"h2020: energía limpia, segura y eficiente. próximas oportunidades de participación"....
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H2020: ENERGÍA LIMPIA, SEGURA Y EFICIENTE:
PRÓXIMAS OPORTUNIDADES DE PARTICIPACIÓN
Pilar González Gotor NCP Energía H2020
División de Programas de la UE CDTI
mpilar.gonzalez@cdti.es
Málaga 6 de octubre de 2016
Índice
oVisión General H2020 oContexto Político oPrograma de Trabajo 2016-2017: Eficiencia energética Energía Baja en Carbono Ciudades Inteligentes
oOtros
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oOtros
Ciencia excelente
Reforzar y ampliar la excelencia de la
base científica de la Unión, así como
consolidar el Espacio Europeo de
Investigación
Liderazgo industrial
Acelerar el desarrollo de las tecnologías
e innovaciones que sustentarán las
empresas del mañana
Retos sociales
Estimular la masa crítica de esfuerzos
de investigación e innovación necesaria
para alcanzar los objetivos políticos de la
Unión
Horizonte 2020: Estructura
Modalidades de participación
A través de las convocatorias ordinarias
Vía Partenariados u otras Iniciativas europeas
Accediendo a la financiación de riesgo
Cómo participar en Horizonte 2020
Types of Actions
Research and Innovation Action (RIA)
- establish new knowledge and/or to explore the feasibility of a new or improved technology, product, process, service or solution
- 100% funding rate
- At least 3 legal entities from 3 different MS/AC
Innovation Action (IA)
- producing plans/arrangements or designs for new, altered or improved products, processes or services (incl. prototyping, testing, demonstrating, piloting, large-scale product validation and market replication)
- 70% funding rate (but 100% for non-profit organisations)
- At least 3 legal entities from 3 different MS/AC
Coordination and Support Action (CSA)
- accompanying measures such as standardisation, dissemination, awareness-raising and communication, networking, coordination or support services
- 100% funding rate
- At least 1 legal entity from MS/AC
Be Realistic
Understand Topic Text + Right TRLs
Impact for IAs
Sound Budget
Simple
Criterios de Evaluación
Excellence (3/5) Impact (3/5) Implementation (3/5) TOTAL* (10/15)
* Impact x1.5 en IAs y SME instrument!!!
OJO! para las convocatorias de 2017 el umbral en las PPP
está en 12/15 y 4/5 en los apartados de Excelencia e
Impacto!
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15 (05/10/2016)
Political Context
2030 Climate-Energy Package • 40% reduction of Greenhouse Gases
• 27% of renewable energy
• 27% improvement in energy efficiency
Energy Union Energy security, solidarity and trust
A fully integrated internal energy market
Energy efficiency first
Transition to a low-carbon society
An Energy Union for Research,
Innovation and Competiveness
SET-Plan Integrated Roadmap
Communication on
Integrated SET-Plan (COM[2015]6317)
16 (05/10/2016)
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17 (05/10/2016)
Secure Clean end
efficient Energy
Energy Efficiency 25 Topics
Budget: 194 M.€
Low Carbon
Technologies 36 topics
Budget: 720,22 M.€
Smart Cities and
Communities 1 topic
Budget: 131,5 M.€
EASME
(EACI)
INEA
(TEN-T EA)
RS3: Programme Structure Call 2016-2017
Cross-Cutting activities
18 (05/10/2016)
Indicative budget distribution per area for Energy calls
2016-2017
Total budget 2016-2017: EUR 1 344 million
* Other Actions = actions not implemented through calls for proposals (e.g. Risk Finance, procurements,
subscriptions, contributions, grant to identified beneficiaries)
19 (05/10/2016)
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oVisión General H2020 oContexto Político oPrograma de Trabajo 2016-2017: Eficiencia energética Energía Baja en Carbono Ciudades Inteligentes
oOtros
20 (05/10/2016)
Heating and cooling
Engaging consumer
Buildings Industry,
services and products
Innovative Financing
Call Energy Efficiency
Reducir el consumo de energía y la huella de carbono mediante un uso inteligente y sostenible
20%
≥27%
2020
2030
PPP E2B PPP SPIRE
21 (05/10/2016)
Heating & Cooling
• Tackling H&C consumption – Moderating demand
• Increasing energy efficiency in supply
• Maximising use of local sustainable and renewable energy sources
• Recovering waste heat
• Linking with electricity system
• Achieving affordable costs
22 (05/10/2016)
Heating & Cooling – Topics 2016-2017
• Topics EE-1-2017, EE-17-2016-2017, EE-20-2017
Innovation in waste heat recovery and reuse technologies (in cities and industry)
• Topics EE-1-2017, EE-2-2017
District heating networks: innovation in urban waste heat reuse in DH, replication of efficient retrofitting of DH networks
• Topic, EE-4-2016-2017
Research and innovation of efficient and low-carbon H&C technologies. Calefacción de distrito de baja temperatura con edificios de alto rendimiento.
