News

Transitional arrangements applicable to South Korean partners

Published on | 1 month ago

Programmes Horizon Europe HorizonEU L+F

As communicated before in this news article the Republic of Korea (South Korea) and the European Commission have finalised the negotiations regarding the association of the Republic of Korea (South Korea) to Horizon Europe in March 2024. Signing of the association agreement will be expected to take place in 2025.

As of 1 January 2025 the transitional arrangements are also applicable to the Republic of Korea which enable South Korean entities to be added as beneficiaries to projects proposals in the calls and activities of pillar 2 of the Horizon Europe programme from the 2025 Work Programme onwards. However do keep in mind that if at the time of the signature of the grant agreement of the approved project, the association agreement has not been signed yet then South Korean partners will need to fund their own participation in the project.

European Commission Press Release

More information on the association process to Horizon Europe of other third countries can also be found in this infosheet on International Cooperation.

myOverview - sign up for personalised information

We offer news and event updates, covering all domains and topics of Horizon Europe, Digital Europe & EDF (and occasionally, for ongoing projects, Horizon 2020).

Stay informed about what matters to you. By signing up, you can opt in for e-mail notifications and get access to a personalised dashboard that groups all news updates and event announcements in your domain(s).

Only for stakeholders located in Flanders

Latest News

1530 articles available search in articles 

Testimonial

image of AI4Culture - Empowering Cultural Heritage through Artificial Intelligence

AI4Culture - Empowering Cultural Heritage through Artificial Intelligence

The AI4Culture project, funded under Digital Europe call Data space for cultural heritage (deployment) aims to develop an online capacity building hub for AI technologies in the cultural heritage sector. This hub contributes to the creation of the European common cultural heritage data space, which provides support to the digital transformation of Europe’s cultural sector and fosters the creation and reuse of content in cultural and creative sectors. The Flemish company CrossLang is one of the 12 partners in the project and brings in its year-long expertise in the development of multilingual technology to the transcription and translation of scanned printed and handwritten documents.