Closed

Optimisation of manure use along the management chain to mitigate GHG emissions and minimize nutrients/contaminants dispersion in the environment

HORIZON Research and Innovation Actions

Basic Information

Identifier
HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage
Programme
Clean environment and zero pollution
Programme Period
2021 - 2027
Status
Closed (31094503)
Opening Date
December 22, 2022
Deadline
March 28, 2023
Deadline Model
two-stage
Budget
€7,000,000
Min Grant Amount
€7,000,000
Max Grant Amount
€7,000,000
Expected Number of Grants
1
Keywords
HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stageHORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02Agriculture related to animal husbandry, dairying, livestock raisingAnimal housingAnimal wasteClimate change adaptationClimate change mitigationCost-benefit analysisEnvironment, Pollution & ClimateEnvironmental impact assessmentFeed additivesGreenhouse gases

Description

Expected Outcome:

In line with the farm to fork strategy, the methane strategy, the EU zero pollution action plan and the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the successful proposal will support research and innovation (R&I) to help farm business reduce local and global GHG and ammonia emissions from livestock farming systems. It will contribute to support policy makers with enhanced knowledge to limit emissions and investigate further measures, inter alia under the common agricultural policy, to achieve reduction targets of 2030 and beyond.

The proposed project is expected to contribute to the reduction of the environmental and climate footprint of the livestock farming systems, through a better understanding of i) the potential of scaling up efficient and innovative manure management practices and technologies, and ii) the impact of emission abatement and contaminant reduction measures on health and environment (air, water and soil) safety.

Activities under this topic will contribute to all of the following outcomes:

  • Improved cost-effective solutions to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and atmospheric, air, water and environment pollutants produced by the livestock manure management chain, both in conventional and organic livestock farming
  • Boosted uptake of improved and innovative practices and technologies to optimise manure management (while considering potential trade-offs)
  • Improved capacity to better manage manure nutrients, minimizing their losses, increasing circularity and matching demand and supply
  • Policy recommendation on improving manure management to mitigate GHG and ammonia emissions and minimize dispersion of undesirable manure components such as biological and chemical contaminants in the environment.
Scope:

Agriculture is a sector that significantly contributes to GHG emissions in EU and to air pollution, mainly through ammonia emissions. Reducing the environmental and climate footprint of the livestock farming system is therefore of paramount importance. Several practices and technical measures to limit emissions from manure management are already available. Some other techniques are still considered experimental. Despite major advancements, there is still no widespread application of these practices and further research is needed to assess their socio-economic and environmental impacts. Furthermore, there is the need to do a comprehensive analysis of the effectiveness of mitigation strategies along the entire manure management chain and to take into account different GHGs and the pollution swapping effect, i.e. decreasing the emission of one GHG that can cause the increase of another one or the increase of the emission of the same GHG at one of the other stages of manure management.

Another important aspect of manure management is to reduce environmental pollution caused among others by ammonia emissions, excess of nitrogen and phosphorus, by nitrate leakages, and by different components of manure, including potential contaminants, on air and water quality, on soil health, on animal health, welfare and productivity and on human health.

Therefore, there is the need to develop further strategies and technologies for livestock farming systems to reduce GHG, ammonia and nitrate emissions from manure through an integrated approach for the management of manure, taking into account all steps: feeding, housing, handling, collection, treatment, storage and application. The following elements should be incorporated:

