Closed

Materials Commons for Europe (IA)

HORIZON Innovation Actions

Basic Information

Identifier
HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-45
Programme
INDUSTRY
Programme Period
2021 - 2027
Status
Closed (31094503)
Opening Date
May 22, 2025
Deadline
September 23, 2025
Deadline Model
single-stage
Budget
€15,000,000
Min Grant Amount
€4,000,000
Max Grant Amount
€5,000,000
Expected Number of Grants
3
Keywords
HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-45HORIZON-CL4-2025-01

Description

Expected Outcome:

The project is expected to contribute to the following outcomes:

  1. Create a pioneer federated digital infrastructure for advanced materials research and development, demonstrating use cases facilitating industrial uptake and offering a feedback loop to academic research;
  2. Give researchers from industry and academia access to interoperable, heterogeneous and FAIR[1] data sources and computational tools that support the workflows for the design and development of advanced materials;
  3. Address the requirements of experimental workflows for high-quality, well-structured and documented primary data by providing tailored solutions to experimentalists;
  4. Provide a framework to support self-driving labs using the digital infrastructure, enabling to use of state-of-the-art AI technologies and predictive modelling techniques in industry and academia;
  5. Devise mechanisms for long term sustainability and expansion to future use cases.
Scope:

This action will accelerate R&I in the area of advanced materials by bringing together at EU level experience, knowledge and resources, from existing and new national digital infrastructures for advanced materials design and development.

It will set the ground for the implementation of a long term sustainable European digital infrastructure for advanced materials R&I as announced in the Communication on Advanced Materials for Industrial Leadership[2], supporting academic and industrial collaborations.

Such a digital infrastructure should:

  • Interconnect existing and new infrastructures devoted to advanced materials design and development across the EU supported by AI tool and facilitate access to High-Performance Computing facilities.
  • Help researchers and innovators from across Europe to significantly accelerate the design, development, characterisation and testing of new or improved advanced materials in a controlled environment.
  • Foster trust in data sharing among stakeholders (including researchers, research organisations, industry and SMEs) based on FAIR data principles, while also fostering common materials taxonomies, ontologies and data interoperability.
  • Be based on an inclusive approach that fosters contributions from academia and industry, across different sectors, using a user-centric view that takes into account intellectual property rights and ownership.
  • Support virtual design of advanced materials and related processing. Foster the progress towards self-driving labs which are widely accessible to European researchers.

To achieve these goals, beneficiaries are in principle expected to be publicly funded organisations with the necessary expertise, which are mandated by their competent ministry. They must be able to function as major (e.g., national or regional) hubs and contact points for stakeholders in national ecosystems, exploring models for participation and contribution, while also working closely with pan-European organisations working on the digitalisation of R&I on advanced materials.

The inclusive nature of the Materials Commons for Europe shall be facilitated through the creation of an advisory board as part of the project composed of relevant ministries or national funding bodies supporting short- and long-term solutions. The applicants are encouraged to consider a project duration of around four years.

The envisioned project should follow the following phases:

  1. Phase 1: Planning and Framework Establishment
  • Developing functional and non-functional requirements and identifying existing solutions (e.g., cloud solutions, middleware, data spaces) that can be used to accelerate, or be integrated into, the infrastructure. Identification of possible use of existing infrastructures and resources, including support for and integration of self-driving labs.
  • Planning a governance framework, able to implement the infrastructure meeting the functional and non-functional requirements, including a strategy for adhesion of new entities in the long term.
  • Agreeing on long-term sustainability plan, taking into account academic, industry needs and aspects going beyond R&I.
  • Determining compatibility issues and standardisation needs, also in relation to semantic interoperability.
  • Setting out key stakeholders, including from academia and industry and related projects and initiatives which will be the users of the infrastructure.
  1. Phase 2: Initial build-up
  • Building up trust infrastructure and enabling remote access.
  • Governance framework for data, computational tools and workflows at operational level.
  • Standards and machine readable, domain-specific data schemas and Advanced Programming Interfaces, enabling semantic interoperability and interconnections between different datasets and tools.
  • Support for European self-driving labs and their interconnection to the infrastructure, enabling them to reach higher levels of data-driven decision making and automated workflows.
  1. Phase 3: Demonstration
  • Integration of workflows and tools, including those aimed at creation of primary data.
  • 5 use cases across different sectors and related demonstrators, facilitating industrial uptake and offering a feedback loop to academic research.
  • concrete steps towards sustainability.

