Improved Components And Tools To Increase The Safety Of Electrolysers
HORIZON JU Research and Innovation Actions
Basic Information
- Identifier
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-01-03
- Programme
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026
- Programme Period
- 2021 - 2027
- Status
- Open (31094502)
- Opening Date
- February 10, 2026
- Deadline
- April 15, 2026
- Deadline Model
- single-stage
- Budget
- €105,000,000
- Min Grant Amount
- €5,000,000
- Max Grant Amount
- €5,000,000
- Expected Number of Grants
- 1
- Keywords
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-01-03HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026Hydrogen
Description
Expected Outcome:
Hydrogen production via water electrolysis is a cornerstone technology for achieving Europe’s climate neutrality goals and supporting the decarbonisation of industry, transport, and the energy sector. As the deployment of electrolyser systems scales up, so do concerns around their safety, durability, and long-term operational reliability. In particular, incidents related to hydrogen and oxygen mixing within cells, stacks and tanks – caused by membrane degradation, structural failures, or inadequate monitoring – pose risks not only to the systems themselves but also to their regulatory acceptance and public perception. These challenges are exacerbated during critical operating phases, such as system start-up, shutdown, and dynamic load transitions driven by fluctuating renewable electricity inputs.
This topic addresses these challenges by focusing on the development and validation of improved components and integrated tools to enhance the safety of low-temperature water electrolysers. Proposals on this topic should cover conventional low temperature electrolyser as well as emerging architectures. It should be open to diverse approaches, provided they address the core issue of increasing system safety while maintaining or improving electrochemical performance and enabling scalable, regulation-ready designs. To address these challenges holistically, proposals should also cover structural and mechanical aspects, including numerical modelling of degradation and failure mechanisms (e.g. finite element (FE) modelling), and provide design recommendations for electrolyser components to enhance operational integrity and intrinsic safety.
Project results are expected to contribute to enhancing the safety, reliability, and regulatory readiness of electrolysers by addressing critical degradation mechanisms and system design flaws that may lead to H₂/O₂ mixing and other hazardous failures.
The projects are expected to contribute to the following outcomes:
- Contribute to the safe operation of large-scale low-temperature electrolyser systems through innovative system designs and control strategies;
- Reduce gas crossover rates during dynamic operation mode compared to the current state-of-the-art, thereby enhancing intrinsic system safety, operational reliability, and mitigating critical safety risks;
- Deploy advanced, real-time detection systems for early identification of membrane or electrode degradation, enabling timely and preventive safety interventions;
- Increase electrolyser lifetime through predictive maintenance enabled by validated degradation models and integrated monitoring tools;
- Improve cell and stack designs to achieve superior gas separation performance, while minimising or eliminating the use of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) membranes and promoting low-permeability alternatives;
- Incorporate Quantitative Risk Analysis (QRA) models for key failure scenarios.
- Support EU-wide safety standards by contributing to pre-normative research and the development of harmonised testing protocols for electrolyser operation and certification.
Project results are expected to contribute to the following objectives and KPIs of the Clean Hydrogen JU SRIA:
- Reducing electrolyser CAPEX and OPEX and thus the cost per kg H2, especially by reducing the amount of Critical Raw Materials (CRM) used;
- Zero use of PFAS in ion exchange membranes and ionomers, by implementing hydrocarbon-based or composite membranes with verified chemical/mechanical stability;
- Increasing the availability of electrolysers reducing safety shutdowns due to leaks and component failures;
- Proof of the technology with long test(s) (3,000 h) under different operative regimes (i.e., RES typical profiles);
- Business model for the scale-up and industrialisation;
- Contribution to at least one new or updated EU safety standard or testing protocol
Project results should contribute to the achievement of the KPIs for increased operation availability and safety of electrolysers:
- Gas crossover incidence rate reduced by ≥ 50% compared to current state-of-the-art (PEMEL: 0.01–0.05%); (AEMEL: 0.05–0.1%) (AEL: 0.1–0.5%) and (< 0.1% in emerging architectures)
- <2 failures per 3,000 operating hours per stack
- Operational availability increased to >95% due to predictive safety controls and to reduced leak frequencies;
- Stack degradation <0.06% per 1,000 hours under nominal operation;
- Current densities of AEL:1 A/cm2 ; PEMEL: 3.0 A/cm2; AEMEL: 1.5 A/cm2;
- Prioritise materials that avoid PFAS and minimise the use of PGMs, in alignment with EU sustainability and Critical Raw Materials (CRM) strategies and the SRIA KPIs for the selected technology — targeting 0 mg W⁻¹ of CRM in AEL, Ir: 0 mg W⁻¹ and Pt: 0.12 mg W⁻¹ in AEMEL, and Ir: 0.09 mg W⁻¹ and Pt: 0.06 mg W⁻¹ in PEMEL.
