h2020 Guide Pse en
h2020 Guide Pse en
Version 1.4
28 May 2015
History of changes
Table of content
I. Introduction
II. H2020 grants: background and principles
II.1 Principles governing the award of grants
II.2 H2020 types of grants and funding rates
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Differences to FP7
III.5 Submit a proposal recommendations of experts limited
negotiation replaced by grant
preparation
Summary
We will treat your proposal confidentially, as well as any related information, data, and
documents we receive from you.
We will ensure that the process of handling and evaluating proposals is carried out in a
confidential manner.
You too should avoid taking any actions that could jeopardise confidentiality. You must not
attempt to discuss your proposal with persons you believe may act as expert evaluator for the
Commission/Agency.
Your proposal is archived under secure conditions at all times. After the evaluation and
signature of any subsequent grant agreement, all copies are destroyed except those required
for archiving or auditing purposes.
Your proposal should not contain any information that is EU classified under the rules on
security of information in the Commission internal Rules of Procedure (see also Guide for
classification).
We will process personal data in accordance with Regulation No 45/2001 and according to
the notifications of the processing operations to the Data Protection Officer (DPO) of the
Commission/Agency (publicly accessible in the DPO register).
Once the coordinator (or sole applicant) has submitted a proposal, you will not hear from us
until the proposal has been evaluated, unless:
o we need to contact you (usually through the coordinator) to clarify matters such as
eligibility or to request additional information
o we need more information, or supporting documents, for legal entity validation,
financial viability check, ethics review or security scrutiny
o you have made an enquiry or a complaint or
o the evaluation process involves hearings.
There is a Helpdesk available to deal with issues relating to the electronic submission of
proposals.
For information on how to register concerns or enquiries please look on the Participant
Portal.
To contact us please use only the electronic exchange system (i.e. the My Area section of
the Participant Portal).
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the proposal (both the administrative forms and technical annex) is complete, readable,
accessible and printable
obtained access to the electronic exchange system (i.e. the My Area section of the
Participant Portal) (see section III.3)
For two-stage submission schemes, you must submit a short outline proposal for the first stage and you
will be invited to submit your full proposal for the second stage, if you pass the first-stage evaluation.
The full proposal must be consistent with the short outline proposal and may not differ substantially.
Some calls may be continuously open for submission at any time. In these cases, the call will set
intermediate or final closure dates and specify whether:
the evaluation of proposals will be carried out within one month of that date
proposals will be evaluated individually as they arrive and ranked after the next intermediate or
final closure date.
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If you miss an intermediate closure date, the proposal will be evaluated in the next evaluation
session.
We will record the date and time the coordinator submits the proposal, and immediately send a
confirmation e-mail to all applicants.
If you have not received this e-mail, it is because the proposal has not been submitted.
If you miss the call deadline, your proposal will be disregarded by the system and we will not
consider it as submitted.
The system carries out basic verification checks for completeness of the proposal, internal data
consistency, virus infection file types, size limitations etc.
The system will check page limits in specific parts of the proposal and, if necessary, suggest
that you shorten it. After the deadline, unless otherwise indicated in the call, any excess pages
will be overprinted with a watermark, indicating to evaluators that these pages must be
disregarded.
Before the call deadline, the coordinator may replace the proposal with new proposals. We will only
keep for evaluation the most recent version submitted.
After the call deadline, changes or additions are no longer possible, unless we ask you to clarify any
obvious clerical errors on your part.
After the call deadline (or intermediate or final closure date for continuous submission schemes),
the system will issue an e-receipt which will be available to all participants via the Participant
Portal; it will contain
the full proposal incl. proposal title, acronym and unique proposal identifier (proposal
number)
the name of the relevant programme part and call identifier and
If during the final days of the submission process there is a fault in the system, we may decide to
extend the call deadline accordingly.
the call title and the topic for which the proposal is submitted
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A disclaimer will inform you that we will be accessing this information and we will give you
the opportunity to refuse access.
Some calls allowing for continuous submission may indicate that proposals will be evaluated
individually as they arrive. They will be ranked after the closure date specified in the call. In those
cases, we may access your proposal from the moment of submission.
3.2 Withdrawing a proposal
The coordinator can subsequently withdraw your proposal the guidance documents will explain
how to do this.
3.3 Multiple proposals
If the coordinator submits a number of similar proposals, we may ask him to choose one or more of
them to be withdrawn.
3.4 Complaints
If you think that the submission of your proposal was not entirely successful due to a technical error
on the side of the Commission, the coordinator may lodge a complaint through the IT Helpdesk on
the Participant Portal. For the complaint to be admissible it must be filed within 4 calendar days
following that of the call closure. You will receive an acknowledgement of receipt the same or next
working day.
