |
3 |
|
Number of proposals with scores lower than 14 and higher or equal to 13 |
4 |
|
Number of proposals with scores lower than 13 and higher or equal to 10 |
12 |
1 Proposals with the same score were ranked according to the priority order procedure set out in the call conditions (for HE, in the General Annexes to the Work Programme or specific arrangements in the specific call/topic conditions).
Summary of observer report:
The Independent Observer concludes that consensus meetings and panel meetings, and in overall evaluation procedures were carried with transparency, efficiency, fairness, consistency, impartiality, by applying homogenous criteria in compliance with the applicable evaluation rules for each phase of the selection exercise (individual evaluation reports, consensus reports, proposal cross-reading, panel ranking). The evaluation process was carried out in full accordance with the Horizon Europe documents on proposal evaluation.
IT systems SEP and CIRCABC worked very well, and they were clear and useful for the evaluation procedures and provided supporting documents to help the expert’s work. Webex IT tool was used for the meetings, and it worked very well permitting a good interaction level for the experts during their discussion about each evaluated proposal.
In this way, all the procedures to select the best proposals were very adequate to define the final ranking in order to select the best projects to be funded according to the call indication.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
We recently informed the applicants about the evaluation results for their proposals.
For questions, please contact the Research Enquiry Service.
24 September 2024
CALL UPDATE: PROPOSAL NUMBERS
PROPOSAL NUMBERS
Call HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE (stage 2) has closed on the 24/09/2024.
28 proposals have been submitted.
The breakdown per topic is:
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01: 19 proposals
Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in 3rd week of December 2024.
Jun 4, 2024 9:46:22 PM
General reminder:
Please make sure that your full proposal is consistent with your short outline proposal. It may NOT differ substantially. The project must stay the same.
Proposal part B page limit:
The title, list of participants and sections 1, 2 and 3, together, should not be longer than 53 pages. All tables, figures, references and any other element pertaining to these sections must be included as an integral part of these sections and are thus counted against this page limit.
The page limit will be applied automatically. At the end of this document you can see the structure of the actual proposal that you need to submit, please remove all instruction pages that are watermarked.
If you attempt to upload a proposal longer than the specified limit before the deadline, you will receive an automatic warning and will be advised to shorten and re-upload the proposal. After the deadline, excess pages (in over-long proposals/applications) will be automatically made invisible, and will not be taken into consideration by the experts. The proposal is a self-contained document. Experts will be instructed to ignore hyperlinks to information that is specifically designed to expand the proposal, thus circumventing the page limit.
Please, do not consider the page limit as a target! It is in your interest to keep your text as concise as possible, since experts rarely view unnecessarily long proposals in a positive light.
Proposal part B formatting conditions:
The following formatting conditions apply.
The reference font for the body text of proposals is Times New Roman (Windows platforms), Times/Times New Roman (Apple platforms) or Nimbus Roman No. 9 L (Linux distributions).
The use of a different font for the body text is not advised and is subject to the cumulative conditions that the font is legible and that its use does not significantly shorten the representation of the proposal in number of pages compared to using the reference font (for example with a view to bypass the page limit).
The minimum font size allowed is 11 points. Standard character spacing and a minimum of single line spacing is to be used. This applies to the body text, including text in tables.
Text elements other than the body text, such as headers, foot/end notes, captions, formula's, may deviate, but must be legible.
The page size is A4, and all margins (top, bottom, left, right) should be at least 15 mm (not including any footers or headers).
This document is tagged. Do not delete the tags; they are needed for our internal processing of information, mostly for statistical gathering. In that light, please do not move, delete, re-order, alter tags in any way, as they might create problems in our internal processing tools. Tags do not affect or influence the outcome of your application.
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Jun 4, 2024 5:11:03 PM
GENERALISED FEEDBACK for successful applicants
after STAGE 1
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE, 1 stage
In order to best ensure equal treatment, successful stage 1 applicants do not receive the evaluation summary reports (ESRs) for their proposals, but this generalised feedback with information and tips for preparing the full proposal.
