Pre-announcement of the CEUS-UNISONO call for proposals

Fri, 11/22/2019 - 14:05

Pre-announcement of the CEUS-UNISONO call for proposals for research projects held in line with the Lead Agency Procedure.

CEUS-UNISONO call announcement 

In February 2020, the international CEUS-UNISONO call for proposals will be announced. The call will be open to proposals for research projects:

  • which involve basic research,
  • in all areas of research,
  • to be carried out in bilateral or trilateral cooperation by the Polish, Austrian, Czech and Slovenian research teams,
  • carried out over 24, 36 and in the case of cooperation with Austrian research teams - also  48 months, starting in 2021 at the earliest.

The call will be announced within the CEUS programme organised in cooperation between the NCN and foreign partner institutions from:

  • Austria (FWF – Austrian Science Fund – Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung),
  • Czech Republic (GAČR – Czech Science Foundation – Grantová agentura České Republiky),
  • Slovenia (ARRS- Slovenian Research Agency – Javna agencija za raziskovalno dejavnost Republike Slovenije).

The CEUS-UNISONO call will be held in line with the Lead Agency Procedure. The lead agency will perform the merit-based evaluation of submitted proposals under its domestic call open to such evaluation. Under the CEUS-UNISONO call, FWF, GAČR or ARRS[1] will act as the lead agency.

Proposals may be submitted to the respective lead agency (FWF, GAČR or ARRS), provided that:

  • in the case of bilateral projects: at least 40 % of the entire project costs must be applied for at the respective lead agency;
  • in the case of trilateral projects: at least 25 % of the entire project costs must be applied for at the respective lead agency.

The CEUS-UNISONO call will be open to NCN proposals to which joint proposals will be attached, drafted by research teams from two or three countries involved in the CEUS programme, according to the requirements of the respective lead agency under its domestic programme, i.e.:

NCN proposals drafted according to the requirements of the NCN should be submitted via the ZSUN/OSF (Integrated System of Services for Science/Servicing Financing Streams) electronic submission system available at https://osf.opi.org.pl), as soon as possible following submission of the joint proposal to the respective lead agency, within 7 calendar days at the latest.

The terms and conditions of domestic calls open under the CEUS programme by the foreign partner institutions, under which joint proposals will be submitted and evaluated, including the proposal submission date, will be set by the FWF, GAČR and ARRS, respectively.

  • Proposal submission dates in 2020 at the partner institutions acting as the lead agency:
    Agency Submission at the lead agency
    FWF

    No fixed proposal submission date;

    proposals can be submitted from 22 February 2020

    GAČR

    Proposal submission date:

    22 February-7 April 2020

    ARRS

    Proposal submission date:

    September-October/November 2020

    NCN

    Proposal submission date:

    from September 2020 till December 2020 under the OPUS

  • Proposal submission dates for domestic research teams at the respective partner institution other than the lead agency:

     

    Institution Submission dates for proposals for funding of domestic teams in the partner institutions other than lead agencies
    FWF

    No fixed proposal submission date;

    proposals can be submitted from 22 February 2020, as soon as possible following the submission of the joint proposal to the respective lead agency, within 7 calendar days at the latest, in accordance with the requirements of the respective institution

    GAČR

    ARRS

    NCN

    No fixed proposal submission date;

    proposals can be submitted from 24 February 2020, as soon as possible following the submission of the joint proposal to the respective lead agency, within 7 calendar days at the latest, in accordance with the CEUS-UNISONO call requirements

Proposals submitted under the CEUS-UNISONO call will be subject to an eligibility check carried out by the NCN and the FWF, GAČR and ARRS separately and merit-based evaluation carried out by the lead agency according to its rules.

Under the CEUS-UNISONO call, funds will be awarded to those research projects that are included in 20% of proposals with the highest marking under a domestic call opened by the lead agency within the CEUS program, whereby all engaged partner institutions award funding to their respective research teams.

Planned date of the announcement of first CEUS-UNISONO call results: second half of 2020.

More information on the CEUS-UNISONO call will be available in February 2020.