23 (05/10/2016)
New deal for energy consumers: Empowering consumer Deploying demand side response Using smart technologies Protecting vulnerable customers
Objectives: Achieve a deeper understanding of consumer behaviour and motivation
structures Inform, engage and activate consumers
Consumer in the centre
24 (05/10/2016)
• Topic EE-6-2016-2017
Engaging private consumers towards sustainable energy
• Topic EE-7-2016-2017
Behavioural change toward energy-efficiency through ICT
• Topic EE-9-2016-2017
Engaging and activating public authorities
Consumer engagement – Topics 2016-2017
Consumer empowerment through smart homes system and demand response EE-12-2017
Consumer information through EU product efficiency legislation EE-16-2016-2017
25 (05/10/2016)
Buildings
Buildings account for 40% of the final energy consumption
• Increasing the rate, quality and effectiveness of renovation to reduce the
energy use in buildings, as well as their replication capacity;
• Integration of demand response in energy management systems while ensuring interoperability;
• Reducing the cost of designing and constructing new Near-Zero Energy Buildings (NZEBs) in order to increase their market uptake;
• Building capacity and provide support for sustainable energy policy implementation.
26 (05/10/2016)
Buildings – Topics 2016-2017
• Topics EE-11-2016-2017
Deep renovation of buildings
• Topic EE-12-2017 (EeB-PPP)
Demand response in energy management systems
• Topic EE-14-2016-2017
Construction skills
27 (05/10/2016)
Industry and service sectors represent more than 39% of the EU's final energy
consumption
Industry, services and products
• Design of manufacturing processes, energy recovery, energy
audits and energy management systems
• Re-use of industrial waste,
• Optimisation of the value chain
• Development and market uptake of innovative highly efficient
energy-related products, systems and services
.
28 (05/10/2016)
Industry, services and products – Topics 2016-2017
• Topic EE-15-2017, EE-18-2017
Capacity building in industry and energy services for industrial parks
• Topic EE-17-2016-2017 (SPIRE-PPP)
Waste heat recovery / Energy symbiosis in industrial systems
• Topic EE-16-2016-2017
Effective implementation of EU product legislation
• Topic EE-20-2017
Energy efficient and integrated data centres
• Topic EE-19-2017
Public procurement of innovative energy efficiency solutions
29 (05/10/2016)
Financing Energy Efficiency
100 bn € investments/year needed to achieve EE targets
Improve supply of large-scale finance at a low cost for by:
– Providing Project Development Assistance to public and private sectors to
deliver innovative and bankable sustainable energy investments; – Development of innovative financing schemes insuring flow of private finance
for EE investments; – Increase "readability" of market fundamentals for financiers and investors
through benchmarking and standardisation of EE investments; – Develop, demonstrate and standardise new types of energy efficiency services
and business models
30 (05/10/2016)
Financing Energy Efficiency – Topics 2016-2017
• Topic EE-22-2016-2017
Aggregation - Project development assistance
• EE-23-2017
Market based culture - Energy efficiency services and innovative financing schemes
31 (05/10/2016)
Energy Efficiency call 2017 - Overview
Deadline 19 January 2017
• Sub-budget: EUR 8 million
• EE-12
• Sub-budget: EUR 11 million
• EE-17
• Sub-budget: EUR 16 million
• EE-1
• EE-4
• Sub-budget: EUR 8 million
• EE-7
• Sub-budget: EUR 6 million
• EE-20
Deadline 7 June 2017
• EE-2
• EE-6
• EE-9
• EE-11
• EE-14
• EE-15
• EE-16
• EE-18
• EE-19
• EE-23
• EE-24
• EE-22
IA – green
CSA- orange
ERA-NET – black
PPI - purple
EUR 4 million
EUR 5 million EUR 7 million
EUR 8 million
EUR 11 million
EUR 4 million
EUR 8 million
EUR 8 million
32 (05/10/2016)
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oOtros
33 (05/10/2016)
Integrated EU energy system
Renewable energy
technologies
Decarbonisation of Fossil Fuels
Social, economic and human aspects
European Research Area
in Energy
Cross-cutting issues
Call
Competitive
Low Carbon
Energy
Suministro de electricidad a bajo coste y de baja emisión de
carbono
2020 2030
2020
2030
2020
2030
10%
≥27%
20%
15%
-40%
-20%
Interconnections
RES
GGE
34 (05/10/2016)
Energy System
● maturation of promising next generation technologies for the distribution network: demand-response, smart grid, storage and energy system integration
● demonstrating technologies for the distribution network integrating several technologies
● demonstration of integration of technologies with a center of gravity on the transmission network
35 (05/10/2016)
Energy System