Information & tips
Main shortcomings found in the stage 1 evaluation.
TOPIC HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01
"BIO-INTELLIGENT MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES (MADE IN EUROPE PARTNERSHIP)"
EXCELLENCE:
Clarity of project's objectives:
- Proposed objectives are not sufficiently described, not measurable, not verifiable, or not achievable.
- Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are not clearly defined, or they are identified only in a generic manner.
- Insufficient description of how KPIs will be achieved, measured and validated.
Ambition, innovation:
- Innovation aspect is insufficiently described (e.g., results on demo cases; strategies for marketing, commercialisation, Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) management).
- Background and foreground IPR management is not sufficiently addressed.
Extent to which the proposed work is going beyond state-of-the-art:
- "State-of-the-art" (SoA) is insufficiently addressed (e.g., SoA is incomplete/lacking depth analysis; not sufficient references provided to relevant publications or already existing products/patents).
- Advantages over alternative methods proposed in the literature are not fully analysed.
Technology Readiness Level (TRL):
- The start and the final/target TRL at the end of the project are not clearly identified.
- Insufficient proof that the appropriate technologies have been validated in lab.
- Insufficient evidence to demonstrate the achievement and verification of the final TRL (e.g., no clear evidence of the steps to build on from the start TLR until the final/target TRL).
Relation to other EU initiatives:
- Previous research and innovation activities, including European projects and initiatives, are insufficiently addressed (e.g., they were only briefly mentioned).
Methodology:
- Proposed methodology is not clearly presented/described (also in relation to scalability, if relevant).
- Methods employed are not sufficiently detailed.
- Choice of the appropriate techniques is not fully supported by an adequate justification.
- Regulatory requirements and standards are not clearly addressed or insufficiently elaborated on; the contribution to new standards is not mentioned.
- Full interconnection of the technologies employed along the production chain is not clearly highlighted.
- Scalability of methodology not sufficiently explained.
- Important features < of the various components and materials employed or to be developed > are not adequately addressed.
- Social and ethical aspects are insufficiently addressed; the integration of social sciences and humanities is only generically addressed.
- Sustainable model for production and recycling of the products is not developed; the sustainability of the concept to use certain materials as a natural resource in Europe is unclear due to lack of information about their supply.
Artificial Intelligence (AI):
- Technical robustness of the AI-based systems is insufficiently discussed/addressed, including the use of AI in < specific process >.
- Impact of AI application to the environment is not considered.
Interdisciplinarity:
- Interdisciplinary character of a proposal is insufficiently addressed.
User groups, stakeholder inputs:
- Target groups are insufficiently analysed.
Gender dimension:
- Gender dimension aspect is not adequately addressed.
IMPACT:
The credibility of the pathways to achieve the expected outcomes and impacts:
- The specific contribution of the expected outcomes and impacts to the project is not clear. The long-term expected impacts are insufficiently outlined.
- KPIs/estimations for expected impacts are not provided or they are insufficiently (partly) quantified/detailed.
- It is not sufficiently clear if and how the proposal results will be tested in the industrial environment or whether they will be translated in materials or applications needed by the industry.
Wider Impacts:
- Wider societal and environmental benefits are insufficiently outlined.
Scale and significance of the project's contributions:
- Scale and significance are not sufficiently detailed, or not fully estimated and quantified. Baselines and benchmarks are lacking clarity.
Barriers and mitigation measures:
- Potential barriers are insufficiently identified or only generically described.
- Potential barriers related to market entry/commercialisation, legal/regulatory aspects, need for industry partnerships, commercial and technical validation, variability in supply quality, logistics costs, health-related aspects, etc, are not properly outlined/ fully acknowledged.
- Potential barriers are not fully aligned with the expected outcomes and impacts.
- Mitigation measures are insufficiently addressed; The mitigation measures for the technical barriers are less convincing or they are missing.