FWF call announcement 

CEUS pre-announcement on GAČR website

CEUS pre-announcement on ARRS website

NCN CONTACT PERSONS:

Dr Magdalena Godowska, tel. +48 12 341 90 16 (general enquiries)

Magdalena Dobrzańska-Bzowska, tel. +48 12 341 9094 (general enquiries)

FWF CONTACT PERSONS:

Dr. Christoph Bärenreuter, tel. +43 (0)1 / 505 67 40 – 8702, email: christoph.baerenreuter@fwf.ac.at

CONTACT GAČR:

Kamila Pětrašová, tel . +420 227 088 863, email: kamila.petrasova@gacr.cz

CONTACT ARRS:

Bojan Volf, tel. +386 1 400 5973, email: bojan.volf@arrs.si

Lead Agency Procedure in the CEUS-UNISONO call applicable to bilateral and trilateral projects

 


[1] In September 2020, proposals for funding of research projects carried out in bilateral or trilateral cooperation by the Polish, Austrian, Czech and Slovenian research teams will be accepted under the OPUS call, with the NCN acting as the Lead Agency, provided that:

- in the case of bilateral projects including Polish research team(s): at least 40 % of the entire project costs must be applied for at the NCN;

- in the case of trilateral projects including Polish research team(s): at least 25 % of the entire project costs must be applied for at the NCN.

 

 

Mid-Term Conference Follow-up

Fri, 11/22/2019 - 12:23

QuantERA Mid-Term Strategic Conference gathered more than 100 participants at the premises of the University of Granada, Spain on 13-14 November, 2019. The event was hosted by the University of Granada and Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (AEI) – a research funding organisation from Spain and QuantERA partner institution.

Materials from the meeting are available under the links in the text below.

The aim of the meeting was to present an overview of the current state of the quantum technology research funding in Europe and conduct a mid-term evaluation of the projects funded within the QuantERA Call 2017. The organizers managed to bring together a wide representation of various stakeholders, incl. European Commission, Quantum Flagship, QuantERA Projects, Research Funding Organisations, industry and quantum community. This resulted in fruitful discussions, spontaneous networking and valuable insights that could be used for future development of the QuantERA programme.

The meeting started with a warm welcome by prof. Enrique Playán Jubillar (AEI Director) and prof. Konrad Banaszek (the QuantERA Scientific Coordinator) followed by an absorbing key note speech given by prof. Nicolas Gisin and speeches of Mr. Pascal Maillot (European Commission) and prof. Tommaso Calarco (the Quantum Flagship). The landscape of the quantum research in Europe was complimented with insightful conclusions of the following guests within two panel discussions:

All 26 QuantERA projects funded within Call 2017 were presented during the scientific sessions which formed the key part of the event and provided ground for engaging discussions which exceeded the timeframe of the meeting. Mid-term presentations of the 26 QuantERA projects funded within the Call 2017 will be soon available at the subpages of individual projects at www.quantera.eu.

The event posed also a chance to meet the Coordinators of the projects recommended for funding within the QuantERA Call 2019 during an Introductory Meeting (presentation from the meeting is available here).

Prof. Konrad Banaszek, the Scientific Coordinator of QuantERA highlighted that “Projects funded in QuantERA Call 2017 produced a significant number of very exciting scientific results that were reported at mid-term review presentations. It was very gratifying for organisations participating in the QuantERA initiative to see that our programme has become an important component of supporting European research into quantum technologies.“

On behalf of the whole QuantERA Consortium we would like to take this opportunity to thank all the participants for their active engagement and valuable insights!

The opening presentation from the event:


Contact:

 

MOZART call closed whilst NCN continues to cooperate with the FWF to fund Polish-Austrian research projects

Thu, 11/21/2019 - 10:38

Acting pursuant to Point 4 (7) of the Council Resolution No 32/2019 of 14 March 2019, the NCN Council has decided to close the MOZART call for proposals on 21 February 2020, at 23:59:59 (Council Resolution No 114/2019 of 14 November 2019).

The MOZART call announcement has been updated accordingly.

The cooperation between the NCN and the FWF will be continued within the framework of the CEUS programme launched by the NCN in cooperation with the funding agencies from Austria (FWF – Austrian Science Fund – Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung), Czech Republic (GAČR – Czech Science Foundation – Grantová agentura České Republiky) and Slovenia (ARRS- Slovenian Research Agency – Javna agencija za raziskovalno dejavnost Republike Slovenije) in line with the Lead Agency Procedure. The aim of the programme is to fund basic research projects in all research areas carried out jointly by research teams from two or three countries involved in the CEUS programme.