- Reduce electricity consumption at nominal capacity addressing the relevant SRIA 2030 KPIs of 48 kWh/kg for each electrolyser technology;
- Development of harmonised safety diagnostics and models integrated into a TRL 5 prototype.
Scope:
The focus of this topic is on advancing and validating novel components and control solutions aimed at improving the operational safety of low-temperature electrolyser systems. This topic is open to a broad range of low-temperature electrolysis technologies, including conventional configurations such as Alkaline Electrolysers (AEL), Proton Exchange Membrane Electrolysers (PEMEL), and Anion Exchange Membrane Electrolysers (AEMEL), as well as emerging designs such as membrane-less electrolysers and decoupled electrolyser systems.
Proposals are expected to develop and integrate innovative materials, cell, and stack and balance-of-plant configurations, including connections, intelligent monitoring/control tools that can detect, and reduce or eliminate the risk of hazardous gas crossover, and inherently safer solutions that prevent hydrogen leaks and build-up of critical concentrations in the module. This includes but is not limited to: next-generation membrane materials with reduced gas crossover, hydrogen permeability, and improved mechanical integrity; novel electrode structures that enhance gas separation; architectures that reduce the potential leak points and physically or operationally decoupled hydrogen and oxygen evolution; novel stack and balance-of plant components integrating efficient H-O recombination catalysts. Novel and advanced optical and spectroscopic techniques for real-time, on-line monitoring of hydrogen purity can be proposed as an integral part of the system’s monitoring and control architecture. These tools can significantly reduce the risk of in-situ cell breakdown while simultaneously supporting an increased number of safe start-up/ shutdown cycles. In parallel, failed components should undergo advanced experimental analysis to identify underlying damage mechanisms and material degradation states. These insights will feed into a dedicated numerical tool—coupling finite element modelling, degradation kinetics, and operational data—to simulate, predict, and optimise component performance under varying conditions. This model should support both real-time decision-making and early-stage design improvements to enhance durability and intrinsic safety. Complementary sensing technologies—such as electrochemical and thermal conductivity sensors—may also be integrated to ensure data redundancy and robust fault validation. Sensor data streams should feed into AI/ML-based models for early anomaly detection, predictive maintenance, and optimised system response strategies.
In parallel with materials, components and hardware development, the topic also encourages the advancement of smart sensing and control solutions to ensure safe operation in real-time. These may include AI- or machine learning-based systems, ideally embedded within a digital twin framework that integrates real-time sensor data with numerical models. Such models can simulate and predict system behaviour under varying conditions, enabling early detection of faults such as membrane failure, electrode delamination, or abnormal thermal and pressure events. Spectroscopy-based diagnostics may further enhance this architecture by providing high-resolution insights into critical degradation processes. Long-term degradation modelling should be combined with embedded diagnostics to support predictive maintenance, reduce unplanned downtime, and extend operational lifetimes. Emphasis should be placed on the performance of these tools under challenging dynamic conditions—including intermittent renewable energy supply—to replicate real-world operating environments (TRL5).
Proposal should validate the proposed solutions. Testing should be carried out at the component, cell, and stack level under relevant conditions (e.g. pressure, temperature, power cycling), with clear metrics for safety, performance, durability, and regulatory compliance. The safety improvements provided by the proposed solutions should be evaluated for their beneficial effects on risk management procedures. Targeted prototype scale and cell size should be appropriate for the considered technology and future scale-up.
The proposal should demonstrate at the end of the project the construction and validation on a stack with the following requirements:
- PEMEL: minimum 100 kWel designed to operate at >100 bars of output pressure. The stack should exhibit a minimum operation performance of current densities > 3.0 A/cm² at <1.9 V.