In your stage 2 proposal, you have a chance to address or clarify these issues.
Please bear in mind that your full proposal will now be evaluated more in-depth and possibly by a new group of outside experts.
Please make sure that your full proposal is consistent with your short outline proposal. It may NOT differ substantially. The project must stay the same.
Jun 4, 2024 5:11:03 PM
Call
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE, 1 stage
TOPIC
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01
EVALUATION results
The results of the evaluation are as follows:
|
|
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01 |
|
Number of proposals submitted (including proposals transferred from or to other calls) |
37 |
|
Number of inadmissible proposals |
2 |
|
Number of ineligible proposals |
1 |
|
Number of above-threshold proposals |
19 |
|
Total budget requested for above-threshold proposals |
93,963,233 € |
|
Number of proposals in the reserve list |
N/A |
|
Ranking distribution: |
|
|
Number of proposals with scores lower or equal to 10 and higher or equal to 9 |
6 |
|
Number of proposals with scores lower than 9 and higher or equal to 8 |
13 |
For questions, please contact the Research Enquiry Service.
May 8, 2024 1:45:18 PM
EVALUATION results
Published: 07.12.2022
Deadline: 07.02.2024
Available budget: EUR 37,000,000
In accordance with General Annex F of the Work Programme, the evaluation of the first-stage proposals was made looking only at the criteria ‘Excellence’ and ‘Impact’. The threshold for both criteria was 4. The overall threshold (applying to the sum of the two individual scores) was set for each topic/type of action with separate call-budget-split at a level that allowed the total requested budget of proposals admitted to stage 2 be as close as possible to 3 times the available budget (and not below 2.5 times the budget):
The results of the evaluation for each topic are as follows:
|
|
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01 |
|
Number of proposals submitted (including proposals transferred from or to other calls) |
37 |
|
Number of inadmissible proposals |
2 |
|
Number of ineligible proposals |
2 |
|
Number of above-threshold proposals |
18 |
|
Total budget requested for above-threshold proposals |
88,963,233 € |
|
Number of proposals in the reserve list |
N/A |
|
Ranking distribution: |
|
|
Number of proposals with scores lower or equal to 10 and higher or equal to 9 |
6 |
|
Number of proposals with scores lower than 9 and higher or equal to 8 |
12 |
Summary of observer report:
The Independent observer (IO) finds that the evaluation followed the applicable rules for the call, and that it was competently evaluated in a fair and equitable manner by both the experts and Agency staff. The IO did not observe any event or activity that gave rise to specific concern that might have jeopardised the fairness of the evaluation. The IO understands that the experts were comfortable with the process and the schedule, and many expressed support for the blind evaluation process, which would encourage new participation and reduce unintentional bias.
We recently informed the applicants about the evaluation results for their proposals.
For questions, please contact the Research Enquiry Service.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
GENERALISED FEEDBACK for successful applicants
after STAGE 1
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE, 1 stage
In order to best ensure equal treatment, successful stage 1 applicants do not receive the evaluation summary reports (ESRs) for their proposals, but this generalised feedback with information and tips for preparing the full proposal.
Information & tips
Main shortcomings found in the stage 1 evaluation.
TOPIC HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01
"BIO-INTELLIGENT MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES (MADE IN EUROPE PARTNERSHIP)"
EXCELLENCE:
Clarity of project's objectives:
- Proposed objectives are not sufficiently described, not measurable, not verifiable, or not achievable.
- Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are not clearly defined, or they are identified only in a generic manner.
- Insufficient description of how KPIs will be achieved, measured and validated.
Ambition, innovation:
- Innovation aspect is insufficiently described (e.g., results on demo cases; strategies for marketing, commercialisation, Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) management).
- Background and foreground IPR management is not sufficiently addressed.
Extent to which the proposed work is going beyond state-of-the-art:
- "State-of-the-art" (SoA) is insufficiently addressed (e.g., SoA is incomplete/lacking depth analysis; not sufficient references provided to relevant publications or already existing products/patents).
