Europaudvalget 2017
KOM (2017) 0642
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EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
Brussels, 6.11.2017
SWD(2017) 355 final
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT
MID-TERM EVALUATION
Accompanying the document
Report on the Mid-term Evaluation of the Programme for Environment and Climate
Action (LIFE)
{COM(2017) 642 final} - {SWD(2017) 356 final}
EN
EN
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Table of contents
LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES ........................................................................................................... 4
1
2.
INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................................................. 7
BACKGROUND TO THE INITIATIVE .......................................................................................... 8
2.1. The LIFE programme's objectives .............................................................................................
9
2.2. Problems that LIFE intends to solve
.......................................................................................... 9
2.3. The structure of the LIFE programme
....................................................................................... 9
2.4. The intervention logic
.............................................................................................................. 15
3.
4.
METHOD ......................................................................................................................................... 16
IMPLEMENTATION - STATE OF PLAY ..................................................................................... 19
4.1. Grants
...................................................................................................................................... 20
Traditional projects .......................................................................................................................... 20
Integrated projects ............................................................................................................................ 24
Other projects ................................................................................................................................... 26
Novelties introduced in grant management......................................................................................
27
4.2. Financial Instruments
.............................................................................................................. 27
5.
ANSWERS TO THE EVALUATION QUESTIONS...................................................................... 28
5.1. Effectiveness
............................................................................................................................ 28
Q.1.
Q.2.
Q.3.
Q.4.
Q.5.
What are the outcomes likely to be achieved under LIFE 2014-2020
................................ 28
To what extent does the observed outcome correspond to its objectives and to the EU
2020 Strategy on sustainable growth?
................................................................................ 30
What are the factors positively and negatively influencing the delivery of the
objectives?
........................................................................................................................... 39
To what extent is the geographical distribution of projects effective?
................................ 42
What is the role of LIFE in bridging uneven integration of environmental and climate
action objectives among Member States?
........................................................................... 44
5.2. Efficiency
................................................................................................................................ 47
Q.6.
To what extent are the costs (especially management) of the LIFE programme
justified, given the effects which have been achieved, and are likely to be achieved by
the end of the LIFE programme?
........................................................................................ 47
Have the changes made between LIFE+ and the current LIFE programme improved
efficiency?
........................................................................................................................... 49
Is there scope for efficiency gains, simplification and burden reduction?
.......................... 50
Q.7.
Q.8.
5.3. Coherence
................................................................................................................................ 52
2
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Q.9.
To what extent does the LIFE programme have a coherent structure taking into
account its two sub-programmes, its priority areas and the various types of
interventions (internal coherence)?
.................................................................................... 52
To what extent is the LIFE programme complementary and enjoying synergies with
other relevant EU funding programmes (i.e. the European Structural and Investment
Funds - ESIF, Horizon 2020) (external coherence)?
.......................................................... 55
Q.10.
5.4. Relevance
................................................................................................................................ 60
Q.11.
Q.12.
To what extent are the programme objectives pertinent to the needs, problems and
issues addressed? ................................................................................................................. 60
To what extent do stakeholders support the LIFE interventions? ....................................... 62
5.5. EU added value
........................................................................................................................ 63
Q.13.
What is the additional value resulting from the EU intervention(s), compared to what
could be achieved by Member States at national and/or regional levels? ........................... 63
Q.14. To what extent do the issues addressed by the intervention continue to require action at
EU level? ............................................................................................................................. 67
Q.15.
What would be the most likely consequences of stopping or withdrawing the existing
EU intervention? ................................................................................................................. 68
5.6. Project sustainability, impact and/or replicability to date........................................................
70
Q.16.
To what extent are the positive effects of projects likely to last after EU funding ends,
especially the demonstration effect and what is the scope for replication of the
projects?
.............................................................................................................................. 70
6.