In February 2020, an international CEUS-UNISONO call will be launched for research projects carried out in bilateral or trilateral cooperation by the Polish, Austrian, Czech and Slovenian research teams. Under the CEUS-UNISONO call, FWF, GAČR or ARRS will act as the lead agency and perform merit-based evaluation of the proposals. More on CEUS-UNISONO call.

Over 390 million PLN for research proposals in OPUS 17 and PRELUDIUM 17 calls

Mon, 11/18/2019 - 15:18

The National Science Centre hereby announces the results of the OPUS 17 call for research projects addressed at all researchers and the PRELUDIUM 17 call for research projects to be carried out by researchers without a doctoral degree. The ranking lists include over five hundred research projects totalling nearly 390.3 million PLN.

In total, 3,145 proposals were received totalling nearly 2.14 billion PLN; out of these, NCN experts recommended 520 for a total funding of 390,268,309 PLN. On average, 16.5% of submitted proposals received funding.

OPUS is a call addressed to a wide range of researchers. There are no restrictions on the research career, academic degree or research experience. The competing researchers are subject to the same evaluation criteria, including quality of research to be performed, innovative nature of the research problem addressed, project’s impact on the development of the scientific discipline or research track record of the principal investigator. As usual, the OPUS call has drawn a record-breaking response, with 2,051 proposals sent to the National Science Centre totalling nearly 1.98 billion PLN. Following the evaluation procedure, the experts recommended 308 proposals for funding totalling 358,270,509 PLN, giving a success rate of just over 15% in the OPUS call.

In PRELUDIUM 17, researchers without a doctoral degree could apply for funding for their research. Maximum funds available in the call amounts to 70,000 PLN, 140,000 PLN or 210,000 PLN to finance projects of 12 months, 24 months or 36 months respectively. The research team in the PRELUDIUM call may consist of a maximum of three persons; a person holding a post-doctoral degree (doktor habilitowany) or academic title of professor may be designated in the proposal solely as a mentor. In the 17th edition of the PRELUDIUM call researchers submitted 1,094 proposals totalling nearly 158.5 million PLN. Ultimately, 212 projects were recommended for funding with a total budget of 31,997,800 PLN, giving a success rate of 19.38%.

The majority of projects submitted to OPUS 17 and PRELUDIUM 17 will be carried out by representatives of Physical Sciences and Engineering, where 193 out of 1,165 submitted proposals were recommended for funding, with a budget of over 142.3 million PLN. Although representatives of Life Sciences received a little less, i.e. 170 grants out of 1026 submitted proposals, their value totalled as much as 186.6 million PLN. 157 grants (with 954 submitted) were awarded to Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, totalling 61.3 million PLN.

NCN grants can be used to cover the cost of remuneration for researchers involved in the project, purchase or construction of research equipment, devices and software, purchase of materials and small equipment, outsourced services, business trips, visits and consultations, and compensation for collective investigators (i.e. direct costs). The grants also include indirect costs, i.e. expenses indirectly related to the project that are crucial to the project. Under OPUS 17 and PRELUDIUM 17, indirect costs amounted to a maximum of 40% of direct costs, with the exception of the amount for the purchase or construction of research equipment, devices and software.

Proposal evaluations in NCN calls are performed by experts selected from outstanding Polish and foreign scientists, holding a minimum of a doctoral degree. The evaluation process comprises two stages: merit-based evaluation and specialist evaluation. Under each stage, a proposal is subject to at least two individual reviews and an expert team meeting is held to discuss the individual reviews and draft a ranking list. 

Under OPUS 17 and PRELUDIUM 17, a majority of proposals have been submitted by universities (274), natural persons (111) and research institutes of the Polish Academy of Sciences (80). The winning grants will be carried out in 109 organisations.

Top 10 organisations to carry out research projects under OPUS 17 and PRELUDIUM 17

Name of organisation Number of grants awarded

University of Warsaw

75

Jagiellonian University

65

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

30

Wrocław University of Science and Technology

18

Wrocław University

17

University of Lodz

16

University of Gdańsk

15

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

12

AGH University of Science and Technology in Krakow

11

Warsaw University of Technology

10


See full ranking lists

PLEASE NOTE that negative decisions will be delivered in an electronic format on an ongoing basis while the positive ones will be delivered within the next few days.