  • Identify and establish inventory of up-to-date manure management practices, technologies and data originating from R&I activities (from feeding to low-emission manure storage and processing, composting, exchange of manure/slurries between livestock and crop farms, manure additives to reduce emissions, etc.) in conventional/intensive, semi-intensive, household and organic livestock farming systems;
  • Improve or develop lifecycle assessment methods, models and equipment for the measurement and monitoring of GHG (CH4, N2O), atmospheric and air pollutants (NH3, NOx) at each stage of manure management practices, from feeding to field application;
  • Improve knowledge on the fate and persistence in the environment (e.g., water, soil, air) of manure chemicals and biological contaminants, including pathogens antibiotic resistance genes, heavy metals and associated health/environmental risks;
  • Demonstrate and test the most efficient strategies and technologies to mitigate GHG emissions and air pollutants from manure at regional/local scale. Activities should take into account relevant practices, strategies and data on GHG, atmospheric and air pollutants mitigation from several livestock farming systems, covering conventional/intensive, semi-intensive, grazing/low input or organic, in different climate/biogeographical regions;
  • Cost-benefit assessment of practices/technologies used to mitigate GHG emissions, air pollutants and nitrate emissions from manure, including assessment of pollution swapping effects, trade-offs and co-benefits on animal (e.g., health and welfare, production efficiencies) and environment (e.g., ammonia emissions, nitrate leakage, nitrogen balance and P losses to water);
  • Formulate technical guidelines and policy recommendation to enhance the implementation and uptake of methods, technologies or practices to limit emissions and contaminants from manure management.

The proposal should take into account other EU-funded projects, including those funded under the ERA-NETs SusAn[1] and ERA-GAS[2]. Proposals should be based on a gap analysis taking into account the existing legislation[3] and related knowledge.

Proposals must implement the 'multi-actor approach’ and ensure adequate involvement of the farming sector, agricultural advisory services, manufacturers, ecology and nature conservation experts, and other relevant actors.

In this topic, the integration of the gender dimension (sex and gender analysis) in research and innovation content is not a mandatory requirement.

Due to the scope of this topic, international cooperation is strongly encouraged, in particular with China. This topic is within the scope of the Administrative Arrangement between the European Commission and the Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China on a Co-funding Mechanism for the period 2021-2024 to support collaborative research projects under the Food, Agriculture and Biotechnologies (FAB) and the Climate Change and Biodiversity (CCB) flagship initiatives.

Actions will contribute to implementing the EU-China Food, Agriculture and Biotechnology (FAB) flagship initiative, which aims to ensure sustainability of agri-food systems, catering for the needs of a growing population, the reduction of food and agricultural losses and waste, and the provision of safe and healthy foodstuffs. Interaction with other actions developed under the EU-China Climate Change and Biodiversity (CCB) Research Flagship and the Flagship on Food, Agriculture and Biotechnologies (FAB) is encouraged if relevant.

[1] https://era-susan.eu/.

[2] https://eragas.eu/en/eragas.htm.

[3] Such as Directive 2000/60/EC on the water framework directive; Directive 91/676/EEC on protection of waters against pollution caused by nitrates from agricultural sources; Directive 2010/75 on Industrial Emissions; Directive 2016/2284 on the reduction of national emissions of certain atmospheric pollutants.

Destination & Scope

Anthropogenic pollution undermines the integrity of Earth’s ecosystems and severely affects natural resources essential for human life. Keeping our planet clean and our ecosystems healthy will not only help addressing the climate crisis but also help regenerate biodiversity, ensure the sustainability of primary production activities and safeguard the well-being of humankind. In line with the objectives of the European Green Deal and related initiatives targeting environmental challenges, particularly the EU zero pollution action plan, the 2030 climate target plan, and other relevant EU legislation, this destination seeks to halt and prevent pollution by focusing on:

  • removing pollution from fresh and marine waters, soils, air, including from nitrogen and phosphorus emissions;
  • substituting harmful chemicals;
  • improving the environmental sustainability and circularity of bio-based systems;
  • reducing environmental impacts of and pollution in food systems.

Synergies with other clusters (notably 1 for health issues and 5 for air pollution from urban sources), relevant destinations, missions (particularly ‘A Soil Deal for Europe’ and ‘Restore our Ocean and Waters by 2030’) and partnerships will be exploited.