● LCE-01-2016-2017. Maturation of promising next generation technologies for the distribution network: demand-response, smart grid. RIA. TRL 3-6. 2-4M€/project. 19 M€
● LCE-04-2017. Demonstration of integration of technologies with a center of gravity on the transmission network, but including links with the distribution network. IA. TRL 5-8. 15-20 M€/project. 65,29 M€
● LCE-05-2017. Tools and technologies for coordination and integration of the European energy system. RIA. 2-4 M€/project**. 30 M€
Deadline: 14/02/2017 **0.1 to 1 MEur if area 5 alone
36 (05/10/2016)
Renewable energies
● Support the next set of technologies for cost-competitiveness and market
introduction (off-shore wind, certain areas of PV, CSP, tidal and wave energy, and geothermal energy);
● Continue supporting those technologies that have started to reach cost-competiveness but where continued efforts are needed (on-shore wind, areas of PV, advanced biofuels, and solar heating and cooling);
● Continue supporting new and emerging technologies (e.g. advanced and solar fuels, ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC), Salienty gradient energy, etc.), mature technologies where further innovation remains important (hydropower, PV-thermal) and replace critical pollutant/expensive materials by eco-friendly/sustainable materials.
37 (05/10/2016)
Renewable energies
Basic Research
(TRL <4)
Advanced
Research
(TRL 3-5)
Demonstration
(TRL 5-7)
Market
uptake
PV
LCE-6
LCE-7
LCE-9, LCE-10 LCE-21
CSP LCE-11
Solar Heating
and Cooling LCE-12
Wind Energy LCE-13, LCE-14
LCE-21
Ocean Energy LCE-15, LCE-16
Hydropower
Geothermal
Energy
LCE-17, LCE-23, LCE-
18
CHP
RES integration
in the system
Bio- and
Renewable
Alternative Fuels LCE-8, LCE-22
LCE-19, LCE-20
38 (05/10/2016)
Photovoltaics (PV)
Basic research (RIA)
• Upscaling technologies currently at lab-scale (excluding activities funded under NMBP 19-2016!) - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• Next generation of perovskite PV cells and modules – LCE-7-2016-2017
Demonstration (IA)
• Reducing cost of PV electricity – LCE-10-2017
Market-uptake (CSA)
• Tackling the bottlenecks of high penetration levels of PV electricity into the electric power network – LCE-21-2017
• High power generation potential; • Reducing the total cost of installed solar energy systems and grid-integration
bottlenecks remains a priority for the sector; • PV R&D is necessary to re-launch an innovative and worldwide competitive
industry relying on the existing PV technology knowledge-base in Europe
39 (05/10/2016)
Concentrated Solar Power (CSP)
Basic research (RIA)
• Upscaling technologies currently at lab-scale - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• New cycles and power blocks for reducing costs of CSP plants – LCE-7-2016-2017
Demonstration (IA)
• Reducing water consumption of CSP plants – LCE-11-2017 (EUR 12 million)
Market-uptake (CSA)
• Facilitating the supply of electricity from CSP plants in Southern Europe to Central and Northern European countries – LCE-21-2017
• Strong European industrial presence but the larger share of the market is outside Europe. The competition is growing.
• Need to reduce further the capital and the operational costs as well as to improve system operations, performances and environmental footprint (water consumption).
40 (05/10/2016)
Solar Heating and Cooling (SHC)
Basic research (RIA)
• Upscaling technologies currently at lab-scale - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• Development of components for residential single-family solar-active houses – LCE-7-2016-2017
Demonstration (IA)
• Solar heat in industrial processes – LCE-12-2017
• Mature technology exists but it still remains under-exploited; • New technology is needed to enlarge the application sectors; • Issues of cost, performance and operability still exist; • Cost competitiveness and acceptability of solar heating systems need to be
improved
41 (05/10/2016)
Geothermal energy
Basic research (RIA)
• Upscaling technologies currently at lab-scale - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• Materials for geothermal installations (deep geothermal) – LCE-7-2016-2017
Demonstration (IA)
• Geothermal systems for retrofitting buildings – LCE-17-2017
• EGS in different geological conditions – LCE-18-2017
Market-uptake (CSA)
• Tackling bottlenecks for high penetration – LCE-21-2017 • Accelerating the penetration of heat pumps for heating and cooling – LCE-21-
2017
• Geothermal energy has great untapped potential for diversifying the energy mix. • "Shallow geothermal": retroffiting existing installations with improved technology; • Enhanced geothermal systems (EGS): reduction of drilling costs and risks;
demonstration of viable technologies to create new reservoirs.
