Highly secure collaborative platform for aeronautics and security industry
DIGITAL Simple Grants
Basic Information
- Identifier
- DIGITAL-2023-CLOUD-AI-04-AEROSEC
- Programme
- Cloud, Data and Artificial Intelligence
- Programme Period
- 2021 - 2027
- Status
- Closed (31094503)
- Opening Date
- May 11, 2023
- Deadline
- November 22, 2023
- Deadline Model
- single-stage
- Budget
- €3,000,000
- Min Grant Amount
- –
- Max Grant Amount
- –
- Expected Number of Grants
- 2
- Keywords
- DIGITAL-2023-CLOUD-AI-04-AEROSECDIGITAL-2023-CLOUD-AI-04AeronauticsArtificial intelligenceCloud ServicesCloud computingCloud trust & securityCloud, Edge and VirtualisationCybersecurityDigital Services and PlatformsSecurity
Description
- A commercially viable highly-secure cloud-based collaborative platform for the management of industrial programmes in the aeronautics and security sector.
- The governance implications that the operations of such a platform would have on the sector, notably how such platform can operate, be deployed, be accessed, and how projects can be managed through their lifecycle.
- A significant contribution to the discussions for an EU-level single set of rules and accreditation for data sharing in the aeronautic and security sector.
The objective is to develop a commercially viable highly secure cloud-based collaborative platform for the management of sensitive multi-country industrial initiatives in the aeronautics and security sector, including civil security.
This platform will allow the development of highly sensitive industrial projects, from design to production. In particular, the platform should be able to support the development of products and services financed under future calls of the European Defence Fund.
The need for a new platform derives from the very specific requirements from the aeronautics and security sector. Over the years, the European industry in general has embraced several paradigm changes resulting from new ICT capabilities: collaborative platforms, co-design, concurrent engineering, decentralised and multi-supplier collaboration, the virtualisation of software and hardware, etc. But the aeronautics and security sector has only embraced such changes with caution, if at all. This is due inter alia to different national standards for the classification of data, complex user-access requirements or justified localisation obligations for data infrastructures, typically on the grounds of public security. Such situation has become untenable and seriously undermines the sector’s competitiveness against other world’s regions, not the least against an international context that implies the multiplication of multi-country and multi-stakeholders’ projects.
Scope:The highly secure collaborative platform should:
- Allow the aeronautics and security sector to reach a similar level of decentralised/distributed working along its supply chains as other sectors already enjoy today (e.g. the automotive sector).
- Be cloud-based (i.e. operated from a highly-secure cloud infrastructure), as opposed to require on-premise software deployment.
- Provide for a broad range of secure and user-friendly collaborative tools including general purpose collaboration tools (messaging, wikis, file sharing, videoconferencing, chat) as well as more advanced tools (computer-assisted design, product lifecycle management, data analysis…).
- Provide for a stack as deep as needed to cater for the specificities of the aeronautics and security sector, including where applicable at IaaS and PaaS levels.
- Cater for state-of-the-art security, interoperability, reversibility, sovereignty and sustainability standards.
- Allow for the concurrent management of different industrial programmes without the need to duplicate the platform (for each programme/country/contractor/etc).
- Be anchored in the security requirements specific to the aeronautics and security sector.
- Cater at minima for the specific needs of information classified at the level of RESTRICTED and equivalents (cf. equivalence table in Council Decision 2013/488/EU and Commission Decision (EU, Euratom) 2015/444), and allow ad-hoc segregation to handle specific national needs or requirements. To the extent possible, the collaborative platform should provide sufficient safeguards so that physical segregation of data is no longer required.
- Incorporate, where appropriate, the outcome of a possible process for defining an EU-level single set of rules and accreditation for data sharing in the aeronautic and security sector.
- Allow for the evolution over-time of the platform, given the very long industrial cycles specific to the aeronautic and security sector (50+ years).
- Allow for multi-cloud tenancy.
- Be tested in quasi-real situations, for example by using it in a real co-design situation which, in reality, does not imply particular confidentiality but where hard user access controls are simulated.
The following items fall outside of the scope:
- the provision of the hardware infrastructure to deploy and operate the platform
The consortium should be structured around private stakeholders (typically: software vendor, data infrastructure providers, aeronautic and security stakeholders, cybersecurity stakeholders). However, to maximise its impact, public authorities, in particular Ministries responsible for national security, home affairs and/or defence, should as well integrate the consortium. Higher education entities, and research and technology organisations with demonstrated cooperation with the above-mentioned public/private stakeholders could also join the consortium where they can make a distinct contribution to the development of the envisaged platform.
Eligibility & Conditions
Conditions
Conditions
1. Admissibility conditions: described in section 5 of the call document
Proposal page limits and layout: described in Part B of the Application Form available in the Submission System
2. Eligible countries: described in section 6 of of the call document
3. Other eligibility conditions: described in section 6 of the call document
4. Financial and operational capacity and exclusion: described in section 7 of the call document
- Submission and evaluation processes: described section 8 of the call document and the Online Manual
- Award criteria, scoring and thresholds: described in section 9 of the call document
- Indicative timeline for evaluation and grant agreement: described in section 4 of the call document
6. Legal and financial set-up of the grants: described in section 10 of the call document
Documents
Call document is accessible here
Standard application form — call-specific application form is available in the Submission System
Detailed budget table - available in the Submission System
DIGITAL EUROPE PROGRAMME - General MGA v1
Guidance Classification of information in DIGITAL projects
Guidelines on How to Complete your Ethics Self-Assessment
Guidance on participation in DEP - restricted calls
Digital Europe Work Programme 2023-2024
Digital Europe Programme Regulation 2021/694
EU Financial Regulation 2018/1046
Support & Resources
For help related to this call, please contact us here
Funding & Tenders Portal FAQ – Submission of proposals.
IT Helpdesk – Contact the IT helpdesk for questions such as forgotten passwords, access rights and roles, technical aspects of submission of proposals, etc.
Online Manual – Step-by-step online guide through the Portal processes from proposal preparation and submission to reporting on your on-going project. Valid for all 2021-2027 programmes.
Latest Updates
The evaluation results of this call can be consulted in the following link.
Please note that the deadline date for this call has been postponed to 22/11/2023
Please note that the deadline date for this topic has been postponed to 22/11/2023