CONCLUSIONS ....................................................................................................................... ...... 74
ANNEXES ................................................................................................................................................ 76
Annex 1: Procedural information concerning the process to prepare the evaluation ................................ 77
Annex 2: Requirements for the Mid Term Evaluation set out in the LIFE Regulation ............................ 79
Annex 3: Methods ..................................................................................................................................... 81
Annex 4: Synopsis report on the stakeholder consultation ....................................................................... 85
Annex 5: Table of assessment of indicators against targets ...................................................................... 91
Annex 6: Total amount non-deductible VAT reimbursed per Member State ........................................... 96
Annex 7: LIFE programme's contribution to Sustainable Development Goals ........................................ 97
3
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List of tables and figures
Figure 1.
Table 1.
Box 1.
Figure 2.
Table 2.
Box 2.
Table 3.
Figure 3.
Figure 4.
Figure 5.
Figure 6.
Figure 7.
Table 4.
Figure 8.
Box 3.
Table 5.
Box 4.
Q.1.
Box 5.
Box 6.
Box 7.
Box 8.
Structure of the LIFE and LIFE+ programmes ..................................................................... 11
Planned allocation of the financial resources by sub-programme and type of activities ....... 12
An example of LIFE traditional project on nature and biodiversity ...................................... 13
Intervention Logic Diagram
The LIFE programme 2014-2017 ......................................... 16
Number of interviews and answers to the surveys and open public consultation ................. 17
Monitoring system: how it works .......................................................................................... 17
LIFE commitment rate
years 2014-2016 ............................................................................ 19
LIFE 2014-2015 - distribution of the funds .......................................................................... 20
Number of projects financed (years 2014-2015) ................................................................... 20
Traditional projects awarded funding out of the total proposals received............................. 21
Amount of the traditional projects awarded out of the amount of total eligible proposals (per
priority area, 2014 and 2015 data) ........................................................................................ 21
Legal status of the beneficiaries:
data on 2014-2015 traditional projects
............................ 22
Non-EU funds mobilised by traditional projects per priority area ........................................ 22
Integrated projects awarded funding out of the total proposals and concepts notes received
(Years 2014 -2015)................................................................................................................ 24
Example of an integrated project:
Implementation of an air quality plan for the Małopolska
Region -
Małopolska in a healthy
atmosphere (LIFE14 IPE/PL/000021) ............................ 25
Integrated projects 2014 and 2015: financial resources ........................................................ 26
The definition of the MAWP targets ..................................................................................... 29
What is the outcome likely to be achieved under LIFE 2014-2020? .................................... 30
Example of a traditional LIFE+ project on information and communication ....................... 31
Example of a traditional LIFE+ project on environmental policy and governance: the
Dyemond Solar project .......................................................................................................... 32
Framework service contracts for more co-operation with national judges in the field of
environmental law ................................................................................................................. 33
Example of a traditional project on Climate Change Mitigation. LIFE BEEF CARBON -
Demonstration actions to mitigate the carbon footprint of beef production in France, Ireland,
Italy and Spain (LIFE14 CCM/FR/001125) .......................................................................... 34
Example of a LIFE Environmental Governance and Information project ............................ 35
The early warning mechanism
Study contract to identify Member States at risk of non-
compliance with the 2020 target of the Waste Framework Directive and to follow-up on the
exercise to promote compliance ............................................................................................ 35
Employment generated by LIFE and LIFE+ projects: .......................................................... 38
To what extent do the observed outcomes correspond to programme's objectives and to the
EU 2020 Strategy on sustainable growth?............................................................................. 39
What factors are positively and negatively influencing delivery of the objectives? ............. 42
To what extent is the geographical distribution of projects effective? .................................. 44
Box 9.
Box 10.
Table 6.
Q.2.
Q.3.
Q.4.
4
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Box 11.
Q.5.
Figure 9.
Q.6.