42 (05/10/2016)
Wind energy
Basic research (RIA)
• Improved understanding of the physics of wind as primary energy source and wind energy technology - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• Reduction of environmental impact – LCE-7-2016-2017
Demonstration (IA)
• Large >10 MW wind turbines (logistics) – LCE-14-2017
Market-uptake (CSA)
• Increase market share of wind energy – LCE-21-2017
• European industries are still world leaders but the competition is growing; • Cost reductions for all components essential, in particular for offshore; • Offshore considered as the future market - large turbines to be demonstrated • Issues remain on environmental and social impact, and on public acceptance
43 (05/10/2016)
Ocean energy
Basic research (RIA)
• Upscaling technologies currently at lab-scale - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• Innovative power take-off systems and control strategies – LCE-7-2016-2017
Demonstration (IA)
• Design tools for ocean energy devices and arrays development/deployment – LCE-16-2017
• European industries are leading the emergence of the technologies. • Many devices developed / prototypes tested, but market potential yet to be realised. • Demonstration of reliable and survivable systems essential. • Environmental, social and public impacts to be addressed
44 (05/10/2016)
Combined Heat and Power (CHP)
Basic research (RIA)
• Upscaling technologies currently at lab-scale - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• Transforming renewable energy into intermediates – LCE-7-2016-2017
• CHP installations already in use, commercial applications exist and have been supported under previous framework programmes
• Market potential for residential scale and for specific industrial applications to increase generation flexibility.
45 (05/10/2016)
Integration of RES in the energy system
Advanced research (RIA)
LCE-7-2016-2017:
• Developing system support functions (or ancillary services) enabling RES technologies to contribute - at transmission and distribution grid level - to a stable and safe energy system;
• Define most suitable pathways for including integration considerations into the different RES development roadmaps
• Growing share of renewable energy sources requires rethink of system management; • Complementing activities supported under the area 'Integrated EU energy system',
integration is also addressed from the perspective of the generation sources in order to share burden and costs.
46 (05/10/2016)
Biofuels (1/2)
Basic research (RIA)
• Diversification of renewable fuel production through novel conversion routes/fuels - LCE-6-2017
Advanced research (RIA)
• LCE-8-2016-2017. Next generation of:
• Biofuels from CO2 in industrial waste flue gases through biochemical conversion by autotrophic ( chemo and photo –autotrophic) micro-organisms;
• Biofuels from organic fraction of municipal and industrial wastes through thermochemical, biochemical or chemical pathways with improved performance and sustainability;
• Biofuels from phototrophic algae & bacteria with improved performance and sustainability.
• European industries have leading technologies, but currently little deployment in EU; • Biofuels are medium-term solution for road and maritime transports and the only solution
for air transport; • Both biological and thermo-chemical pathways are necessary to provide technology
diversity, but the challenges in each pathway are different; • Large scale demonstrations are needed to boost market access; • Research needed to reduce cost, improve environmental impact and performance efficiency.
47 (05/10/2016)
Biofuels (2/2)
Demonstration (IA)
• LCE-19-2016-2017
• Biofuels from waste flue gases / other wastes and residues (2017)
• Biomass from aquatic biomass (2017)
• LCE-20-2016-2017
• Pre-commercial production of advanced aviation biofuels
Market-uptake (CSA)
• Market roll-out of liquid advanced biofuels and liquid renewable alternative fuels – LCE-21-2017
48 (05/10/2016)
Deadline 5 January 2017
• LCE-8 – budget: 10 M€
• LCE-21 – budget 15 M€
Deadline 7 September 2017
• LCE-10 – budget 10 M€
• LCE-11 – budget 12 M€
• LCE-12 – budget: 8 M
• LCE-14 – budget 25 M€
• LCE-16 – budget 7 M€
• LCE-17 – budget 8 M€
• LCE-18 – budget 10 M€
• LCE-19 – budget 15 M€
• LCE-20 – budget 10 M€
Renewable energy – Topic overview
Deadlines: 1st stage: 29/11/2016
2nd: 22/8/2017
• LCE-6 – budget 20 M€
• LCE-7 – budget 64,5 M€
RIA – blue IA – green
CSA- orange
49 (05/10/2016) 49
Decarbonisation of Fossil Fuels
● Fossil fuels will be used in Europe's power generation as well as in industrial processes for decades to come.
● A forward-looking approach to Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) and Carbon Capture and Use (CCU) for the power and industrial sectors is crucial for reaching the 2050 climate objectives in a cost-effective way.
● Shale gas can contribute to our energy security, provided that issues of public acceptance and environmental impact are adequately addressed.
