The European Commission has granted more than €380m to 133 new projects across Europe under the LIFE Programme for environment and climate action. This includes four Irish-led projects.
Recycling company Limerick Polymers
Recycling company Limerick Polymers was awarded €3m to create a blueprint to boost the use of recycled plastic across Europe.
University College Cork is coordinator of two projects – one to create 'one-stop-shops' to assist home owners in residential energy renovations with partners in Bulgaria, Greece, Poland, Ukraine and Slovenia and the other to streamline energy performance contracts at Irish universities.
Finally, Dublin-based BwB, a not-for-profit investment banking, asset management and advisory firm, is receiving funding to roll out energy efficiency renovations in homes in Marseille which can be replicated throughout the EU.
LIFE projects contribute to reaching the European Green Deal's broad range of climate, energy and environmental goals, including the EU's aim to become climate-neutral by 2050 and to halt and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030, while ensuring Europe's long-term prosperity. This investment will have a lasting impact on our environment, the economy and the well-being of all Europeans.
The projects will cover all areas of the LIFE programme, mobilising:
- €143m (of which the EU will provide €74m) to contribute to circular economy and improving quality of life, with 26 projects reducing water use, industrial and household waste, air and noise pollution, as well as making the business case for reducing, reusing and recycling;
- close to €216m (€144.5m EU contribution) for nature and biodiversity projects to restore freshwater, marine and coastal ecosystems, and habitats; and improve the conservation status of birds, insects, reptiles, amphibians, and mammals;
- some €110m (nearly €62m EU contribution) for climate resilience, climate mitigation and governance and information;
- €105m (€99m EU contribution) for governance and market solutions to accelerate the clean energy transition.
Examples of projects supporting sustainability, innovation and quality of life
Among the 26 projects selected to promote a more circular economy and quality of life, the €7.5m project LIFE GRAPhiREC aims at recycling graphite from battery waste in Italy. It is projected to generate €23.4m in revenue and save €25m in production costs.
The Spanish project LIFE POLITEX will invest €5m in reducing the environmental footprint of the fashion industry by converting textile waste back into new textiles. The €9.8m DESALIFE project from the Canary Islands aims to support water resilience by producing fresh water from the Atlantic Ocean. Off-shore wave-powered buoys deployed off the Canary Islands will pump 1.7 billion litres of desalinated freshwater to shore.
A total of 25 projects will support nature and biodiversity in a wide range of areas. Two projects, LIFE4AquaticWarbler and LIFE AWOM, involve Belgium, Germany, Spain, France, Lithuania, Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, as well as Ukraine and Senegal, with a combined budget of nearly €24m to save the rare aquatic warbler bird, in line with the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030. Another example is Biodiverse City LIFE, a €3.6m project in Budapest to promote the ‘peaceful coexistence of nature and the urban lifestyle'.
IMAGE LIFE and LIFE VINOSHIELD are part of the 23 climate change resilience and mitigation projects announced today. With a combined budget of €6.8m, the projects taking place in Spain, France and Italy will help world-renowned vineyards and the production of famous cheeses such as Parmigiano Reggiano, Camembert de Normandie, and Roquefort to become more resilient to the impact of extreme weather events. The projects showcase responses on how best Europe's wider agricultural industry can adapt to climate change and water scarcity. Equally important is the €6.9m LIFE BLUE 420 kV GIS project, taking place in Belgium, led by Siemens to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from electrical circuit breakers.
To ensure a clean energy transition, as part of the 59 new projects announced, LIFE DiVirtue, a three-year, €1.25m digital training scheme will build capacity for a more efficient and innovative building and construction industry sector. The project notably uses virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) to help construction students and professionals deliver zero-emission buildings and renovations across Bulgaria, Czechia, Greece, Croatia and Romania. Meanwhile, with almost €10m, the ENERCOM FACILITY project will provide direct grants to 140 emerging energy communities across Europe to trigger investments in sustainable energy. It will further support energy communities in developing their business models through trainings and capacity building material, paving the way for replicable business models with long-term sustainability.