- AEMEL: minimum 50 kWel designed to operate at >50 bars of output pressure. The stack should exhibit a minimum operation performance of current densities > 1.5 A/cm² at <1.85 V.
- AEL: minimum 100 kWel designed to operate at >30 bars of output pressure. The stack should exhibit a minimum operation performance of current densities > 1 A/cm² at <2 V.
- Other emerging low temperature electrolysers: minimum 5 kWel designed to operate at >30 bars of output pressure. The stack should exhibit a minimum operation performance of current densities > 1 A/cm².
Stacks should be validated for performance and safety for a minimum of 1000 h under diverse operating regimes (steady-state, dynamic load-following, frequent start/stop cycles, and off-normal transients), with results reported under harmonised EU protocols (see below).
Additional KPIs may be proposed, in particular for non-conventional architectures (e.g., decoupled designs), provided that key safety and performance KPIs are fulfilled. Wherever possible, testing should adopt or contribute to harmonised EU protocols and pre-normative research efforts. Proposals are encouraged to liaise with standardisation bodies (e.g., CEN, CENELEC, ISO) and relevant regulatory stakeholders to ensure compatibility with emerging safety frameworks and certification pathways. This alignment is critical for ensuring that innovations move beyond the laboratory and into safe, deployable commercial systems.
Projects are also expected to contribute to the definition or refinement of safety-relevant KPIs, beyond traditional efficiency and cost metrics. These may include indicators such as crossover detection sensitivity, response time of safety shut-off systems, operational uptime due to preventive maintenance, leak probabilities, or compliance with forthcoming regulatory thresholds on gas purity and leakage. KPIs should be integrated in a comprehensive safety-by-design evaluation of the proposed solutions both at component and at system level. Where possible, KPIs should align with EU safety standards and be backed by sensor-based data to support reliable validation and comparison across systems.
To address the full complexity of the safety challenge, proposals should adopt a multidisciplinary approach and involve actors across the electrolyser value chain. This may include component manufacturers (membranes, electrodes, sensors), electrolyser OEMs, digital technology providers (AI, modelling, control systems), testing laboratories, and certification or regulatory entities.
Applicants should clearly articulate the added value and innovation of their proposed approach relative to the state-of-the-art . Projects should also reference, complement and build on existing European initiatives (e.g. European Hydrogen Safety Panel) and projects (e.g., REFHYNE[1], HYScale[2], DELYCIOUS[3], INSIDE[4], , PEACE[5], HYPRAEL[6], ADVANCEPEM[7] and projects funded under Topic HORIZON-JTI-CLEANH2-2023-01-01[8]), and demonstrate how they build upon and complement the results of ongoing JU projects[9]. Duplication of effort should be avoided, and synergies with parallel EU or national initiatives should be identified. In particular, while predictive maintenance tools have previously been explored with a focus on performance and lifetime, their integration here plays a critical role in enabling the early detection of safety-relevant failures, thereby reinforcing the complementarity between the two project scopes.
For activities developing test protocols and procedures for the performance and durability assessment of electrolysers proposals should foresee a collaboration mechanism with JRC[10] (see section 2.2.4.3 "Collaboration with JRC"), in order to support EU-wide harmonisation. Test activities should adopt the already published EU harmonised testing protocols[11] to benchmark performance and quantify progress at programme level.
For additional elements applicable to all topics please refer to section 2.2.3.2
The JU estimates that an EU contribution of maximum EUR 3.00 million would allow these outcomes to be addressed appropriately.
Activities are expected to start at TRL 3 and achieve TRL 5 by the end of the project - see General Annex B.
Technology Readiness Level - Technology readiness level expected from completed projects
Activities are expected to start at TRL 3 and achieve TRL 5 by the end of the project - see General Annex B.
[1] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/779579
[2] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101112055
[3] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101192075
[4] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/621237
[5] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101101343
[6] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101101452
[7] https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101101318
[8] HORIZON-JTI-CLEANH2-2023-01-01: Innovative electrolysis cells for hydrogen production
[9] https://www.clean-hydrogen.europa.eu/projects-dashboard/projects-repository_en
[10] https://www.clean-hydrogen.europa.eu/knowledge-management/collaboration-jrc-0_en
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.