● New solutions for fossil fuel power plants to provide highly flexible yet efficient back-up power to stabilise the grid for RES integration.
Topics: LCE 27(15M€), 28 (15M€), 29 & 30 (20M€), RIA
Deadline: 5/1/2017
50 (05/10/2016)
Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH)
• Socioeconomic incentive structures that encourage or discourage energy-responsible behaviour;
• Political, institutional, and organizational frameworks that condition and structure citizen participation, including questions of inclusiveness, gender, democracy, organizational formats and business models.
• Topic: LCE31 RIA. 10M€ budget. Prop 2-4M€
Deadline: Dos fases: 1ª: 29/11/2016, 2ª: 22/8/2017
Transition to a low-carbon energy system is a complex societal problem because it changes the interrelations between all relevant actors in the
system (-> policy, economic, governance challenges)
51 (05/10/2016)
Supporting the development of the European Research Area in energy
• Encourage coordination of national and EU efforts to increase effectiveness and efficiency;
• Pool resources and create critical mass to address challenges that no country can tackle alone;
• Align efforts to develop a European Research Area in energy and to create the Energy Union, one of the political priorities of the Juncker Commission;
• The new Integrated SET Plan provides the strategic framework for setting priorities and for discussing implementation;
Topic: LCE 35,37 (ERA-NETs)
52 (05/10/2016)
Cross-cutting issues
Support to the energy stakeholders to contribute to the SET-Plan (LCE-36-2016-2017)
• Areas supported for 2017*:
– Geothermal Energy
53 (05/10/2016)
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Call Smart Cities and Communities
Improving quality of live, competitiveness and sustainability
Exporting European knowledge in a strong growth market estimated globally at €1.3 trillion in 2020
55 (05/10/2016)
WP CROSS-CUTTING ACTIVITIES
(ii) Internet of Things
(iii) Smart and Sustainable Cities
(i) Industry 2020 in the Circular Economy
Smart Cities and Communities (SCC-01)
Sustainable cities though Nature-based solutions (SCC-02)
SCC-1-2016-2017: Smart Cities and Communities light house projects
SCC-2-2016-2017: Demonstrating innovative nature-based solutions in cities
SCC-3-2016: New gobernance, business, financing models and economic impact assessment tools for sustainable cities with nature-based solutions (urban re-naturing)
SCC-4-2016: Sustainable urbanisation
56 (05/10/2016)
WP 2016-2017 Topic SCC-01
Smart and Sustainable Cities
Sustainable, cost-effective and replicable district-scale solutions at the intersection of energy, transport enabled by ICT
Intelligent, user-driven and demand-oriented city infrastructure and services
'Lighthouse project' approach continue
57 (05/10/2016)
INTEGRATION
BALANCED COMBINATION
REPLICATION
• smart buildings (existing/new)
• smart grids (electricity, DH, telecom, water, etc…)
• energy storage,
• electric vehicles and smart charging infrastructures,
• latest generation ICT platforms based on open specifications
Capitalizing on synergies between components to increase efficiency and reduce costs.
SCC1 calls 2016/2017 SCOPE
58 (05/10/2016)
Each PROJECT
Must:
• Be realised in 3 new ligthhouse cities situated in different EU member states or associated countries.
• Involved at least 3 follower cities from at least 3 different EU member states or associated countries.
SCC1 calls 2016/2017 SCOPE
61 (05/10/2016)
Important details
A city can be funded as a lighthouse city only once under Horizon2020
Follower cities are defined as cities that have not yet acquired the full technical
competence to become a lighthouse city
Sustainable Energy Actions Plans (SEAP - Covenant of Mayors approved or
evaluated by DG JRC as having at least similar quality) are obligatory for
lighthouse cities.