Complementarity and synergies should be sought with existing national initiatives such as Material Digital[3], DIADEM[4] and CaPeX[5], as well as with innovation-related strategies, policies, programmes and plans at national and/or regional level. This also extends to EU initiatives such as the proposed “Innovative Materials for EU” partnership, Data Spaces including in particular the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC)[6], EuroHPC[7] and Open Innovation Testbeds[8].

The action should also envisage the coordination with a possible mutual learning exercise (MLE) on this topic, targeted to countries leading on this area and those who still need to improve national digital infrastructure, enabling an exchange of experience with digital infrastructures, and creating synergies with ongoing related initiatives.

Proposals should involve appropriate expertise in Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH), in particular to achieve a user-centred design that facilitates access across different sectors, and by different communities with different characteristics.

[1] Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable

[2] COM(2024) 98 final

[3] https://www.materialdigital.de/

[4] https://pepr-diadem.fr

[5] https://capex.dtu.dk/

[6] https://eosc.eu/

[7] https://eurohpc-ju.europa.eu/index_en

[8] https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/0aaf1e05-2082-11ee-94cb-01aa75ed71a1/language-en

Destination & Scope

The research and innovation under this Destination will contribute to a paradigm shift, as regards the availability, development, use and disposal of chemicals and materials. This is necessary to guarantee Europe’s technological sovereignty and capacity to deliver on the twin green and digital transitions (it is thus strongly linked to the objectives of the Destination ‘Achieving global leadership in climate-neutral, circular and digitised industrial and digital value chains’).

To enable such a shift, an innovative, strong European R&I ecosystem for circular chemicals and materials is needed, working across different technology readiness levels. Bringing knowledge and skills together across the materials’ value chains is key to ensuring that this shift can materialise.

The requirements of the European Green Deal for safety, sustainability and circularity should be considered across the life cycle of a chemical or material. The 2022 Commission Recommendation on ‘Safe and Sustainable by Design’ (SSbD) sets out a new framework on how to achieve these objectives.

R&I activities should contribute to strengthen EU’s critical raw materials capacities along all stages of the value chain, increasing our resilience by reducing dependencies, increasing preparedness and promoting supply chain sustainability and circularity, in line with the Critical Raw Materials Act. It is necessary to improve the energy and process efficiency of extractive and processing activities and minimise their environmental impact, including GHG emissions. Advancements need to be made on finding options for replacing critical raw materials with other (advanced) materials offering at least the same functionality and taking into account the existing environmental concerns.

Advanced materials (including amongst others nano- and 2D materials) and chemicals are designed with functionality in mind. Compared to conventional materials, they have novel properties that significantly step-up performance. New digital tools are needed such as common data spaces, digital twins, industrial virtual worlds, as well as novel (autonomous) design, synthesis, development, characterisation and fabrication tools as well as continuous training of scientists on these new tools.

To secure unimpeded market entry, appropriate test methods are needed. New chemicals and materials should be developed using the SSbD framework and with the efficiency and circularity of materials in mind, also for their inclusion in products. This calls for tools, models and data for robust SSbD, including animal-free new approach methodologies and systematic life-cycle assessments. Bio-based advanced materials/chemicals and the integration and interaction of biological and artificial materials and components offer new opportunities to reduce resource dependencies and maintain sustainability.

Achieving the circularity of both raw materials and advanced materials is a key future challenge. Establishing new material flows, recovery, recycling and upcycling of materials from waste are challenges in themselves, but they also require information sharing along and across value chains and development of new business models allowing to foster innovative solutions related to technological progress, such as in materials design.

Uptake of advanced materials as well as a more efficient use of materials should be fostered in product and materials-based technology developments. This also requires new business models to be developed for the deployment of circular technologies and value chains as well as for providing product-as-a-service models, on-demand manufacturing, take-back-schemes and other service-based businesses. Strong support to SMEs is required so they can thrive in this materials ecosystem.

Business cases and exploitation strategies for industrialisation:

This section applies only to those topics in this Destination, for which proposals should demonstrate the expected outcomes by including a business case and exploitation strategy for industrialisation.

A business case and a credible initial exploitation strategy are essential components in the ultimate success of an industry-based project, as well as its prospects to attract further investments for deployment. They will both be decisive factors under the impact criterion, and proposers are encouraged to use the extended page limit to present a carefully considered business case and exploitation strategy, backed by the management of the companies involved.

The business case should demonstrate the expected impact of the proposal in terms of enhanced market opportunities for the participants and deployment in the EU, in the short to medium term. It should describe the targeted market(s); estimated market size in the EU and globally; user and customer needs; and demonstrate that the solutions will match the market and user needs in a cost-effective manner; and describe the expected market position and competitive advantage.