LIFE support to Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy ............................................. 45
What is the role of LIFE in bridging uneven integration of environmental and climate action
objectives among Member States? ........................................................................................ 46
Costs of various programmes managed by EASME ............................................................. 48
To what extent are the costs (especially management) of the LIFE programme justified,
given the effects which have been achieved, and are likely to be achieved by the end of the
LIFE programme? ................................................................................................................. 49
Transfer from Commission to EASME: estimates and real figures (2014-2016) in EUR. ... 49
Have the changes made between LIFE+ and this LIFE programme improved efficiency? .. 50
Is there scope for efficiency gains, simplification and burden reduction? ............................ 52
Table 7.
Q.7.
Q.8.
Figure 10. Types of activities per priority areas (LIFE 2014-2015) ....................................................... 53
Figure 11. Extent of synergies in LIFE projects ..................................................................................... 54
Q.9.
To what extent does the LIFE programme have a coherent structure taking into account its
two sub-programmes, its priority areas and the various types of interventions (internal
coherence)? ............................................................................................................................ 55
Example of uptake in LIFE projects of research-funded activities ....................................... 56
Example of a LIFE integrated project. LIFE-IP RBMP-NWRBD UK
Integrated water
management approach to delivery of the North West England river basin management plan
(LIFE14 IPE/UK/000027) ..................................................................................................... 57
Example of rural development-funded projects piloted in LIFE ........................................... 58
To what extent is the LIFE programme complementary to and enjoying synergies with other
relevant EU funding programmes (i.e. the European Structural and Investment Funds -
ESIF, Horizon 2020) (external coherence)? .......................................................................... 59
LIFE study contract on ‘methods and considerations for the determination of greenhouse
gas emission reduction objectives for international shipping’
.............................................. 61
To what extent are the programme objectives pertinent to the needs, problems and issues
addressed? ............................................................................................................................. 61
Extract from European Economic and Social Committee on the Mid-term evaluation of the
LIFE programme -
NAT/689............................................................................................ 63
To what extent do stakeholders support the LIFE interventions? ......................................... 63
Example of a traditional project on environmental governance and information. LIFE-ENPE
European Network of Prosecutors for the Environment (LIFE14 GIE/UK/000043) ....... 65
What is the additional value resulting from the EU intervention(s), compared to what could
be achieved by Member States at national and/or regional levels? ....................................... 66
Modelling of biophysical and economic impacts of EU water policy implementation
scenarios (hydro-economic modelling) ................................................................................. 68
To what extent do the issues addressed by the intervention continue to require action at EU
level? ..................................................................................................................................... 68
Support to the Commission on analysis of information and related follow-up to the
fulfilment of the requirements of EU water legislation ......................................................... 69
What would be the most likely consequences of stopping or withdrawing the existing EU
intervention? .......................................................................................................................... 69
Box 12.
Box 13.
Box 14.
Q.10.
Box 15.
Q.11.
Box 16.
Q.12.
Box 17.
Q.13.
Box 18.
Q.14.
Box. 19.
Q.15.
5
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Box 20.
Box 21.
Q.16.
Example of a traditional project on environment and resource efficiency ............................ 70
Example of a LIFE traditional project on climate change adaptation: climate-resilient
construction materials with a market potential ...................................................................... 73
To what extent are the positive effects of projects likely to last after EU funding ends,
especially the demonstration effect, and what is the scope for replication of the projects? .. 73
6
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1.
I
NTRODUCTION
Launched in 1992, LIFE is the only EU funding programme exclusively dedicated to the
environment, nature protection and climate action, all areas of growing concern to the public.
For the current 2014-2020 funding period, the LIFE Regulation
1
will make approximately EUR
3.4 billion available to protect the environment and climate.
During its 25 years of existence, the LIFE programme has been evaluated a number of times.
The current programme is the result of these evaluations and has been shaped by the lessons
learnt from the programme’s implementation over the years.
Following on from the previous LIFE+ programme (2007 - 2013)
2
, LIFE now tackles the
environment and climate actions in two explicit sub-programmes, one for environment and one
for climate action.