Topics under the heading Halting pollution of air, soil and water aim to identify and demonstrate approaches to combat diffuse emissions of pollutants from land and other sources. In this context, keeping nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) cycles in balance is a major challenge. N and P flows from anthropogenic sources, mostly from excessive or inefficient input of fertilisers (manure, sewage sludge, etc.) in agriculture and from waste water treatments, currently exceed planetary boundaries. Their leaching and run-off negatively affect soil biodiversity, pH, organic matter concentration and carbon sequestration capacity, and cause the eutrophication of water bodies while ammonia and nitrous oxide emissions affect air quality and climate. As all environmental compartments are concerned, a systemic approach is needed to limit N/P emissions from different sources, and to bring N/P flows back within safe ecological boundaries, e.g. by improving the way fertilising products in agriculture are managed while taking into account regional conditions. Actions will include showcasing best practices to recover nutrients from secondary raw materials in order to produce alternative fertilisers and demonstrating pathways for regions to keep their N/P flows within ecological boundaries.

Topics under Protecting drinking water and managing urban water pollution seek to develop and demonstrate a comprehensive framework bringing together new innovative solutions and approaches to ensure drinking water is of a good quality, address urban water pollution and harmonise different policies and management approaches. Actions should explore solutions to increase the resilience of urban waste water systems, reducing the carbon footprint and emissions, improve resource efficiency and energy recovery, and limit risks from contaminants of emerging concern. An integrated strategy to harmonise and update monitoring with prioritisation for comprehensive control of urban water cycles should be developed by harnessing the potential of digital solutions.

Topics under Addressing pollution in seas and ocean strive to fill knowledge gaps about risks and impacts of pollution from contaminants of emerging concern in the marine environment (in particular pharmaceuticals and endocrine disruptors) including in the context of the changing marine environment due to changes in the climate system. They will further develop and test solutions for the integrated assessment and monitoring of the circulation and impacts of contaminants of emerging concern in the marine environment, in order to help implement EU policies and legislation, e.g. the Water Framework Directive and Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Actions should also explore the role of pollution in intensifying impacts related to climate change, including in the Arctic, resulting in solutions and strategies to help ecosystems and human communities adapt as regards the changes in the Arctic.

Topics under Increasing the environmental sustainability and circularity of bio-based processes and products look at developing bio-based solutions for environmental monitoring and remediation as well as the concept of integrating sustainability and circularity into bio-based systems. This concept also includes bio-based chemicals, additives and materials solutions contributing to carbon removal objectives, the chemicals strategy for sustainability (CSS strategy) and the development of safe- and -sustainable-by-design materials and products.

Furthermore, topics under the heading Reducing the environmental impact and pollution of food systems focus on increasing our knowledge of the soil, water and air pollution stemming from different food production and supply practices and providing opportunities to reduce environmental and climate impacts of food systems. This also includes preventing and reducing plastic pollution stemming from plastic food packaging.

Expected impact

Proposals for topics under this destination should set out a credible pathway that helps to halt and eliminate pollution to guarantee clean and healthy soils, air, fresh and marine water for all and ensure that natural resources are used and managed in a sustainable and circular manner. To reach this objective, it will be vital to advance the knowledge of pollution sources and pathways to enable preventive measures to be rolled out, improve sustainability and circularity, apply planetary boundaries in practice and introduce effective remediation methods. To this end, the following is required:

  • move towards achieving clean, unpolluted surface water and groundwater bodies in the EU and Associated Countries by increasing understanding of diffuse and point sources of water pollution in a global and climate change context, enabling novel solutions to avoid degradation and restore water bodies, aquatic ecosystems and soil functionality, and further improve the quality and management of water for safe human and ecological use, while strengthening the EU’s and Associated Countries’ positions and roles in the global water scene;
  • balance N/P flows within safe ecological boundaries at regional and local level, helping restore ecosystems;
  • move towards achieving clean, unpolluted oceans and seas, including in the Arctic, by means of successful scientific, technological, behavioural, socio-economic, governance and green-blue transitions;
  • strengthen circular bio-based systems to operate within planetary boundaries, replacing fossil-based systems and their carbon footprint, mitigating climate change, and restoring biodiversity and protecting air, water and soil quality along the supply chain of biological feedstocks and industrial value chains within the EU and Associated Countries and across borders;
  • substitute harmful chemicals for safer and more sustainable alternatives, notably by boosting innovative biotechnology and other sustainable technologies to create zero-pollution bio-based solutions;
  • reduce the environmental impact of food systems, e.g. by increasing knowledge of the environmental and climate impacts stemming from the food systems and reducing pollution from plastic food packaging.

