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Program key data
Interreg Europe
Parent program | European Regional Development Fund |
Link to the program | www.interregeurope.eu |
Content of program
short description | Interreg Europe is an interregional cooperation programme, co-funded by the European Union. The European Union strives to reduce disparities in the levels of development, growth and quality of life in and across Europe’s regions. Interreg Europe's objective is to enable public authorities and other relevant organisations to actively learn from the experience of other regions. This is a learning process which involves identifying, analysing, and transferring good practices with the aim of improving regional development policy instruments and ultimately delivering solutions that benefit all citizens. |
program objectives | Interreg Europe's overall objective is "to improve the implementation of regional development policies, including Investment for jobs and growth goal programmes, by promoting the exchange of experiences, innovative approaches, and capacity building in relation to the identification, dissemination, and transfer of good practices among regional policy actors". The programme will finance two complementary types of strategic action:
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Expected results | Interreg Europe contributes to all EU priorities and strives for better regional governance through capacity building in the following areas:
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Regions / countries for funding | EU Member States Norway (Norge), Switzerland (Schweiz/Suisse/Svizzera) |
eligible entities Partners |
Public Body (national, regional and local; incl. EGTCs), Non-Profit Organisation (NPO) / Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) |
Mandatory partnership | Yes |
Project Partnership | Interreg Europe projects must involve partners from at least three participating countries, at least two of which shall be beneficiaries from EU Member States, with the latter applying for Interreg Europe funding. Based on previous experience, a partnership of between 5 to 8 ‘regions’ appears to be the configuration which best ensures a rich and successful interregional learning process. The recommended number of partners per project (without considering the possible involvement of an advisory partner) is therefore from minimum 5 up to 16 partners when the following points are also considered:
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other eligibility criteria | The programme introduces a further eligibility criterion, specifically, a minimum geographical coverage for all project applications. The application must involve partners from the either three or four geographical areas defined below by the programme (North, East, South, and West).
Further, at least one policy instrument addressed in the application is an Investment for jobs and growth goal programme. Applicants should be careful when completing the related question in the ‘Policy instruments’ section of the application form (i.e., ‘is this policy instrument an Investment for jobs and growth goal programme?’). To answer ‘yes’ to this question, it is not sufficient that the policy instrument addressed is linked to an Investment for jobs and growth goal programme, it must be the operational programme itself. For instance, the Sustainability Urban Mobility Plan (SUMP) of a particular city cannot be considered an operational programme even if it is fully financed through this programme. To be considered an Investment for jobs and growth goal programme, the applicant must describe the corresponding investment priority of the operational programme, and not the SUMP, in the section of the application form dedicated to the policy instruments. The fulfilment of this criterion also implies that the relevant managing authority or intermediate body is indicated as policy responsible authority for the related Investment for jobs and growth goal programme. Finally, for at least 50% of the policy instruments addressed in the application, the policy responsible authorities must be involved as partners. For any instruments where this is not the case, the relevant policy responsible authorities must be involved as ‘associated policy authorities’. Applicants should therefore be careful when completing the related field in the section ‘Policy instruments’ of the application form (i.e., ‘please select the authority responsible for this policy instrument’). To be considered a ‘policy responsible authority’, the organisation must have a clear responsibility in the development and/or delivery of the policy instrument it addresses. |
Additional information
Topics | Administration & Governance, Institutional Capacity & Cooperation, Agriculture & Forestry, Fishery, Food, Soil quality, Air Quality, Biodiversity & Environment, Climate & Climate Change, Water quality & management, Arts & Culture, Cultural Heritage, Tourism, Circular Economy, Natural Resources, Competitiveness of Enterprises, Employment/Labour Market, SME & entrepreneurship, Demographic Change, European Citizenship, Migration, Digitalisation, Digital Society, ICT, Disaster Prevention, Resilience, Risk Management, Education & Training, Children & Youth, Media, Energy Efficiency, Renewable Energy , Equal Rights, Human Rights, People with Disabilities, Social Inclusion, Health, Social Services, Sports, Justice, Safety & Security, Mobility & Transport, Rural & Urban Development/Planning |
Relevance for EU Macro-Region | EUSAIR - EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region, EUSALP - EU Strategy for the Alpine Space, EUSBSR - EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, EUSDR - EU Strategy for the Danube Region |
UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN-SDGs) | |
Program documents | Interreg Europe Programme 2021-2027 (2751kB) |
Contact | Interreg Europe - Austrian Conference on Spatial Planning +43 153 53 44 21 kramann@oerok.gv.at Website |
Open calls
15.03.2023 - 09.06.2023
Interreg Europe- third call for projects
20.03.2024 - 07.06.2024