Open access to JRC Research Infrastructures

The European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) opens its scientific laboratories and facilities to people working in academia and research organisations, industry, small and medium enterprises (SMEs), and more in general to the public and private sector.

The JRC offers access to its facilities to researchers and scientists from EU Member States, candidate countries and countries associated to the EU Research Programme Horizon 2020.

Offering access to visiting researchers is part of JRC’s strategy to:
•enhance dissemination of scientific knowledge;
•boost competiveness;
•bridge the gap between research and industry.

Scientists will have the opportunity to work in the following fields:
•nuclear safety and security (Euratom Laboratories);
•chemistry;
•biosciences/life sciences;
•physical sciences;
•ICT;
•Foresight.

The results will also feed into JRC’s mission to support EU policymaking.

In a pilot project, three facilities in Ispra (Italy) with the necessary infrastructure to host visitors will offer access through dedicated calls in the fields of safety and security of buildings and of nanobiotechnologies.

Other JRC facilities in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands are planning to gradually provide access after completion of the pilot phase in 2017-2018.

Relevance-driven access

The relevance-driven access is exclusively dependent on scientific and socio-economic relevance at European level. It is based on a peer-review selection process following a call for proposals. Projects accessing JRC facilities under the relevance-driven mode are only charged the additional costs associated to such access.

You will find all relevant information here: https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/research-facility/open-access.

Leave a Reply

This article was last updated on: June 30, 2017