Under the general guidance of the Better Regulation guidelines
3
, this mid-term evaluation
explores whether the LIFE programme continues to be relevant in tackling the issues it seeks to
address. It assesses whether LIFE is operating in an effective and efficient manner and whether
its provisions are consistent and coherent with other programmes, delivering EU added value in
the process. Furthermore, pursuant to Article 27(2)(a) of the LIFE Regulation, the Commission,
in its mid-term evaluation, must report in particular on
4
:
-
-
the extent to which synergies between the objectives have been reached;
whether the LIFE programme has contributed (measured in a quantitative and
qualitative analysis) to the conservation status of habitats and species listed under
Directives 92/43/EEC and 2009/147/EC;
how successful integrated projects have been (or are expected to be) in leveraging other
EU funds.
-
This mid-term
evaluation also considers the LIFE programme’s contribution to the Europe 2020
strategy, especially job creation, and to what extent the LIFE activities can be sustained or
reproduced.
The scope of the evaluation encompasses all actions and operations financed under the LIFE
programme, and in particular (for further details see section 2.3):
-
-
-
-
1
traditional action grants
integrated projects
technical assistance projects
capacity-building projects
Regulation (EU) No 1293/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013 on the
establishment of a Programme for the Environment and Climate Action (LIFE) and repealing Regulation (EC)
No 614/2007,
OJ L 347 of 20.12.2013, p. 185.
Regulation (EC) No 614/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 May 2007 concerning the
Financial Instrument for the Environment (LIFE+), OJ L149 of 9.06.2007, p. 170.
SWD(2015) 111 final, Commission Staff Working Document, Better Regulation Guidelines.
See Annex 2 for the list of requirements to be reported with the mid-term evaluation of the LIFE programme
as set out in the LIFE Regulation.
2
3
4
7
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-
-
-
-
preparatory projects
operating grants for non-profit making organisations
operations through financial instruments (Natural Capital Financing Facility and Private
Finance for Energy Efficiency)
public procurement for support activities.
This mid-term
evaluation has been undertaken at an early stage of the programme’s
implementation: most projects have not started yet, and few projects have been completed (the
average duration of a LIFE project is 4 to 5 years).
As a consequence, the mid-term evaluation has focused mainly on the processes put in place
(launch of calls,
signing of contracts, funding of projects, etc.) to reach the programme’s
objectives. Where relevant, the evaluation has looked at their expected results and anticipated
long-term effects more than the results and long-term effects achieved (since they have not yet
had time to achieve their objectives). In addition, where appropriate, the results of the (earlier)
LIFE+ projects are used to support and inform the evaluation's findings
5
.
However, with more than half of the LIFE+ projects underway, a full analysis of the long-term
effect of LIFE
6
, as required by the LIFE Regulation, is premature at this stage.
This evaluation builds on the ‘External and independent LIFE mid-term evaluation report’
7
,
(the ‘external study’) carried out by independent contractors.
Together, the external study and the mid-term evaluation respond to Article 27 of the LIFE
Regulation which requires the Commission to submit an external and independent mid-term
evaluation of the LIFE programme to the European Parliament, the Council of the European
Union, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of Regions.
2.
B
ACKGROUND OF THE INITIATIVE
Major environmental and climate challenges have significant consequences for the EU’s
environment and economy if left unaddressed.
The 7th environmental action plan
8
provides the framework for EU action and identifies three
key objectives:
1.
protect, preserve and improve the EU’s natural capital;
2. turn the EU into a resource-efficient, green, and competitive low-carbon economy;
5
This is required by the LIFE Regulation, and appropriate given that most of the activities and procedures
(traditional projects, operating grants and procurement) of the previous LIFE+ programme have continued
under the current programme.
For matter of clarity in this staff working document we will refer to: LIFE+ when referring to the previous
programme (2007-2013) while according to the context the LIFE programme can mean the current
programme(2014-2020) or the programme in general since its creation in 1992
See ‘External and independent LIFE mid Term Evaluation Report’. 2017. Ecorys and AA. .