You should secure a PDF version of all the B-parts and annexes of your proposal holding a time
stamp (file attributes listing the date and time of creation and last modification) that is prior to the
call deadline dd/mm/yyyy:hh:mm , as well as any proof of the alleged failure (e.g. screen shots).
Later in the procedure you may be requested by the IT Helpdesk to provide these items. Please, note
that any information regarding the proposal will be treated in a strictly confidential manner.
In order that a complaint would be upheld, the IT audit trail (application log files and access log
files of the EC IT-systems involved) must show that there was indeed a technical problem at the EC
side which prevented you from submitting (or resubmitting) the proposal using the electronic
submission system.
You will be notified about the outcome of the treatment of your complaint as soon as possible and
at latest within the time indicated in the acknowledgment of receipt (AoR). If a decision cannot be
reached in this term you will receive a holding reply.
If your complaint is upheld, the secured files (provided by you to the IT helpdesk), for which the
investigation has demonstrated that technical problems at the EC side prevented (re)submitting, will
be used as a reference for accepting the proposal for subsequent evaluation. In absence of such
documents, the version present in the IT system will be evaluated.
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Rules:
III.6 Admissibility & Eligibility check Art 131(2) FR
Art 201 RAP
Art 7-10 RfP
Summary WP/call
submitted in the Electronic Submission System before the deadline given in the call
conditions
If the missing information or document would substantially change the proposal, it will
not be taken into account.
We will also check your proposal for ineligibility (against the standard eligibility criteria set out in
General Annexes A and C to the Main Work Programme and the specific eligibility conditions set
out in the work programme for your call).
Example: Research & innovation actions (RIA) require, for instance, a minimum of three independent legal
entities established in different Member States or associated countries1.
Your proposal must also correspond to the topic description for your call.
For more information on participation of third country participants, see section on cross-
cutting issues (international cooperation).
Specific cases:
In the case of two-stage submission schemes, an eligibility check is carried out at first stage. At second
stage, we will check that the eligibility conditions are still complied with.
If your Marie Skodowska-Curie action proposal is ineligible for call you submitted it for, but eligible in
another open call, we will transfer to that call.
1
Further conditions may be set out in the work programme.
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Rules:
Art 128(2), 131(3), 132(1,2), 133
IV.1 Evaluation of proposals and operational FR
capacity check Art 202, 203, 204 RAP
Art 15, 40 RfP
WP/call
Summary
Key points
We will evaluate your proposal with the help of independent external experts.
o Excellence Proposals must demonstrate high quality in relation to the topics and
criteria set out in the calls.
o Transparency Funding decisions must be based on clearly described rules and
procedures, and applicants should receive adequate feedback on the outcome of the
evaluation.
o Fairness and impartiality All proposals submitted in response to a call are treated
equally and evaluated impartially on their merits, irrespective of their origin or the
identity of the applicants.
o Efficiency and speed Evaluation, award and grant preparation should be done as
quickly as possible without compromising quality or neglecting the rules.
o Ethics and security Proposals must not contravene fundamental ethical principles or
relevant security procedures.
For two-stage submission schemes, there is a first-stage and a second-stage evaluation (against the
evaluation criteria for each stage). In a two-stage submission scheme, proposals must pass all thresholds
to pass to the second stage.
For continuous submission schemes, there is normally an evaluation session after the intermediate or
final closure dates (normally within a month). The work programme/call may provide for evaluation
when the proposals arrive. In this case they are all ranked after the intermediate or final closure date and
evaluation results are made available immediately.
If the work programme/call provides for a combination of continuous submission scheme and two-
stage submission scheme, the first-stage short outline proposals may be evaluated on a continuous basis
when they are received and the full proposal will be evaluated after the intermediate closure date for the
second-stage evaluation.
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For multi-step evaluations, different experts may be examining the different criteria. Proposals failing
a threshold score may not progress to the next step.
To evaluate your capability, the experts will also give an opinion on your operational capacity to
implement the action.
a high level of skill, experience and knowledge in the relevant areas (e.g. project
management, innovation, exploitation, dissemination and communication)
and, provided the above condition can be satisfied, a balance in terms of:
geographical diversity
gender
For the first stage in two-stage submission schemes and for low-value grants, it may be that only two
experts are used.
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has a close family or personal relationship with any person representing an applicant
such a role is justified by the requirement to appoint the best available experts
and by the limited size of the pool of qualified experts (and this is documented).
is a National Contact Point (NCPs) or persons directly working for the Enterprise
Europe Network (EEN)
We will decide whether a conflict of interest exists taking account of the objective
circumstances, available information and related risks when an expert:
is in any other situation that could cast doubt on their ability to participate in the
evaluation of the proposal impartially (or that could reasonably appear to do so in the
eyes of an external third party).