Page limit for Innovation Actions: For all Innovation Actions the page limit of the applications are 70 pages.
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.
Additional eligibility condition: Maximum contribution per topic
For some topics, in line with the Clean Hydrogen JU SRIA, an additional eligibility criterion has been introduced to limit the Clean Hydrogen JU requested contribution mostly for actions performed at high TRL level, including demonstration in real operational environment and with important involvement from industrial stakeholders and/or end users such as public authorities. Such actions are expected to leverage co-funding as commitment from stakeholders. It is of added value that such leverage is shown through the private investment in these specific topics. Therefore, proposals requesting contributions above the amounts specified per each topic below will not be evaluated
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-03-03: The maximum Clean Hydrogen JU contribution that may be requested is EUR 5.00 million
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-04-02: The maximum Clean Hydrogen JU contribution that may be requested is EUR 8.00 million
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-01: The maximum Clean Hydrogen JU contribution that may be requested is EUR 17.00 million
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-02: The maximum Clean Hydrogen JU contribution that may be requested is EUR 8.00 million
Additional eligibility condition: Membership to Hydrogen Europe / Hydrogen Europe Research
For the topics listed below, in line with the Clean Hydrogen JU SRIA, an additional an additional eligibility criterion has been introduced to ensure that one partner in the consortium is a member of either Hydrogen Europe or Hydrogen Europe Research. This concerns topics targeting actions for large-scale demonstrations, flagship projects and strategic research actions, where the industrial and research partners of the Clean Hydrogen JU are considered to play a key role in accelerating the commercialisation of hydrogen technologies by being closely linked to the Clean Hydrogen JU constituency, which could further ensure full alignment with the SRIA of the JU. This approach shall also ensure the continuity of the work performed within projects funded through the H2020 and FP7, by building up on their experience and consolidating the EU value-chain. In the Call 2026 this applies to: development and demonstration of flexible and standardised hydrogen storage systems and demonstration and operation of reversible solid oxide cell systems operation for local grid-connected hydrogen production and utilisation. This will also apply to the Hydrogen Valleys (flagship) topics as they are considered of strategic importance for the European Union ambitions to double the number of Hydrogen Valleys by 2025 as well as to the more recent European Commission’s inspirational target to have at least 50 Hydrogen Valleys under construction or operational by 2030 across the entire EU. For the Hydrogen Valleys topics a large amount of co-investment/co-funding of project participants/beneficiaries including national and regional programmes is expected.
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-03-03
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-04-02
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-01
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-02
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.
STEP (Sovereignty) Seal
For the Hydrogen Valleys topics, as shown below, STEP Seal (so called “Sovereignty Seal” under the STEP Regulation) will be awarded to proposals exceeding all of the evaluation thresholds set out in this Annual Work Programme. The STEP Seal is a label, which aims to increase the visibility of quality projects available for funding and help attract alternative and cumulative funding for quality projects, and simultaneously to provide a potential project pipeline for regional and national programmes.
STEP (Sovereignty) Seal is applicable to the following topics:
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-01
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-02
6. Legal and financial set-up of the grants
Eligible costs will take the form of a lump sum as defined in the Decision of 7 July 2021 authorising the use of lump sum contributions under the Horizon Europe Programme – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation (2021-2027) – and in actions under the Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community (2021-2025) [[This decision is available on the Funding and Tenders Portal, in the reference documents section for Horizon Europe, under ‘Simplified costs decisions’ or through this link: https://ec.europa.eu/info/funding-tenders/opportunities/docs/2021-2027/horizon/guidance/ls-decision_he_en.pdf]].
described in Annex G of the Work Programme General Annexes.
In addition to the standard provisions, the following specific provisions in the model grant agreement will apply:
1. Lump Sum
This year’s call for proposals will take the form of lump sums as defined in the Decision of 7 July 2021 authorising the use of lump sum contributions under the Horizon Europe Programme – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation (2021- 2027) – and in actions under the Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community (2021-2025)[2].
Lump sums will be used across all topics in the Call 2026.