The exploitation strategy should identify obstacles, requirements and necessary actions involved in reaching higher TRLs (Technology Readiness Levels), for example: securing the required investments, including through possible synergies with other programmes; accessing the required skills; matching value chains; enhancing product robustness; securing industrial integrators; and user acceptance.

For TRLs 6 and 7, a credible strategy to achieve future full-scale deployment in the EU is expected, indicating the intentions of the industrial partners after the end of the project.

Where relevant, in the context of skills, it is recommended to develop training material to endow workers with the right skillset in order to support the uptake and deployment of new innovative products, services, and processes developed in the different projects. This material should be tested and be scalable, and can potentially be up-scaled through the European Social Fund Plus (ESF+). This will help the European labour force to close the skill gaps in the relevant sectors and occupational groups and improve employment and social levels across the EU and associated countries.

For topics in this destination, consortia (if selected for funding) could consider voluntary contributions in terms of data, indicators and knowledge to relevant Joint Research Centre (JRC) platforms for capitalising the knowledge developed in their projects and become more policy relevant:

Innovation Actions — Legal entities established in China are not eligible to participate in Innovation Actions in any capacity. Please refer to the Annex B of the General Annexes of this Work Programme for further details.

Eligibility & Conditions

General conditions

1. Admissibility Conditions: Proposal page limit and layout

described in Annex A and Annex E of the Horizon Europe Work Programme General Annexes.

Proposal page limits and layout: described in Part B of the Application Form available in the Submission System.

2. Eligible Countries

described in Annex B of the Work Programme General Annexes.

A number of non-EU/non-Associated Countries that are not automatically eligible for funding have made specific provisions for making funding available for their participants in Horizon Europe projects. See the information in the Horizon Europe Programme Guide.

3. Other Eligible Conditions

described in Annex B of the Work Programme General Annexes.

4. Financial and operational capacity and exclusion

described in Annex C of the Work Programme General Annexes.

5a. Evaluation and award: Award criteria, scoring and thresholds

are described in Annex D of the Work Programme General Annexes.

5b. Evaluation and award: Submission and evaluation processes

are described in Annex F of the Work Programme General Annexes and the Online Manual.

5c. Evaluation and award: Indicative timeline for evaluation and grant agreement

described in Annex F of the Work Programme General Annexes.

6. Legal and financial set-up of the grants

described in Annex G of the Work Programme General Annexes.

Specific conditions

described in the [specific topic of the Work Programme]

Support & Resources

Online Manual is your guide on the procedures from proposal submission to managing your grant.

Horizon Europe Programme Guide contains the detailed guidance to the structure, budget and political priorities of Horizon Europe.

Funding & Tenders Portal FAQ – find the answers to most frequently asked questions on submission of proposals, evaluation and grant management.

Research Enquiry Service – ask questions about any aspect of European research in general and the EU Research Framework Programmes in particular.

National Contact Points (NCPs) – get guidance, practical information and assistance on participation in Horizon Europe. There are also NCPs in many non-EU and non-associated countries (‘third-countries’).

Enterprise Europe Network – contact your EEN national contact for advice to businesses with special focus on SMEs. The support includes guidance on the EU research funding.

IT Helpdesk – contact the Funding & Tenders Portal IT helpdesk for questions such as forgotten passwords, access rights and roles, technical aspects of submission of proposals, etc.

European IPR Helpdesk assists you on intellectual property issues.

CEN-CENELEC Research Helpdesk and ETSI Research Helpdesk – the European Standards Organisations advise you how to tackle standardisation in your project proposal.

The European Charter for Researchers and the Code of Conduct for their recruitment – consult the general principles and requirements specifying the roles, responsibilities and entitlements of researchers, employers and funders of researchers.

Partner Search help you find a partner organisation for your proposal.

Latest Updates

Last Changed: September 23, 2025

CALL UPDATE: PROPOSAL NUMBERS



Call HORIZON-CL4-2025-01 has closed on the 23/09/2025.

639 proposals have been submitted.