We will publish on the Reference Documents page of the Participant Portal at least once a year
the list of experts who have assisted us together with their area of expertise.
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excellence,
impact and
For two-stage submission schemes, thresholds and the maximum overall score may vary between the
first and the second stage.
For each criterion, your proposal will be given scores of 0 to 5 (half marks are possible), as follows:
0 The proposal fails to address the criterion or cannot be assessed due to missing or
incomplete information (unless the result of an obvious clerical error)
1 Poor: the criterion is inadequately addressed or there are serious inherent weaknesses
2 Fair: the proposal broadly addresses the criterion but there are significant
weaknesses
3 Good: the proposal addresses the criterion well but with a number of shortcomings
4 Very good: the proposal addresses the criterion very well but with a small number of
shortcomings
5 Excellent: the proposal successfully addresses all relevant aspects of the criterion;
any shortcomings are minor.
The maximum overall score is therefore 15.
Exception:
For the Marie Skodowska-Curie (MSC) actions and SME instrument, scores with a resolution of
one decimal place may be awarded.
If the work programme/call provides for a weighting factor, this will be used to determine the
final ranking.
Proposals will be evaluated on their own merit, and not their potential should certain changes be
made. Proposals with an inflated budget are likely to receive a lower score.
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4. Evaluation process
The evaluation process has three phases:
Phase 1 Individual evaluation
Phase 2 Consensus group
Phase 3 Panel review
Before starting the evaluation process, the experts are briefed on:
the evaluation processes and procedures (including selection and award criteria)
the terms of their contract (e.g. confidentiality, impartiality, conflicts of interest, completing
tasks and approving reports, penalties for non-compliance)
the need to evaluate proposals as they were submitted, rather than their potential should
certain changes be made.
falls entirely outside the scope of the part of the call which they are evaluating or
If foreseen in the work programme/call, an arithmetic average (i.e. median or mean value) of the
individual scores may be taken as the consensus score (e.g. for the first stage of two-stage
submission schemes, SME Instrument actions).
The mean is the total score of the experts, divided by the number of experts.
The median is found by arranging all the scores from lowest value to highest value and picking
the middle one (e.g. the median of {3, 5, 9} is 5).
If there is an even number of experts, then there is no single middle value; the median is then the
mean of the two middle scores (e.g. the median of {3, 5, 7, 9} is (5 + 7) / 2 = 6).
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If foreseen in the work programme/call the consensus report may consist in a collation of the
individual evaluation reports or extracts from them (e.g. the first stage of two-stage submission
schemes; SME Instrument actions)
If you have submitted your proposal to the Commission/Agency previously under Horizon
2020 or any other programme in the past two years, and if the work programme topics and
criteria were comparable, the moderator of the consensus group may give a copy of the previous
Evaluation Summary Report (see below) to the experts.
The group has an impartial moderator (normally a Commission/Agency staff member), who:
ensures that proposals are evaluated fairly, in line with the criteria.
If a consensus group cannot reach a common view, the consensus report will set out both the
majority view and the dissenting views.
In some cases we may ask additional experts to examine the proposal, to establish whether a
clear majority view exists.
4.3 Phase 3 Panel review
Finally, a panel will review all the proposals within a call, or part of a call, to:
make sure that the consensus groups have been consistent in their evaluations
resolve cases where a minority view was recorded in the consensus report.
There will be no panel review:
if there are sufficient funds to support all the proposals that passed the relevant
thresholds.
Specific case:
There will also be no separate panel review if the same consensus group has examined all the proposals.
In this case their final review will be done together with the consensus reports. This is considered to
constitute the panel review.
clarify the proposals and help the panel establish their final assessment and scores or
Invitations to hearings are sent only to the coordinators of proposals with consensus scores
above the individual and overall thresholds and, in some cases, also to those whose proposals
passed the individual thresholds, but fell short of the overall threshold.
Hearings may not be used to modify proposals.
You may only provide explanations and clarifications in response to questions submitted to you
in advance.
You may choose not to attend the hearing and to reply only in writing.
The panel may invite additional experts to clarify particular issues requiring specific expertise.
These experts may not take position on the proposal as a whole.
Hearings are usually held in Brussels, but may also be conducted by a written procedure, via
telephone, or by video-conference.
The panel report includes the evaluation summary report (ESR) for each proposal (based on
the consensus report, including comments and scores, and taking into account the panels
deliberations and any new scores or comments considered necessary), with explanations and a list
of proposals passing all thresholds, along with a final score, (panel ranked list) and, where
necessary, the panels recommendations for a priority order for proposals in the event of equal
scores, using the procedure set out in the work programme.
You will receive a copy of your evaluation summary report, when you will be informed of
the outcome of the evaluation by the experts.