Performance monitoring for at least 2 years
Convincing and realistic work, replication and investment plans
Incorporate all performance data into SCIS (Smart Cities Information System)
SCC1 calls 2016/2017 SCOPE
62 (05/10/2016)
CALL CONDITIONS
Foreseen contribution from the EU: between EUR 12 to 18 million / selected project
Call 2017:
Deadline: 14 February 2017 Budget: 71,5 M.€
FAQ: https://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/desktop/en/support/faq.html
Type of action: Innovation Action (IA)
64 (05/10/2016)
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Energy outside the Energy Challenge
Cross-thematic priorities
Bottom-up activities
Implementation
• Materials, Key Enabling Technologies
• ICT
• Energy-efficiency in buildings/industry
• Biomass production
• Energy in transport
• Socio-economics
• Access to risk finance
• Research Infrastructures
• European Research Council (ERC)
• Marie Skłodowska-Curie actions
• Future and Emerging Technologies (FET)
• Fast-track to Innovation
• European Commission/ Executive Agencies
• Public-Private Partnerships
• Joint Technology Initiatives (JTI)
• EIT – KIC InnoEnergy
• European Investment Bank
66 (05/10/2016)
- Multi-annual Work-Plan 2014-2020 (support H2020)
- EU budget: 665 mill. EUR
- Objectives: reduce the (production) cost, increase the lifetime, increase
the efficiency, reduce ‘Critical raw materials’
JTI-FCH 2014-2020
68
Tasas de éxito globales – 2014-2015 Propuestas Proyectos Tasa de Éxito
EE 781 87 11,1%
LCE 615 115 18,7%
SCC 80 9 11,2%
Total 1476 211 14,3%
RETORNOS – RS ENERGIA 2014-2015
1476 propuestas, de las cuales 211 se han financiado En 124 proyectos aprobados hay participación española 33 proyectos de los financiados están liderados por españoles. Retorno UE (27) – 13,1% (141,1 M.€) (Total adjudicado: 1.077,6 M.€) 2º Pais en retornos por detrás de Alemania (15,7%), y seguido de UK (13%) 55% de participación empresarial en proyectos aprobados.
69
Tasas de éxito globales – 2014-2015 Propuestas Proyectos Tasa de Éxito
EE 781 87 11,1%
LCE 615 115 18,7%
SCC 80 9 11,2%
Total 1476 211 14,3%
RETORNOS – RS ENERGIA 2014-2015
1476 propuestas, de las cuales 211 se han financiado En 124 proyectos aprobados hay participación española (58,7%)
33 proyectos de los financiados están liderados por españoles. (15,6%) Retorno UE (27) – 13,1% (141,1 M.€) (Total adjudicado: 1.077,6 M.€)
2º Pais en retornos por detrás de Alemania (15,7%), y seguido de UK (13%) 55% de participación empresarial en proyectos aprobados.
70
Calls EE 2014 y 2015:
0,0
2,0
4,0
6,0
8,0
10,0
12,0
14,0
16,0
18,0
20,0
Call EE - 2014-2015. Retornos por países M.€
De 87 proyectos, en 52 hay participación española. 15 proyectos liderados por España.
12,2% - tasa de éxito española. Entidades más destacadas: CIRCE, Diput.Girona, Giroa, SA, Wellness SC SL, Escan
SL, UPCatalunya, Tekniker, Deloitte, Accional Infraestructura
71
Calls LCE 2014 y 2015:
0,0
20,0
40,0
60,0
80,0
100,0
120,0
140,0
Call LCE - 2014-2015. Retornos por países M.€
De 115 proyectos, en 64 hay participación española. 15 proyectos liderados por España.
19,6% - tasa de éxito española. Retorno España 12,1% Entidades más destacadas: Acciona Infra, Esteyco, SA, Tecnalia, Adwen OS,SL, EDP
Renovables, SL, F.CENER-CIEMAT, CIRCE, Ciemat, CSIC.
72
SCC 2014 y 2015: Light House Projects, CSA
9 proyecto con participación española en 8. 3 liderados por España
Lighthouse cities: VALLADOLID, BARCELONA, SAN SEBASTIAN, VITORIA
Followers: SABADELL, SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA Lideres: Tecnalia, Fundación Cartif, Fomento de S.Sebastian, S.A.
73
Call 2014: Selected Proposal SELECTED PROPOSAL SCC-01
ACRONIMO LEAD CITIES FOLLOWERS CITIES
GrowSmarter Stockholm, Cologne and Barcelona
5: Valetta, Suceava, Porto, Cork and Graz
REMOURBAN Valladolid, Nottingham and Tepebasi
2: Seraing, Miskolc
TRIANGULUM Manchester, Eindhoven and Stavanger
3: Prague, Leipzig and Sabadell
74
Call 2015: Selected Proposal
SELECTED PROPOSAL SCC-01
ACRONIMO LEAD CITIES FOLLOWERS CITIES
SmartENcity Vitoria, Tartu, Sodenburg Lecce, Asenovgrad
REPLICATE San Sebastian, Florencia y Bristol
Essen, Nilufer, Lausanne
SMARTER TOGETHER
