EU research and innovation funding – immediate changes to cut red tape for researchers and SMEs

Published: 24 January 2011 y., Monday

Today the European Commission has adopted measures to make participation in the EU's current Seventh Framework Programme for Research more attractive and more accessible to the best researchers and most innovative companies, especially Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs). Based on the simplification plan unveiled by the Commission in April 2010, these measures will take effect at once.

Research, Innovation and Science Commissioner Máire Geoghegan-Quinn said: "Today's measures will allow the many thousands of excellent people we fund to save time and effort on paperwork and concentrate on what they do best - working to boost growth and jobs and improve our quality of life in Europe through world class research and innovation. We want to attract even more and better applicants, including dynamic small businesses which can't cope with reams of red tape. This is only the start: the Commission has already proposed big changes to the overall financial rules governing all EU funding programmes, and if the Parliament and Council agree with those, we will put forward more radical simplification measures for the successor programme to FP7."

Three concrete measures

The Commission adopted three concrete measures with immediate effect on the management of EU research grants in the current EU research programme (FP7). Each of these steps responds to concerns repeatedly expressed by participants and would-be participants in FP7:

  • - Allowing more flexibility in how personnel costs are calculated so that EU research grant-holders can apply their usual accounting methods when requesting reimbursement for average personnel costs. They will no longer need to set up entire parallel accounting systems just for this purpose;

  • - SME owners whose salaries are not formally registered in their accounts can now be reimbursed, through flat-rate payments, for their contribution to work on research projects.

  • - A new steering group of senior officials from all the Commission departments and agencies involved will remove inconsistencies in the application of the rules on research funding.

Next steps

The Commission considers simplification as one of the basic design principles for the next EU research and innovation programme, and it will continue to push for substantive improvement. The Commission will present its legislative proposals for the next EU research and innovation programme by the end of this year, following an open consultation to be launched in the early spring.

Background

The current EU research programme, FP7, has attracted more than 40,000 proposals from the research community since 2007, and almost 8,000 projects have so far been funded. Nearly all European universities participate, and about 15% of the participants are SMEs.

Several concrete steps have already been taken towards simplifying procedures both before and after the launch of FP7.

In April 2010, the Commission adopted a Communication presenting further simplification options which apply to the existing legal framework and, in the longer term, to a possible revision of the EU Financial Regulations. This Communication triggered a broad debate among the EU institutions and with many other research and innovation stakeholders. In this context it is also recalled that the Commission's proposal on the revised EU financial regulation offers simplification still to be applied to FP7, such as the abolition of the interest bearing accounts, and proposes measures which will set the basis for a more radical simplification of the next framework programme. It is now under the responsibility of the Council and the European Parliament to adopt these measures.

The measures adopted in the present Commission Decision are based on a broad consensus in this debate, and are also in line with the recommendations of the Expert Group carrying out the Interim Evaluation of FP7.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Related videos

05/02/2014

Padėkime augti

Staying on top of change

As part of the 2009 European Year of Creativity and Innovation, a diverse group of prominent scientists, artists, scholars and business executives - European ambassadors of the year – has come up with an ambitious manifesto. more »

‘100 Ideas to Save the Planet’ by Development Marketplace Finalists

A hundred teams have arrived to Washington, DC from all corners of the globe, each with an idea to help save the planet. more »

NASA rolls out new rocket

NASA is calling its new rocket Ares 1-X the next chapter in space exploration. more »

Wills made easier

Common rules proposed for cross-border inheritances. more »

Funding a low-carbon future

Solar energy and carbon capture and storage earmarked for lion's share of extra technology funding. more »

US scientist wins Nobel Physics

George Smith and his colleague Willard Boyle revolutionized digital imaging technology, and on Tuesday the two men each got an early morning call from Sweden advising they'd been awarded one half of the 2009 Nobel Prize for Physics. more »

Investing in the future: Commission calls for additional €50bn in low carbon technologies

European Commission called public authorities, business, and researchers to join efforts in order to develop by 2020 the necessary technologies to address climate change, secure EU energy supply and ensure the competitiveness of our economies. more »

Trio of Americans win Nobel Medicine

This year's announcement from Stockholm, Sweden -- awarded the Nobel prize for medicine to a trio of Americans for discovering telomerase -- an enzyme which helps prevent the fraying of chromosomes that underlies aging and cancer. more »

Who is the 2 millionth Erasmus student?

Since its launch in 1987, the Erasmus programme has helped 2 million students carry out a part of their studies or a work placement in another European country. more »

Water on the moon?

Three separate missions examining the moon have found clear evidence of water there, apparently concentrated at the poles and possibly formed by the solar wind. more »