Decision No 1386/2013/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 November 2013 on a
General Union
Environment Action programme to 2020 ‘Living well, within the limits of our planet’. OJ L
354, 28.12.2013, p. 171-200,.
6
7
8
8
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3. safeguard the EU public from environment-related pressures and risks to health and
wellbeing;
It also identifies
four ‘enablers’:
1.
2.
3.
4.
better implementation of legislation,
better information by improving the knowledge base,
more and wiser investment for environment and climate policy,
full incorporation of environmental requirements and considerations into other policies.
2.1.
The LIFE programme’s objectives
Within this policy framework, the LIFE Regulation establishes the EU’s instrument to fund
environmental, nature conservation, and climate action projects throughout the EU.
Its general aims (contained in Article 3) are to:
1. help move towards a resource-efficient, low carbon and climate resilient economy,
improve the quality of the environment and halt and reverse biodiversity loss;
2. improve the development, implementation and enforcement of EU environmental and
climate policy and legislation, and act as a catalyst for, and promote, the mainstreaming
of environmental and climate objectives into other policies and practices;
3. support better environmental and climate governance at all levels, including better
involvement of civil society, NGOs and local actors;
4. support the implementation of the 7th environmental action plan.
In this context LIFE provides support to an extremely wide range of stakeholders. They range
from the private sector (a lead player in production processes) to public institutions (primarily
responsible for legislation and governance), civil society organisations (which carry out
awareness-raising and environmental protection activities) and the general public (which
benefits from environmental goods).
2.2. Problems that LIFE intends to solve
According to its ex ante impact assessment
9
, the role of the LIFE programme is to focus on
specific problems linked to institutional barriers such as:
-
-
-
-
uneven and inadequate implementation of legislation in Member States;
uneven inclusion of environment and climate concerns in other policies and Member
States’ practices;
inadequate level of awareness of and sharing of information on environmental and
climate change goals; and
limited support to eco-innovation.
Because of its limited size, the LIFE programme is not meant to solve environmental and
climate problems. Rather, it is meant to act as a catalyst for developing and exchanging best
practices and knowledge. The programme’s role is also to build up and improve capacity, speed
9
Commission staff working paper ‘Executive Summary of the Impact Assessment accompanying the document
Proposal for a Regulation on the establishment of a programme for the Environment and Climate Action
(LIFE)’.
SEC(2011) 1541 final
.
9
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up the implementation of EU legislation, and help private players, in particular businesses, to
test small-scale technologies and solutions.
2.3. The structure of the LIFE programme
The LIFE Regulation replaced the LIFE+ programme, which covered the years 2007-2013.
LIFE+: the results of the evaluation
LIFE+ had a budget of EUR 2.1 billion, divided into three components: nature and biodiversity,
environmental policy and governance, and information and communication. They were used to
finance action and operating grants and procurement contracts for the development and
implementation of environmental legislation.
The EU provided EUR 1.7 million in funding for grant projects under LIFE+. It mobilised more
than EUR 1.8 million in non-EU funding from other private or public sources.
Several independent evaluations
10
found that, in general, the LIFE+ programme was a
successful instrument to implement Union environmental policy and legislation, and had
significant added value
11
.
However, the following weaknesses were identified
12
:
1.
There needs to be a more strategic focus. Given that a minimum of 78 % of the LIFE+
budgetary resources were devoted to action grants, the possibility of addressing Union
environmental and climate policy issues depended on the quality and quantity of the
applications
received (a ‘bottom-up’ approach based on demand for action grant projects).
The application process and reporting obligations need to be simplified, as underlined by
stakeholders.
The objectives of certain strands need to be better defined. This is especially the case with
environmental policy and governance and information and communication. There also
needs to be more focus on implementing and creating multipliers to improve the utilisation
of project results and the transfer of know-how.
There needs to be more complementarity and synergies with other EU Funds.
2.
3.
4.