- Advantages over alternative methods proposed in the literature are not fully analysed.
Technology Readiness Level (TRL):
- The start and the final/target TRL at the end of the project are not clearly identified.
- Insufficient proof that the appropriate technologies have been validated in lab.
- Insufficient evidence to demonstrate the achievement and verification of the final TRL (e.g., no clear evidence of the steps to build on from the start TLR until the final/target TRL).
Relation to other EU initiatives:
- Previous research and innovation activities, including European projects and initiatives, are insufficiently addressed (e.g., they were only briefly mentioned).
Methodology:
- Proposed methodology is not clearly presented/described (also in relation to scalability, if relevant).
- Methods employed are not sufficiently detailed.
- Choice of the appropriate techniques is not fully supported by an adequate justification.
- Regulatory requirements and standards are not clearly addressed or insufficiently elaborated on; the contribution to new standards is not mentioned.
- Full interconnection of the technologies employed along the production chain is not clearly highlighted.
- Scalability of methodology not sufficiently explained.
- Important features < of the various components and materials employed or to be developed > are not adequately addressed.
- Social and ethical aspects are insufficiently addressed; the integration of social sciences and humanities is only generically addressed.
- Sustainable model for production and recycling of the products is not developed; the sustainability of the concept to use certain materials as a natural resource in Europe is unclear due to lack of information about their supply.
Artificial Intelligence (AI):
- Technical robustness of the AI-based systems is insufficiently discussed/addressed, including the use of AI in < specific process >.
- Impact of AI application to the environment is not considered.
Interdisciplinarity:
- Interdisciplinary character of a proposal is insufficiently addressed.
User groups, stakeholder inputs:
- Target groups are insufficiently analysed.
Gender dimension:
- Gender dimension aspect is not adequately addressed.
IMPACT:
The credibility of the pathways to achieve the expected outcomes and impacts:
- The specific contribution of the expected outcomes and impacts to the project is not clear. The long-term expected impacts are insufficiently outlined.
- KPIs/estimations for expected impacts are not provided or they are insufficiently (partly) quantified/detailed.
- It is not sufficiently clear if and how the proposal results will be tested in the industrial environment or whether they will be translated in materials or applications needed by the industry.
Wider Impacts:
- Wider societal and environmental benefits are insufficiently outlined.
Scale and significance of the project's contributions:
- Scale and significance are not sufficiently detailed, or not fully estimated and quantified. Baselines and benchmarks are lacking clarity.
Barriers and mitigation measures:
- Potential barriers are insufficiently identified or only generically described.
- Potential barriers related to market entry/commercialisation, legal/regulatory aspects, need for industry partnerships, commercial and technical validation, variability in supply quality, logistics costs, health-related aspects, etc, are not properly outlined/ fully acknowledged.
- Potential barriers are not fully aligned with the expected outcomes and impacts.
- Mitigation measures are insufficiently addressed; The mitigation measures for the technical barriers are less convincing or they are missing.
In your stage 2 proposal, you have a chance to address or clarify these issues.
Please bear in mind that your full proposal will now be evaluated more in-depth and possibly by a new group of outside experts.
Please make sure that your full proposal is consistent with your short outline proposal. It may NOT differ substantially. The project must stay the same.
TOPIC HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-12
"ENHANCED ASSESSMENT, INTERVENTION AND REPAIR OF CIVIL ENGINEERING INFRASTRUCTURE"
EXCELLENCE:
Clarity of project's objectives:
- For some of the objectives, the target values associated to the identified Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are not sufficiently presented.
Relation to other EU initiatives:
- The relevant research projects on which the proposal intends to build are not sufficiently identified.
- The development of synergies with other relevant European, national, or regional initiatives, funding programmes and platforms is not sufficiently considered.
- The way in which the work is building on relevant research outcomes of EU, national and regional research projects, initiatives and networks is insufficiently described / not explicitly presented.
