Published on | 10 months ago
Programmes Research Infrastructures Health Culture and society Security Digital, Industry & Space Climate, Energy, Mobility Agro-Food, EnvironmentThe Horizon Europe Research Infrastructures NCP network (RICH) database on transnational and virtual access to research infrastructures contains all ongoing Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe projects that open their research infrastructures to transnational/virtual researchers/users.
These are the projects funded under the Integrating Activities part of the Research Infrastructures work programme, some of the ESFRI projects (if access is granted to all researchers no matter if their country is member of the ESFRI RI) and some e-infrastructures (provided services are addressed to researchers and not to RIs or other e-infra).
For each project, a short description of the transnational/virtual activities is given as well as the deadline to submit a proposal to an open call and a link to the project website and the TA&VA access webpage. The projects can be filtered by scientific domain and type of access (transnational or virtual). The database is updated every 3 months.
What is Transnational Access?
Transnational Access ensures free of charge access to the best European research infrastructures. Apart from the cost of research itself, travel, accommodation and subsistence costs may be reimbursed by the budget of the project. This opportunity is open to all European researchers and to some extent to researchers from non-EU countries.
What is Virtual Access?
Virtual Access ensures free of charge access to e-infrastructure, namely to:
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The UNCHAIN project, ‘urban logistics and planning: anticipating urban freight generation and demand including digitalisation of urban freight’ obtained funding from the Horizon Europe’s Mobility Cluster. The project focuses on breaking down data silos and promoting public-private data exchange across a unified European mobility data space, enabling more informed decisions and greater efficiency. The City of Mechelen is a partner in the project and takes on the role of ‘follower city’: it will work alongside the primary demonstration sites (in Madrid, Berlin and Florence) to maximize the geographical coverage and replicability of solutions across Europe. Mechelen aims to test 2 concrete solutions in the UNCHAIN project, with the aim to help addressing its current and future challenges in urban freight distribution.