[2] DECISION authorising the use of lump sum contributions under the Horizon Europe Programme – the Framework Programme for Research and Innovation (2021-2027) – and in actions under the Research and Training Programme of the European Atomic Energy Community (2021-2025) ls-decision_he_en.pdf (europa.eu)
2. Full capitalised costs for purchases of equipment, infrastructure or other assets purchased specifically for the action
For some topics, in line with the Clean Hydrogen JU SRIA, mostly large-scale demonstrators or flagship projects specific equipment, infrastructure or other assets purchased specifically for the action (or developed as part of the action tasks) can exceptionally be declared as full capitalised costs. This concerns the topics below:
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-03-03
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-04-02
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-01
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-02
3. Subcontracting
For all topics: an additional obligation regarding subcontracting has been introduced, namely that subcontracted work may only be performed in target countries set out in the call conditions.
The beneficiaries must ensure that the subcontracted work is performed in the countries set out in the call conditions.
The target countries are all Member States of the European Union and all Associated Countries.
4. Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), background and results, access rights and rights of use (article 16 and Annex 5 of the Model Grant Agreement (MGA))
An additional information obligation has been introduced for topics including standardisation activities: ‘Beneficiaries must, up to 4 years after the end of the action, inform the granting authority if the results could reasonably be expected to contribute to European or international standards’. These concerns the topics below:
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-01-03
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-03-03
- HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-05-02
Specific conditions
described in the chapter 2.2.3.2 of the Clean Hydrogen JU 2026 Annual Work Programme
Application and evaluation forms and model grant agreement (MGA):
Application form templates — the application form specific to this call is available in the Submission System
Application form - Part B (HE CleanH2 RIA, IA)
Application form - Part B (HE CleanH2 CSA)
Evaluation form templates — will be used with the necessary adaptations
Standard evaluation form (HE RIA, IA)
Standard evaluation form (HE CSA)
Guidance
Model Grant Agreements (MGA)
Call-specific instructions
Clean Hydrogen JU - Annual Work Programme 2026 (AWP 2026)
Clean Hydrogen JU - Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (SRIA)
Lump Sums Guidance
Guidance: "Lump sums - what do I need to know?"
Comprehensive information on lump sum funding in Horizon Europe
FAQ on Call HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026
Additional documents:
HE Main Work Programme 2026-2027 – 1. General Introduction
HE Main Work Programme 2026-2027 – 15. General Annexes
HE Framework Programme 2021/695
HE Specific Programme Decision 2021/764
EU Financial Regulation 2024/2509
Decision authorising the use of lump sum contributions under the Horizon Europe Programme
Rules for Legal Entity Validation, LEAR Appointment and Financial Capacity Assessment
EU Grants AGA — Annotated Model Grant Agreement
Funding & Tenders Portal Online Manual
Frequently Asked Questions About Improved Components And Tools To Increase The Safety Of Electrolysers
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.
FAQ document from call HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026
Latest Updates
Topic Update:
- In section "Get support" the FAQ document has been updated
Topic Update: Explanation of Costs in the Lump-Sum "Detailed Budget Table"
If your lump sum budget contains any cost items in cost category C and/or D, please make sure to justify these items in the ‘Any comments’ sheet of the Excel detailed lump sum budget table.
The reason is that we simplified the proposal template, removing this information from Part B and bringing it closer to the relevant budget items.
Specifically, you must include justification in the ‘Any comments’ sheet if you are in any of the following situations:
- If the sum of the costs for ’travel and subsistence’, ‘equipment’, and ‘other goods, works and services’ (i.e. the purchase costs) exceeds 15% of the personnel costs for a participant. If this is the case, justify the most expensive cost item(s) up to the level that the remaining costs are below 15% of personnel costs.
- If other cost categories (e.g. internally invoiced goods and services) are used.
- If in-kind contributions are used (non-financial resources made available free of charge by third parties, which must be included as direct costs in the corresponding cost category, e.g. personnel costs or purchase costs for equipment).
Topic Update:
- In section "Get support" the FAQ document has been updated
- Please note that due to a technical issue, some information displayed on the Portal was incorrect for topics HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-01-01 (TRL) and HORIZON-JU-CLEANH2-2026-06-02 (Maximum funding and EU13 text in expected outcomes and scope). The correct information is now reflected, and this notice supersedes the previously displayed information.