€2.9 billion in EU Innovation Fund grants awarded to 61 large-scale net-zero projects.
Expected to cut 221 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent in first decade—comparable to emissions from nearly 10 million cars.
Projects span 19 industrial sectors and reinforce the EU’s 2050 climate neutrality target.
Brussels Pushes Deep Decarbonization Across Europe
The European Commission has allocated €2.9 billion ($3.1 billion) from the EU’s Innovation Fund to 61 large-scale net-zero technology projects across 18 countries, in one of the bloc’s most significant investments to date in industrial decarbonization.
The funding—sourced from revenues generated under the EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS)—was awarded through the Innovation Fund’s first dedicated Net-Zero Technologies call, launched in December 2024. The program targets sectors that are hard to abate, including energy-intensive industries, cleantech manufacturing, industrial carbon management, and net-zero mobility.
According to the Commission, the selected projects are expected to prevent 221 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent during their first decade of operation—roughly the annual emissions of 9.9 million average European cars.
Scope and Sectoral Reach
The 61 winning projects cut across 19 industrial sectors, covering renewable energy and storage, sustainable building materials, advanced battery production, and circular carbon solutions. Collectively, they represent the EU’s broadest deployment yet of innovation-driven emissions reduction technologies.
By tapping proceeds from the EU ETS—Europe’s primary carbon pricing mechanism—the Innovation Fund directly channels carbon revenues into climate-positive technologies. This financial model aims to reinforce the EU’s 2050 climate neutrality goal and support the bloc’s interim 2040 target, which calls for a 90% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions compared to 1990 levels.
Oversubscription Highlights Industry Readiness
The IF24 Call attracted 359 proposals seeking a total of €21.7 billion—nearly nine times the available budget. The surge in applications underscores both the competitive maturity of Europe’s cleantech ecosystem and growing investor confidence in low-carbon industrial transformation.
Independent experts evaluated all projects against criteria including emissions-reduction potential, technological innovation, project maturity, scalability, and cost efficiency. The evaluation process aims to identify high-impact solutions capable of being replicated across the single market.
“The strong response confirms that Europe’s industrial base is ready to scale up climate technologies if adequate public support and policy certainty are in place,” said an EU official involved in the program.
Next Steps and Funding Delivery
Developers of the selected projects have been invited to enter the grant agreement phase with the European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA). This process will finalise technical deliverables, budget allocations, and implementation timetables before funding is released. The European Commission expects all agreements to be signed by the first half of 2026.
Once finalised, the new projects will join a growing Innovation Fund portfolio that now totals over 270 projects with €15.6 billion committed. The Fund itself draws on an estimated €40 billion in carbon allowance revenues through 2030, positioning it as one of the world’s largest public funding instruments for climate innovation.
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Supporting Industrial and Energy Transitions
Beyond this funding round, the Commission in 2024 launched specialised calls under the Innovation Fund for electric vehicle battery cell manufacturing and renewable hydrogen production through the European Hydrogen Bank. Grant agreements for both are expected before year-end, further deepening the EU’s commitment to supply-chain resilience and clean energy deployment.
By directing public financing toward high-impact innovation, Brussels aims to consolidate Europe’s leadership in net-zero technologies amid intensifying global competition. The initiative aligns with the Clean Industrial Deal—a key policy pillar designed to preserve industrial competitiveness while meeting stringent climate obligations.
Strategic Context for Investors and Industry
For corporate leaders and investors, the Fund’s latest round reaffirms the EU’s pivot toward industrial policy as a central mechanism of its climate agenda. It also reflects a broader shift in European governance: embedding emissions reduction directly into industrial financing frameworks.
The combination of carbon pricing, innovation funding, and sectoral decarbonisation support is shaping a model of climate finance increasingly studied beyond Europe. As implementation advances, the projects backed under the Innovation Fund will provide a crucial test of whether targeted public investment can deliver measurable emissions reductions at industrial scale—offering a potential blueprint for other regions pursuing net-zero pathways.
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