Lyon, Munich, Vienna Santiago, Sofía, Venecia, Kiev, Yokohama
SHARMLLM London, Lisboa, Milán. Burdeos, Varsovia, Burgas
75
Call 2016: Selected Proposal
SELECTED PROPOSAL SCC-01
ACRONIMO LEAD CITIES FOLLOWERS CITIES
mySMARTlife Nantes (France), Hamburg (Germany) and Helsinki (Finland)
Varna (Bulgaria), Bydgoszcz (Poland), Rijeka (Croatia) and Palencia (Spain)
Ruggedised Rotterdam (Netherland), Glasgow (UK) and UMEA (Suecia)
Brno (Czech Republic), Parma (Italia) and Gdansk (Polonia)
76
6,7
5,4 5,1 4,9 4,5
4,1
2,4
1,1 1,1 0,6 0,4 0,1 0,1
0,0
1,0
2,0
3,0
4,0
5,0
6,0
7,0
8,0
Call 2016 - SCC
Call 2016: Sólo 8 propuestas evaluadas, y 2 financiadas (2014 – 19 (3); 2015 – 37(4)
Budget inicial: 60 M.€ - Sólo se adjudica 36,35 M.€ Retorno España: 2,38 M.€ (6,5% UE-27 y Total)
7ª posicion en retorno
77
Resultados EE-RIA-IA
Deadline: 21 enero 2016
77
Code EE Call 2016 Topics (Jan. deadline) Type Budget (M€)
EE-03 Standardised installation packages integrating renewable and energy efficiency solutions for heating, cooling and/or hot water preparation
IA
34 EE-04 New H/C solutions using low-grade sources of thermal energy RIA
EE-05 Models & tools for heating and cooling mapping and planning RIA
EE-07 Behavioural change toward energy efficiency through ICT IA
EE-08 Socio-economic research on consumer's behaviour related to energy efficiency
RIA
EE-10 Supporting accelerated and cost-effective deep renovation of buildings (EeB-PPP)
IA 16
EE-17 Valorisation of waste heat in industrial systems (SPIRE-PPP) IA
78
7,1
5,8
4,7 4,4 4,4
3,8 3,1
2,6 2,5 2,3 2,1
1,0 0,7 0,5 0,5 0,5
2,0
0,0
1,0
2,0
3,0
4,0
5,0
6,0
7,0
8,0
Resultados EE-RIA/IA Deadline 21/1/2016 Estadísticas, retorno por país.
15 propuestas a financiar – Subvención solicitada: 47,76 M.€ Subv.España: 4,4 M.€
79
Resultados convocatoria Renovables, CCS, SSH . Deadline: 16 febrero 2016
Topic Activity Budget (€)
LCE-07-2016-2017 Developing the next generation technologies of renewable electricity and heating/cooling
61,300,000
LCE-08-2016-2017 Development of next generation biofuel technologies 10,000,000
LCE-23-2016 International Cooperation with Mexico on geothermal energy 10,000,000
LCE-24-2016 International Cooperation with South Korea on new generation high-efficiency capture processes
17,000,000
LCE-25-2016 Utilisation of captured CO2 as feedstock for the process industry 10,000,000
LCE-31-2016-2017 Social Sciences and Humanities Support for the Energy Union 10,000,000
Total 118,300,000
Tipo de instrumento: RIA. Incluye los siguientes topics:
80
26,7
12,3 11,4
9,4 8,0 7,7 7,5
5,8 4,8 4,4 3,9 3,4 3,3 3,0 3,0 2,0 1,3 1,2 1,0 1,0
3,7
0,0
5,0
10,0
15,0
20,0
25,0
30,0
Resultados convocatoria Renovables, CCS, SSH . Deadline: 16 febrero 2016. Estadísticas, retorno por país.
Retorno económico provisional en M.€
ESPAÑA: De un total de 24 proyectos financiados en esta convocatoria, 5 son liderados por España. 23 participaciones españolas financiadas de un total de
276. Retorno España: 9,4 M.€ de un total de 125 M.€ adjudicados.
81
Resultados Convocatoria - Smart Grid System Deadline: 5 Abril 2016
Topic Activity Budget (€)
LCE-01-2016-2017 Next generation innovative technologies enabling smart grids, storage and energy system integration with increasing share of renewables: distribution network
20,000,000
LCE-02-2016 Demonstration of smart grid, storage and system integration technologies with increasing share of renewables: distribution system
73,660,000
LCE-03-2016 Support to R&I strategy for smart grid and storage 4,000,000
Total 97,660,000
SMART GRID SYSTEM: LCE1 – RIA LCE2 – IA
LCE3 - CSA
82
Resultados 2ª convocatoria SGS Estadísticas, retorno por país.
Retorno económico provisional en M.€
12,5
11,1
8,0 7,2 7,1 6,9 6,5
5,9 5,8 5,6 5,3 4,8
4,0 3,0 2,6 2,3 2,0
1,2 1,1 1,0 1,7
0,0
2,0
4,0
6,0
8,0
10,0
12,0
14,0
ESPAÑA: De un total de 13 proyectos financiados en esta convocatoria, 4 son liderados por España. 21 participaciones españolas financiadas de un total de
171. Retorno España: 12,5 M.€ de un total de 105,6 M.€ adjudicados.
83
Resultados Convocatoria - ERA-SSH-RIA Deadline: 5 Abril 2016
Prop. elegibles
Prop. above threshold
Prop. A financiar
EU grant solicitado M.€.