Methodology:
- The application of the appropriate research methods is insufficiently described.
- The number and the type of pilot sites are not clearly provided.
- The conditions under which the proposed solutions will be demonstrated are not always determined.
- There is insufficient information regarding the material used for construction and repair so that all the variations among European countries are taken into account.
- The methodology used/proposed to perform inspections and repairs is insufficiently considered.
- Some of the damage, degradation categories do not explicitly indicate the type of deterioration mechanisms to be covered.
- There is insufficient information regarding the use of the proposed tools in specific conditions.
Technology Readiness Level (TRL):
- The targeted TRL at the end of the project is not explicitly indicated and not convincingly demonstrated for all the proposed solutions.
Open Science:
- The Open science practices are not sufficiently addressed.
Data management:
- The integration and processing of the data feedback and learnings from technician performing maintenance are not very well explained.
User group, stakeholder inputs:
- Stakeholder feedback to improve the project implementation is not very well explained.
IMPACT:
The credibility of the pathways to achieve the expected outcomes and impacts:
- The contribution to the outcome related to the cost savings (in terms of both operational costs and deferred or avoided capital costs) is not sufficiently demonstrated.
Wider Impacts:
- The contribution towards certain wider impacts, as specified in the respective destinations of the work program, is not sufficiently described.
Scale and significance of the project's contributions:
- Scale and significance of the project’s contribution to the expected outcomes and impacts are insufficiently quantified.
- Justification of achieving some of the KPIs is not convincingly described.
Barriers and mitigation measures:
- The barriers linked to infrastructure and investment are not well addressed.
- The mitigation measures linked to the usage of equipment or tools are not fully convincingly addressed.
Copernicus and/or Galileo/EGNOS:
Reminder: Whenever a proposal is using satellite-based earth observation, positioning, navigation and/or related timing data and services, beneficiaries must make use of Copernicus and/or Galileo/EGNOS (or other data and services may additionally be used).
In your stage 2 proposal, you have a chance to address or clarify these issues.
Please bear in mind the published FAQ (ID 31280): “What kinds of civil engineering infrastructure are included in the scope of topic HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-12: Enhanced assessment, intervention and repair of civil engineering infrastructure (RIA)?”
“For the purpose of this topic, ‘civil engineering infrastructure’ means civil engineering works that may both be over or in the ground or water, including roads and runways, bridges, tunnels, pipelines, aqueducts, dams and reservoirs, ports, waterways, and installations which are the basis for rails of railways. The following are excluded: electricity generation installations, oil platforms or chemical plants, pylons and other facilities for transport of electricity, industry manufacturing installations, agricultural installations. Buildings are also excluded.”
Please bear in mind that your full proposal will now be evaluated more in-depth and possibly by a new group of outside experts.
Please make sure that your full proposal is consistent with your short outline proposal. It may NOT differ substantially. The project must stay the same.
Feb 7, 2024 8:55:50 PM
PROPOSAL SUBMISSION
Call HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE_stage1 was closed on 07/02/2024.
107 proposals have been submitted.
The breakdown per topic:
HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01: 37 proposals
Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in the 2nd half of June 2024.
Jan 11, 2024 4:07:50 PM
An overview of the HORIZON-CL4-2023-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE_stage2 evaluation results (Flash Call Info) (see document)
Sep 19, 2023 8:57:56 AM
The submission session is now available for: HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01(HORIZON-RIA)
Bio-intelligent manufacturing industries (Made in Europe Partnership) (RIA)
TOPIC ID: HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-01
Programme: Horizon Europe Framework Programme (HORIZON)
Call: TWIN GREEN AND DIGITAL TRANSITION 2024 TWO STAGE (HORIZON-CL4-2024-TWIN-TRANSITION-01-TWO-STAGE)
Type of action: HORIZON-RIA HORIZON Research and Innovation Actions
Type of MGA: HORIZON Lump Sum Grant [HORIZON-AG-LS]
Deadline model: two-stage
Planned opening date: 19 September 2023
Deadline dates: 07 February 2024 17:00:00 Brussels time
24 September 2024 17:00:00 Brussels time
ExpectedOutcome:
European manufacturing industries are reinforced through biological transformation; in particular
Access to bio-intelligent production technologies and architecture;
Technological advances and improvements in sustainability (in particular SDGs 11, 12 and 13) arising from the integration of bio-intelligent principles, functions, structures and technologies in manufacturing;
Substitution of raw materials by bio-based materials, or implementation of bio-based or bio-intelligent manufacturing operations, and business models leading to regenerative production.