10
“LIFE ex-post evaluation” carried out by COWI in 2009; “LIFE+ mid-term evaluation” carried out by GHK in
2010; “Combined impact assessment and ex-ante evaluation of the review of the LIFE+ Regulation’ carried
out by a consortium led by GHK in 2011 and ‘Climate Change in the future multiannual financial framework’
carried out by the Institute for European Environmental Policy in 2011.
See Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council ‘Final evaluation of
Regulation (EC) No 614/2007 concerning the Financial Instrument for the
Environment (LIFE+)’.
COM/2013/0478 final.
Ibidem.
11
12
10
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The new features introduced in the LIFE programme
After analysing options in the impact assessment and consulting stakeholders, the Commission
included some changes in the new LIFE Regulation compared to the previous LIFE+
programme. These are summarised in Figure 1 below.
The main features introduced in the new LIFE Regulation are:
1.
a change in the overall objectives,
with two additional objectives clarifying the general
purpose of the LIFE programme (see objective 1 of the LIFE programme), the importance
of environmental and climate governance with the involvement of all stakeholders (see
objective 3 of the LIFE programme), and the role of the LIFE programme in the
enforcement of environmental and climate policy and legislation (see objective 2 of the
LIFE programme in comparison with objective 2 of LIFE+).
two sub-programmes,
one for environment (under the responsibility of the Directorate-
General for Environment with a budget of EUR 2.59 billion) and one for climate action
(under the responsibility of the Directorate-General for Climate Action with a budget of
EUR 0.86 billion). The creation of a sub-programme for climate action upgraded the
former thematic strand ‘climate change’, which showed a percentage of projects of around
14 %. Given that the Commission intended to increase the climate-related proportion of
the Union budget to at least 20 % for all policies, it was decided
13
that the allocation under
the LIFE programme would be 75:25 between the sub-programme for environment and the
sub-programme for climate action.
Figure 1. Structure of the LIFE and LIFE+ programmes
2.
13
See
COM(2011)500
final ‘A Budget for Europe 2020’.
Part II.
11
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LIFE PROGRAMME 2014- 2020
Objectives
LIFE+ PROGRAMME 2007-2013
Objectives
1. To contribute to the shift towards a resource efficient, low
carbon and climate resilient economy, to the improvement of the
quality of the environment and to halting and reversing
biodiversity loss
2. To improve the development, implementation and enforce-
ment of Union ENV and CLIMA policy and legislation and promote
integration and mainstreamining into other policies and practices
1. To contribute to the implementation, updating
and development of Community environmental
policy and legislation
3. To support better environmental and climate governance at all
levels, including better involvement of civil society, NGOs and local
actors
4. To support the implementation of the 7th Environment Action
Plan
2. To support the implementation of the 6th
Environment Action Plan
Thematic priorities
- Water
- Waste
- Resource efficiency, incl. soils
and forests, and green and
circular economy
- Environment and health, incl.
chemical and noise
- Air quality and emissions
including urban environment
- Implementation of the Nature
Directives
- Implementation of the EU
bidoversity Strategy to 2020
Priority areas
Priority areas
ENVIRONMENT AND
RESSOURCE
EFFICIENCY
Activities
Activities
Traditional projects
a. Traditional projects
b. Integrated projects
Operating grants
c. Technical assistance
Procurement
projects
Integrated projects
d. Capacity building projects
Technical assistance projects
e. Preparatory projects
Capacity building projects
f. Financial instruments
Preparatory projects
g. Operating grants
Financial instruments
h . Procurement
Components
Components
ENVIRONMENT
POLICY AND
GOVERNANCE
Activities
Activities
a. Traditional projects
Traditional projects
g. Operating grants
Operating grants
h. Procurement
Procurement
NATURE AND
BIODIVERSITY
NATURE AND
BIODIVERSITY
ENVIRONMENTAL
GOVERNANCE AND
INFORMATION
INFORMATION AND
COMMUNICATION
CLIMATE
MITIGATION
- Inf., comm .and awareness
raising campaigns in line with the
7th EAP
- Effective control process and
promotion of compliance in
relation to Union legislation
CLIMATE
ADAPTATION
CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE AND
INFORMATION
Source: Based on the LIFE and LIFE+ Regulations
3.
two multiannual work programmes (MAWP),
which detail the allocation of resources
between types of funding, the selection process and specific eligibility and award criteria
for grants, and the progamme’s output and outcome indicators.