Eligibility & Conditions

General conditions

Applicants submitting a proposal under the blind evaluation pilot (see General Annex F) must not disclose their organisation names, acronyms, logos, nor names of personnel in Part B of their first stage application (see General Annex E).

General conditions

1. Admissibility conditions: 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.

The following additional eligibility criteria apply: the proposals must apply the multi-actor approach. See definition of the multi-actor approach in the introduction to this work programme part.

3. Other eligibility 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

This topic is part of the blind evaluation pilot under which first stage proposals will be evaluated blindly.

  • Award criteria, scoring and thresholds are described in Annex D of the Work Programme General Annexes

  • Submission and evaluation processes are described in Annex F of the Work Programme General Annexes and the Online Manual

  • 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

7. Specific conditions: described in the [specific topic of the Work Programme]

 

Support & Resources

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Latest Updates

Last Changed: February 15, 2024

 

CALL UPDATE: FLASH EVALUATION RESULTS

 

EVALUATION results

Published: 22.12.2022

Deadline: 26.09.2023

Available budget: EUR 15.00 M

The results of the evaluation are as follows:

 

Topic Id

Number of proposals submitted (including proposals transferred from or to other calls)

Number of inadmissible proposals

Number of ineligible proposals

Number of above-threshold proposals

Total budget requested for above-threshold proposals (EUR M)

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage

4

0

0

4

27.9

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-2-two-stage

8

0

0

8

32.28

 

We recently informed the applicants about the evaluation results for their proposals.

For questions, please contact the Research Enquiry Service.

 

 

Last Changed: October 16, 2023

 

 

CALL UPDATE: PROPOSAL NUMBERS

 

PROPOSAL NUMBERS

Call HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02_stage2 has closed on the 26 September.

12 proposals have been submitted.

The breakdown per topic is:

  • HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage: 4 proposals
  • HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-2-two-stage:8 proposals

 

Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in January 2024

 

 

Last Changed: July 6, 2023

 

CALL UPDATE: FLASH EVALUATION RESULTS

 EVALUATION results

Deadline: 28/03/2023

Available budget: EUR 15,00 M

: 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):

Topic ID

Topic short name

Overall threshold applied

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage

Optimisation of manure use along the management chain to mitigate GHG emissions and minimize nutrients/contaminants dispersion in the environment

9

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-2-two-stage

Safe-and-sustainable-by-design bio-based platform chemicals, additives, materials or products as alternatives

8.5

 

The results of the evaluation are as follows:

Topic

Number of proposals submitted

Number of inadmissible proposals

Number of ineligible proposals

Number of above-threshold proposals

Total requested EU contribution of proposals invited to stage 2 (EUR Mil)

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage

10

0

0

4

28.18

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-2-two-stage

25

0

0

8

31.90

 

We recently informed the applicants about the evaluation results for their proposals.

For questions, please contact the Research Enquiry Service

 

Last Changed: July 4, 2023

 GENERALISED FEEDBACK for successful applicants after STAGE 1

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.

Main shortcomings found in the stage 1 evaluation for topic HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage:

·         Several proposals failed to address all the expected impacts set out in the work programme, in particular those related to water pollution.

 

·         The significance of the project’s contribution to the expected outcomes and impacts was not always quantified.

 

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.

Last Changed: April 3, 2023

CALL UPDATE: PROPOSAL NUMBERS

 

PROPOSAL NUMBERS

Call HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02 has closed on the on March 28.

36 proposals have been submitted.

The breakdown per topic is:

Topic Id

Proposals Received

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage

10

HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-2-two-stage

26

 

Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in June 2023.

Last Changed: February 28, 2023

The new version of the 1st stage application form Part B, including the guidance on blind evaluation, is now available in the submission tool. 

Last Changed: December 22, 2022
The submission session is now available for: HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-1-two-stage(HORIZON-RIA), HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-02-2-two-stage(HORIZON-RIA)
Optimisation of manure use along the management chain to mitigate GHG emissions and minimize nutrients/contaminants dispersion in the environment | Grantalist