How are the little ones coping - Arctic meiofauna in the face of climate change

Principal Investigator :
Dr Katarzyna Grzelak
University of Lodz

Panel: NZ8

Funding scheme : FUGA 5
announced on 15 December 2015

The Arctic is one of the regions most vulnerable to climate change and at the same time the area where the rate of observed change is the greatest. Due to the increased heat transfer with Atlantic waters and rising average air temperatures, the surface of the ice cap, as well as the thickness and total volume of ice in the Arctic, have shrunk dramatically in recent years. Considering that sea ice is an essential factor that affects all the biotic and abiotic components of Arctic marine ecosystems, these changes can be expected to have a major impact on the functioning of many marine organisms, including benthic fauna (i.e. the various organisms that live on the Arctic seabed). The purpose of the project was to characterize meiofauna communities, i.e. groups of small invertebrates living on the surface of deposits or in interstitial spaces, with bodies smaller than 500 µm, with a special emphasis on Nematodes as a dominant taxon, as well as to assess the impact of ongoing climate change (especially changes in the type and thickness of the ice cap and primary production in the surface layers of the water column) on their functioning in the European Arctic. The research project was conducted in the Svalbard archipelago, to which more and more warm water is transported every year from the Atlantic. The smallest marine organisms, such as the meiofauna, play an important role in marine ecosystems, representing one of the most numerous groups of primary consumers; they contribute to the biomineralization and bioturbation of deposits and reintroduce biogenic particles from sea deposits back into the food chain. This is why it is so essential to include these extremely interesting organisms in ecological studies.

Fot. Michał ŁepeckiFot. Michał Łepecki The project provided a detailed description of the communities of meiofauna and Nematodes along the ice gradient, in the region to the north of Svalbard and in the area of the Barents Sea. We established that the period of ice retention, as well as late and low-intensity algal blooms, have a negative impact on the population, biomass and taxonomic diversity of Nematodes. In areas where the period of ice retention is shorter and which receive more Atlantic waters, which accelerate the growth of phytoplankton, Nematodes show greater population numbers, as well as greater total biomass, species diversity and food diversity. Organisms living in regions under the strong influence of Arctic waters typically have a smaller body size than those found in areas with a greater advection of Atlantic waters. The project also looked into the feeding strategies of Nematodes. The organisms were shown to be non-selective in their food choices and ready to tap any available food sources in the environment, which attests to their high ecological flexibility and ability to adapt to changing environmental conditions.

We are obtaining more and more data on the broader impact of climate change on ecosystem diversity and functioning, but the information is often fragmentary and our knowledge of many animal groups in the Arctic region and the scale of their response remain incomplete. The results obtained in the framework of this project will shed more light on the reactions of the smallest, microscopic inhabitants of the Arctic ecosystem. This will help draw up potential scenarios for the behaviour of the entire benthic fauna in the face of rising temperatures, receding ice caps and shorter ice retention in the European Arctic.

Project title: Nematode community structure under different ice regime conditions in the European Arctic: structural, functional and genetic aspects

Dr Katarzyna Grzelak

Kierownik - dodatkowe informacje

Assistant Professor at the Marine Ecology Unit of the Institute of Oceanology at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Sopot. She completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the Laboratory of Polar Biology and Oceanobiology at the University of Łódź within the framework of a research grant awarded under the FUGA funding scheme, as well as research fellowships in the US, Denmark and Germany. She specializes in the ecology of meiofauna, a minuscule, yet very numerous, group of organisms with body size smaller than 0.5 mm. Her research interests centre on free-living marine Nematodes and Kinorhyncha in the Arctic region. She has won scholarships awarded by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, the Kościuszko Foundation, and the Fulbright Program.

dr Katarzyna Grzelak

“Managing Threats” IdeaLab workshops (21-25.10.2019)

Tue, 10/29/2019 - 14:35

International law, political economy, transport and mobility, urban studies, psychology, neurobiology, chemistry, public health, future studies are just some of the disciplines represented by the participants of the workshop organised by the National Science Centre between 21 and 25 October 2019 under the IdeaLab call funded from the EEA grants.

Over 30 scientists from Poland and Norway participated in the workshop held in Jaroszowice near Krakow. They worked in interdisciplinary teams aimed at developing the research projects ideas addressing the widely understood topic “Managing threats”. During the five days of the workshop, 8 projects ideas were developed addressing, inter alia, climate change, migration flows, disinformation in the globalised and networked world and smart cities focused on the needs of their citizens.