Scope:
The biological transformation of industry is a pioneering frontier that the industry of the Union and Associated Countries can harness to enhance circularity and sustainability, while advancing production efficiency and competitiveness.
The biological transformation of industry involves the integration of bio-intelligent structures, processes, organisms or materials into technology by systematically applying knowledge from biology. This should lead to a necessary convergence of biotechnology with mechanical engineering, production technology and information technology with new possibilities for the flexible adaptation of production and value creation processes to requirements, especially in the context of sustainability.
The biological transformation of industries includes but is not limited to:
Bio-inspired manufacturing processes (biomimicry, biomimetics);
Development of bio-intelligent manufacturing systems or tools;
Expanding opportunities of bio-intelligent and bio-based materials by substituting fossil-based raw materials and limiting the release of microplastics, e.g. in the textile industry;
A systematic application of the knowledge of nature and/or natural processes aiming at optimising a manufacturing system through a convergence and the integration of technical and biological processes.
This transformation can also aid in reducing the carbon footprint of production and products, and foster circularity, while contributing to the competitiveness and digitalisation of the industry of the Union and Associated Countries.
Proposals need to demonstrate the development of digital and green technologies that facilitate the upscaled manufacturing of bio-based or bio-intelligent products in one manufacturing value chain. In addition, sustainable business models need to be developed for production and recycling of the products.
Proposals should address either advanced manufacturing techniques (e.g. additive manufacturing, extrusion, moulding etc.) to process bio-materials or bio-intelligent components for upscaled production; or bio-intelligent production technologies; or combinations of these two approaches.
The focus of this topic is on manufacturing. The development of materials beyond the manufacturing context is excluded.
Proposals submitted under this topic should include a business case and exploitation strategy, as outlined in the introduction to this Destination.
Research must build on existing standards or contribute to standardisation. Interoperability for data sharing should be addressed, leveraging on existing ontologies and metadata and though the implementation of the FAIR data principles.[1]
Additionally, a strategy for skills development should be presented, associating social partners and civil society where relevant. Collaboration with EIT Manufacturing is encouraged, in particular on the development of skills.
All projects should build on or seek collaboration with existing projects and develop synergies with other relevant European, national or regional initiatives, funding programmes and platforms, for example with Horizon Europe Cluster 6 and its Destination on Circular Economy and Bioeconomy sectors and/or its Partnership Circular Bio-based Europe (CBE)[2].
This topic implements the co-programmed European Partnership Made in Europe.
Specific Topic Conditions:
Activities are expected to start at TRL 4 and achieve TRL 6 by the end of the project – see General Annex B.
[1]Turning FAIR into reality: https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/default/files/turning_fair_into_reality_1.pdf
[2]http://www.cbe.europa.eu

Horizon Europe will incorporate research and innovation missions to increase the effectiveness of funding by pursuing clearly defined targets.
The Commission has engaged policy experts to develop studies, case studies and reports on how a mission-oriented policy approach will work.
Mission areas
5 mission areas have been identified, each with a dedicated mission board and assembly. The board and assembly help specify, design and implement the specific missions which will launch under Horizon Europe in 2021.
Covers general goods and services that support daily operations, facilities management, and basic institutional needs.
Focuses on collecting data, generating new knowledge, and applying it to develop improved methods, technologies, products, and solutions across sectors.