Deadline Date: October 29, 2026
The Eurogia2030 Call 31 is inviting applications for collaborative low carbon technology research and innovation projects.
The focus areas of this call include carbon-free energy supply, green mobility and smart cities, smarter housing and construction, bio-resources and environment, low carbon technologies, sustainable development, and innovative solutions supporting economic growth and societal benefits.
Eurogia2030 aims to create collaborative projects that address important challenges related to low carbon technologies and support the development and application of emerging technologies across multiple sectors.
The call is open to applicants from Austria, Belgium (Flanders and Wallonia), Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Singapore, Slovakia, Spain, South Africa, South Korea, Türkiye, and the United Kingdom.
Funding availability varies by participating country. The Czech Republic provides grants of up to 12,000,000 Czech korunas, with projects limited to a maximum duration of 36 months. France provides loans of up to €3 million per project for startups and SMEs. Hungary provides grants between 20 and 70 million Hungarian forints for eligible organisations.
Lithuania provides grants of up to €300,000 per project, while Poland provides grants of up to 1 million Polish zloty for single applicants or 2 million Polish zloty for domestic consortia. Ireland provides a maximum budget of €250,000 per organisation per project.
Spain provides loan and grant support options, including loans covering up to 75% of eligible costs and non-repayable grants for eligible companies. South Africa provides grants of up to €300,000 per project, and South Korea provides grants of up to 500 million South Korean won per year per project for up to three years, with total funding of up to 1.5 billion South Korean won.
Eligible applicants must submit projects that represent international cooperation through a specific project and focus on researching or developing an innovative product, process, or service with the goal of commercialisation.
Projects must have a civilian purpose, and consortia must include at least two independent legal entities from a minimum of two Eureka countries. No single organisation or country can be responsible for more than 70% of the project budget.
For more information, visit Eureka Network.