The workshop was carried out according to the “sandpit” method which makes IdeaLab different from a standard call for proposals mainly due to an unusual formation of the teams and procedure of developing proposal ideas. The participants did not know each other before. During the workshop they created ad hoc teams and developed project ideas to form the basis for future funding proposals submitted with the National Science Centre. 

More on the IdeaLab call: https://www.ncn.gov.pl/eeanorwaygrants/calls/idealab?language=en.

 

uczestnicy podczas pracy w ramach warsztatów IdeaLab
tablica z pomysłami uczestników warsztatów IdeaLab

IdeaLab Workshop, photo credits: Daria Wójcik/NCN

Pre-Announcement of the CHIST-ERA Call 2019

Tue, 10/29/2019 - 08:56

The CHIST-ERA Network has defined topics for the Call for proposals that will be announced in December 2019: Explainable Machine Learning-based Artificial Intelligence (XAI), Novel Computational Approaches for Environmental Sustainability (CES).

Researchers are encouraged to start discussing possible projects with prospective partners. The call will require that projects are submitted by international consortia with partners in at least three countries (the list of countries which have shown preliminary interest in participating in the Call is provided in the pre-announcement). The national/regional eligibility criteria will be defined by each participating funding agency.

The anticipated deadline for proposals is 14th February 2019. The projects will be selected in the second half of 2020.

For details please see the attached document (CHIST-ERA Pre-announcement of Call 2019) and CHIST-ERA website, where a Partner Search Tool is available.

Please note that this pre-announcement is for information purposes only. It does not create any obligation for the CHIST-ERA consortium nor for any of the participating funding organisations. The official call announcement, to be published later, shall prevail.


Contact:

  • Dr Anna Wieczorek,  The Physical Sciences and Engineering Coordinator Unit, phone: 12 341 9164
  • Alicja Dyląg, International Cooperation Office, phone:  12 341 9069

JPI Urban Europe Pre-announcement

Mon, 10/28/2019 - 08:34

We would like to invite all researchers to participate in new international funding opportunities in urban studies  JPI Urban Europe.

In December 2019 JPI Urban Europe network plans to open a new funding opportunity on the following theme: Urban accessibility and connectivity. For more information please follow the promotion flyer and the webpage.


Contact:

 

Success of Polish researchers in the BiodivERsA Call 2018

Fri, 10/25/2019 - 13:19

BiodivERsA Consortium is pleased to announce the results of the Biodiversity and its influence on animal, human and plant health call. Thanks to the funding provided by the BiodivERsA member organisations, the list of projects recommended for funding includes 10 excellent international proposals in the field of biodiversity research for over EUR 11,9 M.

The BiodivERsA Call 2018, launched in October 2018 by 15 funding organisations from 11 countries, attracted 49 international research consortia. Polish researchers will be involved in 6 of 10 awarded projects.


List of the projects with participation of Polish research teams:

  • BioRodDis. Managing biodiversity in forests and urban green spaces: Dilution and amplification effects on rodent microbiomes and rodent-borne diseases, with participation of dr Maciej Grzybek from Medical University of Gdańsk;
  • VOODOO. Viral eco-evolutionary dynamics of wild and domestic pollinators under global change, with participation of dr Hajnalka Szentgyörgyi from University of Agriculture in Krakow (cooperating with Warsaw University of Life Sciences);
  • ANTIVERSA. Biodiversity as an ecological barrier for the spread of clinically relevant antibiotic resistance in the environment, with participation of dr hab. Magdalena Popowska from University of Warsaw;
  • Dr. FOREST. Diversity of forests affecting human health and well-being, with participation of dr hab. inż. Bogdan Jaroszewicz from University of Warsaw (cooperating with Medical University of Warsaw);
  • NutriB2. Nutrition as critical link between Biodiversity and Bee health, with participation of dr Michał Filipiak from Jagiellonian University;
  • FunProd. Relationships between functional diversity and food production and quality under ecological intensification, with participation of prof. Werner Ulrich from Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń (cooperating with Warsaw University of Life Sciences).

Full list of the projects recommended for funding. More information and the full list of the projects recommended for funding are available on the BiodivERsA web page.