Exception:
For two-stage submission schemes, the ESR of the first stage will not be sent to successful first stage
applicants, unless this is provided for in the Work Programme/call. (In such schemes, successful
applicants will receive the grant information letter and ESR at the end of the second/last stage; at the end
of the first stage, they will only be informed about the outcome and, if applicable, be invited to submit
their full proposal.)
normally also a reserve list (in case proposals are withdrawn, excluded or extra funding
becomes available)
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If on the basis of this ranking and the available budget your proposal is on the main list, we
will invite you to the grant preparation stage (via a grant information letter sent through the
electronic exchange system).
Specific case:
For two-stage submission schemes, if you successfully pass the first stage, you will receive the
information letter at the end of the second stage; at the end of the first stage, you will be informed
that your short outline proposal has been successfully evaluated and only be invited to submit your
full proposal.
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Rules:
IV.2.1 Ethics review (ethics screening and ethics assessment) Art 19 H2020 FP Reg
Art 13(2,3), 14 RfP
Summary
During proposal submission, you are asked to fill out the ethics self-assessment for your
proposal.
We will check if your proposal complies with ethical principles (including research
integrity) and applicable international, EU and national law.
Proposals raising serious or complex ethics issues must undergo an ethics assessment (e.g.
proposals involving the use of human embryonic stems cells (hESCs); significant research
integrity issues).
1. Ethics review
In parallel to the evaluation (or soon after), we will check with the help of independent ethics
experts if your proposal complies with ethical principles and relevant legislation.
2. Ethics issues
Although the main focus is on the ethical dimension (e.g. human rights and protection of human
beings, animal protection and welfare, data protection and privacy, environmental protection,
malevolent use of research results), we will also look at research integrity issues (e.g. fabrication,
falsification or plagiarism, including misrepresenting credentials and authorship improprieties).
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Proposals involving the use of human embryonic stems cells (hESCs) must always undergo an
ethics assessment (without ethics screening).
Example (ethics issues): impact on human beings, environment or animal welfare; processing of personal
data; fabrication and falsification of date (plagiarism).
If your proposal raises serious or complex ethics issues, it will have to also undergo an ethics
assessment (i.e. a more in-depth analysis).
Example (serious ethics issues that require ethics assessment): severe intervention on humans; multiple and
interconnected ethics issues; lack of appropriate ethics framework in the country where the research will be
conducted, etc.
We may contact you during the ethics review, if we need more information or supporting
documents.
grant ethics clearance (for proposals that are ethics-ready, i.e. respect ethical
principles and applicable law)
grant conditional ethics clearance (for proposals where the experts make the clearance
subject to conditions (i.e. ethics requirements) to be fulfilled before the signature of the
grant agreement or to be included in the grant agreement)
The conditions may include:
regular reporting
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During an ethics assessment, the experts may request a second ethics assessment, if they
consider that the elements submitted do not allow them to provide an opinion.
If the report is positive (clearance or conditional clearance) or recommends an ethics assessment, it
will be sent to your coordinator (via the electronic exchange system).
If the report is negative (no ethics clearance), we will inform your coordinator (via a proposal
rejection letter sent through the electronic exchange system), together with the reasons why and
how to appeal.
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Summary
If your project deals with information that is EU-classified under the Commission internal
Rules of Procedure, we will check how you propose to deal with information (see General
Annex J to the Main Work Programme).
The security scrutiny is not a fully-fleged security check on all potentially security-
relevant aspects of a proposal; it is limited to identifying actions that involve security-
sensitive information (and classifying them and their deliverables as classified deliverables).
The security scrutiny does not concern other issues or activities involving dual-use goods or
dangerous materials and substances.
Security scrutiny will be used for most parts of Societal Challenge 7 Secure Societies
calls, but it may also apply to other proposals.
1. Security scrutiny
If your proposal deals with information that is EU-classified under the Commission internal Rules
of Procedure2, it will have to undergo security scrutiny.
you apply for funding under the Societal Challenge 7 Secure Societies and your proposal
falls under areas described in the Guide for classification
2
Commission Decision 2001/844/EC, ECSC, Euratom amending the Commissions internal Rules of Procedure (OJ
L 317, 3.12.2001, p. 155). Available at http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:02001D0844-20050202&qid=1395937087333&from=EN.
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a Security Aspect Letter (SAL) and Security Classification Guide (SCG) 3, covering
the classified results (including which participant will have access to what
information).
a copy of the Facility Security Clearances (FSC) (or of the FSC request).
The validity of the FSC may be checked by the Commission Security Directorate
through the appropriate formal channel with the national security authorities (NSAs)
involved.
If the reasons for rejection are themselves EU classified, we cannot include them in the
rejection letter.
3
See Section 27 of Commission Decision 2001/844/EC, ECSC, Euratom. Available at http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32006D0548&from=EN.
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