%Ret/Elegibles
LCE-26-ERANET-Geoscience 1 1 1 10,0 100%
LCE-32-SSH 6 4 1 2,0 17%
LCE-33-ECRIA-RIA 11 4 4 10,7 36%
LCE-34-Eranets 2 2 2 16,7 100%
Total 20 11 8 39,4
84 (05/10/2016)
Y no olvidar…
Instrumento Pyme APC Programa de gestores en SOST Seminario de gestores…
29/01/2016 85
"The SME instrument is not an R&D programme. It is an accelerator for market introduction of promising
technological or non-technological innovations."
Subvención en fases para PYMES.
Sin requisito mínimo de consorcio.
Sólo para PYME como socios.
Subcontratación libre.
4 fechas de corte al año
29/01/2016 86
Implementación a través de topics Topics
Budgets (EUR million)
2016 2017
SMEInst-01-2016-2017: Open Disruptive Innovation Scheme 60,00 66,00
SMEInst-02-2016-2017: Accelerating the uptake of nanotechnologies advanced materials or advanced manufacturing and processing technologies by SMEs
31,83 35,32
SMEInst-03-2016-2017: Dedicated support to biotechnology SMEs closing the gap from lab to market
7,50 7,50
SMEInst-04-2016-2017: Engaging SMEs in space research and development 11,37 12,60
SMEInst-05-2016-2017: Supporting innovative SMEs in the healthcare biotechnology sector
35,00 45,00
SMEInst-06-2016-2017: Accelerating market introduction of ICT solutions for Health, Well-Being and Ageing Well
18,00 12,50
SMEInst-07-2016-2017: Stimulating the innovation potential of SMEs for sustainable and competitive agriculture, forestry, agri-food and bio-based sectors
25,81 32,54
SMEInst-08-2016-2017: Supporting SMEs efforts for the development - deployment and market replication of innovative solutions for blue growth
9,50 10,00
SMEInst-09-2016-2017: Stimulating the innovation potential of SMEs for a low carbon and efficient energy system
46,00 50,00
SMEInst-10-2016-2017: Small business innovation research for Transport and Smart Cities Mobility
57,57 61,23
SMEInst-11-2016-2017: Boosting the potential of small businesses in the areas of climate action, environment, resource efficiency and raw materials
25,00 27,50
SMEInst-12-2016-2017: New business models for inclusive, innovative and reflective societies
10,80 11,40
SMEInst-13-2016-2017: Engaging SMEs in security research and development 15,37 14,67
Overall indicative budget 353,75 386,26
29/01/2016 87
Fase 1:
Análisis de viabilidad
Fase2:
Proyecto de Innovación
• Viabilidad del concepto.
• Análisis de riesgos.
• Régimen PI.
• Planteamiento de proyecto.
• Estudio de diseño/s.
• Estrategia de innovación
• Desarrollo I+D, prototipos, y/o ensayos.
• “Demostrar” procesos, productos o servicios innovadores.
• Diseño de productos
• Planificación y desarrollo del escalado industrial.
• Actualización modelo de negocio.
Subvención (lump sum): 50 k€ / 6 meses
Fase 3: Comercialización
Subvención 70% Reembolso de costes
1-2,5 M€ financiación EC 12 -24 meses
• Etiqueta calidad para proyectos exitosos.
•Acciones de soporte a través de networking, formación, coaching, información ,etc.
•Dirigidos a la gestión de IPR, compartir conocimiento y promoción y difusión.
Sin financiación directa
Y
N
Y
N
Esquema de “Mentoring y Coaching” para las PYMES beneficiarias
Otros
Consorcios
y/o PYMES
Fases del Instrumento PYME Id
ea/
Co
nce
pto
P
lan
de
Ne
goci
os
I
Output: Plan de Negocio II Output: Plan de Negocio III “Investor ready”
88 (05/10/2016)
Roles en la gestión de Horizonte 2020
PARTICIPANTES
NCP
REPRESENTANTE
CCAA, Ministerios Expertos
Mª Pilar González Gotor (NCP CDTI): mpilar.gonzalez@cdti.es Virginia Vivanco (NCP IDAE): vvivanco@idae.es Cristina Quintana (NCP CIEMAT): cristina.quintana@ciemat.es
Mª Luisa Revilla: luisa.revilla@cdti.es
MUCHAS GRACIAS
Pilar González Gotor
Reto Energía – Horizonte 2020
División Programas Europeos- CDTI
mpilar.gonzalez@cdti.es
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