Introducing the 22nd edition of the Project Repository journal (PRj)

A new year is the perfect time to reflect on previous scientific achievements and look forward to the exciting advancements the year ahead holds. As we welcome the first issue of 2025, we are delighted to present the 22nd edition of the Project Repository journal, dedicated to showcasing the impactful results and ongoing efforts within the framework of EU-funded projects.

Reflecting on the achievements of the past year, we celebrate the vital role these projects play in advancing scientific knowledge, fostering innovation, and addressing the societal challenges of today and tomorrow.

If you have a project or research story you’d like to share, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. We look forward to hearing from you!

“Disseminate – Communicate – Educate”


LIFE: uniting nature lovers and farmers in a common cause

LIFE ENPLC celebrates its success in uniting private landowners and conservationists with the shared goal of protecting Europe’s precious soils.


Transforming Europe’s food systems

FutureFoodS launches first joint call to support innovative projects creating a sustainable food future.


EU Mission ‘Restore our Ocean and Waters’: 19 projects to receive technical assistance under Horizon Europe

What do Seagrass aquaculture, plastic waste removals, restoring biodiversity and circular economy have in common?


Over €380 million new funding for LIFE Projects

The EU’s flagship LIFE programme has awarded more than €380 million to 133 new green projects in support of the European Green Deal.


EU Ecolabel numbers continue to increase: nearly 100 000 products now certified

The European Commission has released new statistics highlighting the continued growth in EU Ecolabel—awarded products and licences.


LIFE at the heart of #WaterWiseEU campaign

In the run-up to the upcoming European Water Resilience Strategy and the ongoing WaterWiseEU campaign, CINEA celebrates some of the many 2024 highlights—and the positive contribution that LIFE projects have made to the campaign’s success.


What did ancient cities smell like?

The aroma of our societies evolves with changing trends, technologies—and hygiene. What would a time traveller from 2024 notice first about cities from previous centuries? Inger Leemans sniffs out the answers.


CORDIS on the web

Looking back on 30 years of online access to EU-funded research results.


A year to be proud of the many successes of LIFE projects

The past 12 months have seen LIFE projects achieve landmark moments, win awards and welcome high-profile visitors to see their work.


Funding independent healthcare research topics that industry ignores

EU-backed scientists explore why we need to support multinational clinical studies carried out by independent researchers, and how to do it.


Killing cancer cells, saving normal ones

Researchers develop a new machine learning approach that accurately predicts cancer clone-specific treatment options based only on single-cell RNA sequencing.


Driving collaboration and innovation in manufacturing

A new online community facilitates expert collaboration across diverse fields for more sustainable manufacturing.


Moving graphene from lab to fab – how 2D materials could transform everyday electronics

Graphene has lived up to its promise in the lab. Now, EU-funded researchers are working on supporting its wider adoption in high-end electronics, photonics and sensors.


AI, collaborative shared awareness is the way to go

EU-funded researchers propose that specialised AI systems tailored to specific tasks can be more effective than general intelligence.


Innovations set to reshape life in 2025

Celebrating LIFE projects from the reintroduction of the Iberian Lynx and Scottish Wild Cat to hydrogen powered trucks.


Star wars: what killed the universe’s massive galaxies?

Astronomers are closer than ever to working out how the biggest galaxies in the cosmos grew so quickly before dying.


Event horizon: after photographing black holes, scientists are now making a movie

The first moving images of a black hole could reveal swirls of plasma and collapsing stars, deepening our understanding of the universe.


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