The ITRE Committee's Pivotal Debate on Europe's Research Future
The European Parliament's Industry, Research and Energy (ITRE) Committee recently hosted a high-stakes public hearing that has ignited widespread discussion on the successor to Horizon Europe, the European Union's flagship research and innovation programme. On 25 February 2026, experts gathered to scrutinize the proposed Framework Programme 10 (FP10), set to run from 2028 to 2034, alongside the massive European Competitiveness Fund (ECF). This debate underscores the urgency of bolstering Europe's research ecosystem amid global rivalries from the US and China, with universities at the forefront as primary beneficiaries.
Horizon Europe, which allocated €95.5 billion from 2021 to 2027, has funded groundbreaking work across pillars like excellent science and global challenges, delivering tangible impacts such as advancements in quantum computing and climate-resilient agriculture. Its successor, FP10, promises an even larger scale, but questions linger over budget size, programme structure, and integration with the €409 billion ECF.
For European higher education institutions, the stakes are immense. Universities host over 70% of Horizon-funded projects, driving talent mobility via Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) and frontier research through the European Research Council (ERC). The ITRE discussions highlight how FP10 could either supercharge university innovation or risk diluting core academic missions if overshadowed by industrial priorities.
Horizon Europe's Proven Track Record and Lessons Learned
Launched in 2021, Horizon Europe built on Horizon 2020's successes by emphasizing missions—targeted challenges like cancer and climate neutrality. To date, it has disbursed over €50 billion, with universities securing the lion's share: ERC grants alone have supported 16,000 projects and 100,000 researchers, fostering breakthroughs at institutions from Oxford to Heidelberg.
MSCA, with its postdoctoral fellowships and doctoral networks, has trained 50,000 early-career researchers annually, enhancing Europe's brain gain. Yet, interim evaluations reveal pain points: bureaucratic hurdles, low success rates (around 12% for ERC), and underfunding of basic research amid rising geopolitical tensions.
These lessons inform FP10 debates. European colleges and universities advocate retaining Horizon's three-pillar structure—excellent science (33%), global challenges (50%), and innovative Europe (17%)—while simplifying application processes to boost participation from smaller institutions in Eastern and Southern Europe.
Commission's Ambitious FP10 Blueprint: Doubling the Bet
In July 2025, the European Commission unveiled its FP10 proposal: a standalone €175 billion programme, nearly double Horizon Europe's budget in current prices. Structured around four pillars—excellent science, competitiveness and society, innovation, and the European Research Area (ERA)—it aims to channel funds into strategic autonomy in AI, green tech, and health.
- Excellent Science: Bolstered ERC and MSCA to attract global talent, with ERC potentially doubling to €31.5 billion.
- Competitiveness and Society: €75.9 billion for collaborative projects addressing societal needs.
- Innovation: Enhanced European Innovation Council (EIC) for startups scaling at universities.
- ERA Pillar: New focus on reducing disparities, supporting university alliances.
This influx could transform European higher education, funding 75% of 'excellent' proposals and mobilizing private investment. Yet, critics note it falls short of the €220 billion urged by Draghi's competitiveness report.
ITRE's Bold Recommendations: €220 Billion and Research Councils
The ITRE draft report champions FP10 as standalone, proposing €220 billion—25% above Commission figures—with half earmarked for ERC and EIC to bridge basic research to market. It endorses new councils: a European Technology and Industrial Competitiveness Council for private sector pull-in and a Societal Challenges Council led by academics.
Simplification is key: scrap underperforming missions, cut lump-sum funding complexities, and introduce 'Choose Europe' for researcher careers. Voting slated for September 2026, this positions ITRE as a champion for university-led innovation, countering Council fiscal conservatism.
For colleges, this means more ERC Starting Grants (€1.5-2M per project) and Pathfinder schemes, vital for early-career faculty in fields like biotech at institutions such as KU Leuven or Sorbonne.
Photo by Viktor Hesse on Unsplash
University Alliances Rally: Safeguarding FP10 from ECF Overreach
Over 900 universities via EUA, LERU, and peers issued a joint statement post-ITRE hearing, demanding clear FP10-ECF boundaries. FP10 as 'bridge generator' for knowledge, ECF as 'amplifier' for deployment—avoiding a 'de facto hierarchy' where competitiveness trumps curiosity-driven science.
"Horizon Europe should remain the programme for excellent and collaborative R&I," urged EUA's Amanda Crowfoot. Risks include imported constraints stifling ERC's bottom-up ethos, which funds high-risk projects at 400+ universities.
Proposals: separate work programmes, expert boards, fast-tracks from FP10 to ECF. This protects higher ed's role in talent pipelines, with MSCA fellowships hosting 20,000 researchers yearly across Europe.
Explore research positions funded by EU programmes.ERC and MSCA: Lifelines for Europe's Academic Talent
The ERC, Horizon's jewel, awarded €728 million to 349 mid-career researchers in 2025 alone, powering labs at Europe's top colleges. FP10 must double this to retain talent against US NSF's $9B annual outlay.
MSCA doctoral networks train 6,000 PhDs yearly, fostering European Universities alliances like Una Europa. Debates center on ring-fencing 40% of FP10 for pillar 1, ensuring universities like Ghent (20 ERC grants in 2022) thrive.
- ERC success rate: 12-15%, needs funding hike for 20%+.
- MSCA: Boosts mobility, 54% to non-academic careers.
- University impact: €1B+ to 21 top unis in Horizon phase 1.
Stakeholder Clashes: MEPs, Commission, and University Voices
MEPs push €200B+ FP10, echoing Draghi: R&I at 3% EU GDP. Commission ties FP10 to ECF for synergies, but unis fear bureaucracy. Experts at ITRE hearing—Nobel winner Philippe Aghion among them—stressed risk-taking over safe bets.
Science Europe and ERA-LEARN advocate partnerships, while EERA eyes energy missions. Universities like Tartu lead national funding, but disparities persist: Western Europe dominates 80% ERC wins.
Discover higher ed opportunities across Europe.Navigating Challenges: Budget, Bureaucracy, and Geopolitics
MFF 2028-34 negotiations pit EP ambition against Council austerity. ITRE eyes April 2026 draft report, plenary by year-end. Challenges: simplify 100+ funding instruments, counter US CHIPS Act subsidies, integrate third countries like UK/Switzerland.
For higher ed, low SME participation (10%) hampers university spin-offs. Solutions: digital portals, AI evaluators, capacity-building for Eastern unis.
Photo by Antoine Schibler on Unsplash
FP10's Promise for European Higher Education Competitiveness
A robust FP10 could elevate Europe's unis to global top 100 dominance, funding AI hubs at ETH Zurich or green labs at Imperial. MSCA/ERC attract 30% non-EU talent, curbing brain drain.
Outlook: If €220B materializes with safeguards, expect 50% more grants, ERA pillar closing North-South gaps. Universities must lobby via alliances for bottom-up focus.
European Commission Horizon Europe Portal | EUA Joint Statement.Seizing Opportunities: Advice for Researchers and Institutions
Prospective PIs: Monitor ITRE votes, prep ERC Consolidators (€2M grants). Unis: Build ECF-FP10 consortia, leverage alliances. With FP10, Europe's colleges can lead in net-zero tech and digital health.
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