The breakdown per topic is:

Topic ID

Topic title

Action type

Proposals submitted

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-01

Integrated approaches for remanufacturing (Made in Europe Partnership) (IA)

IA

80

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-02

Physical and cognitive augmentation in advanced manufacturing (Made in Europe Partnership) (RIA)

RIA

94

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-05

Advanced manufacturing technologies for leadership of EU manufacturers in products for the net-zero industry (Made in Europe Partnership) (IA)

IA

64

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-31

From heat-driven processes to the use of mechanical and electric forces (Processes4Planet Partnership) (IA)

IA

13

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-32

Green and resilient flexible production processes (Processes4Planet Partnership) (IA)

IA

19

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-33

Integrated use of renewable energy carriers in industrial sites (Processes4Planet Partnership) (RIA)

RIA

35

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-34

Smart integration of net zero technologies into Energy Intensive industries (Processes4Planet and Made in Europe Partnerships) (IA)

IA

12

TWIN-TRANSITION-36

Safe and clean processing technologies and products (Processes4Planet Partnership) (RIA)

RIA

25

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-37

Solving issues in carbon-neutral iron and steel making processes with diverse input materials of varying quality (Clean Steel Partnership) (RIA)

RIA

22

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-38

Synergies and mutual learning with national and regional initiatives in Europe on Industrial decarbonisation (Processes4Planet and Clean Steel Partnerships) (CSA)

CSA

1

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-39

Towards human-centric, sustainable and resilient energy-intensive industries (Processes4Planet and Clean Steel Partnerships) (CSA)

CSA

3

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-31

Digitally enabled local-for-local textile and apparel production (Textiles for the Future Partnership) (IA)

IA

33

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-44

Innovative Advanced Materials Innovation Procurement (CSA)

CSA

4

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-45

Materials Commons for Europe (IA)

IA

3

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-52

Accelerate the uptake of life-cycle assessment (LCA) for Safe and Sustainable by Design (SSbD) chemicals and materials and resulting products (RIA)

RIA

35

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-61

Technologies for critical raw materials and strategic raw materials from end-of-life products (IA)

IA

38

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-62

Strategic Partnerships for Raw Materials: Innovative approaches for sustainable production of Critical Raw Materials (IA)

IA

31

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-63

Innovative solutions for the sustainable production for semiconductor raw materials (IA)

IA

7

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-64

EU Co-funded Partnership on raw materials for the green and digital transition (Programme Co-fund action)

COFUND

1

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-DIGITAL-61

AI Foundation models in science (GenAI4EU) (RIA)

RIA

47

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-DIGITAL-62

Facilitated cooperation for AI in Science (CSA)

CSA

7

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-60

Horizon Standardisation Booster (CSA)

CSA

3

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-61

Standardisation landscape analyses tool (CSA)

CSA

3

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-62

Artificial Intelligence for knowledge valorisation (CSA)

CSA

15

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-63

Value creation pilots for scaling up innovative solutions (CSA)

CSA

10

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-64

Pilot initiatives on Technology Infrastructures (CSA)

CSA

20

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-65

Network of Industry 5.0 system innovation hubs in connected Regional Innovation Valleys (IA)

IA

8

HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-66

Assessment of Technology Infrastructure needs in Ukraine (CSA)

CSA

6

Total:

639



Evaluation results are expected to be communicated around mid-January 2026.



A.R.



Last Changed: September 15, 2025

Reminder on proposal part B page limit and formatting conditions



1.    Proposal part B page limit



The title, list of participants and sections 1, 2 and 3, together, should not be longer than page limit, indicated in a proposal part B template inside the Submission System. 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 a proposal part B template inside the Submission System 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.



2.Proposal part B formatting conditions



The following formatting conditions apply (as listed in a proposal part B template inside the Submission System) and will be checked by the Agency during an admissibility check of submitted proposals.



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).



Proposal part B template inside the Submission System 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.



Last Changed: June 10, 2025

Please note that due to a technical issue, during the first days of publication of this call, the topic page did not display the description of the corresponding destination. This problem is now solved. In addition to the information published in the topic page, you can always find a full description of destinations:

* destination 1: Achieving global leadership in climate-neutral, circular and digitised industrial and digital value chains;

* destination 2: Achieving technological leadership for Europe's open strategic autonomy in raw materials, chemicals and innovative materials;

* destination 4: Achieving open strategic autonomy in digital and emerging enabling technologies;

* destination 6: Digital and industrial technologies driving human-centric innovation,

that are relevant for the call in the Work Programme 2025 part for “Industry”. Please select from the work programme the destination relevant to your topic and take into account the description and expected impacts of that destination for the preparation of your proposal.

Last Changed: May 22, 2025
The submission session is now available for: HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-52, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-64, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-37, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-65, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-66, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-DIGITAL-61, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-31, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-02, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-44, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-64, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-63, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-34, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-61, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-32, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-38, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-63, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-36, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-DIGITAL-62, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-31, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-05, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-61, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-39, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-01, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-62, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-MATERIALS-45, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-TWIN-TRANSITION-33, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-60, HORIZON-CL4-INDUSTRY-2025-01-HUMAN-62
Materials Commons for Europe (IA) | Grantalist