The first MAWP covers
2014-2017. The second multiannual work programme covering 2018-2020 is expected to
be adopted in 2017.
six ‘priority areas’
environment and resource efficiency; nature and biodiversity;
environment governance and information; climate mitigation; climate adaptation and
climate governance and information
— replace the three LIFE+ ‘components’ —
environmental policy and governance; nature and biodiversity; and information and
communication.
an
overall budget increase
from EUR 2.1 billion (for LIFE+ 2007-2013) to EUR 3.4
billion (for the LIFE programme 2014-2020).
a shift from a pure bottom-up approach
,
with the grants driven only by demand, to
a
flexible bottom-up approach
designed to better steer demand, with thematic priorities
and specific project topics defined for the environment sub-programme
14
.
4.
5.
6.
14
Thematic priorities are defined for water, waste, resource efficiency, environment and health, air quality and
emissions, nature, biodiversity, environmental governance and information. See Annex III of the LIFE
12
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7.
a minimum
81 %
of the overall LIFE budget is
dedicated to action grant projects,
which are
awarded funding following an annual call for proposals
15
,
and to operations
financed through financial instruments.
Projects and operations through financial
instruments continue to depend on the quantity and quality of the applications received.
The definition of priorities is expected to improve
the programme’s strategic focus.
Table 1. Planned allocation of the financial resources by sub-programme and type of activities
Amount in % out of
million
the total
EUR
LIFE
Amount
% out of the
in million
total LIFE
EUR
Climate action sub-
programme
C1. Action grants
(item "a" to
"e" under point 8)
C2. Financial instruments
(item "f" under point 8)
- Natural capital financing
facility
Private financing for energy
efficiency
C3. Operating grants
(item "g"
under point 8)
C4.Commission procurement
activities and support
expenditures
(item "h" under
point 8)
Total Climate action sub-
programme
Environment sub-programme
E1 Action grants
(item "a" to
"e" under point 8)
E2. Financial Instrument
(item
"f" under point 8)
- Natural capital financing
facility
1067.95
59%
249.96
14%
30
2%
30
80
8.6
2%
4%
0%
E3. Operating grants
(item "g"
under point 8)
E4. Commission procurement
activities and support
expenditures
(item "h" under
point 8)
Total Env. sub-programme
30
2%
219.2
12%
80.6
4%
1347.15
75%
449.16
25%
Ceilings included in the LIFE Regulation:
A minimum of 81% of the overall financial resources available has to be devoted to action grants and financial
instruments (E1+C1+E2+C2)
A minimum of 55% of the resources assigned to action grants and financial instruments (E1+E2) has to be
devoted to nature and biodiversity
Source: MAWP 2014-2017
8. A more structured approach to funding consisting of
16
:
a.
traditional projects:
these are action grant projects to test a new potential best-practice
or to demonstrate a technique or a method that has not been applied or tested before or to
support communication, dissemination of information and awareness-raising. They must
include activities to ensure the
project’s sustainability and/or replicability.
Box 1. Example of a LIFE traditional project on nature and biodiversity
Regulation. These are further detailed as priority project topics in the first MAWP (2014-2017). This is
expected to ensure the programme’s strategic focus, because the projects will target the priorities identified.
15
See point 8, items from (a) to (e) and figures 3 and 4 below for more details on the different types of projects
and forms of funding.
Under the LIFE+ programme only traditional projects, operating grants and procurement/support activities
were financed.
16
13
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LIFE EUROTURTLES
Collective actions to improve the conservation status of the EU
sea turtle populations (LIFE15 NAT/HR/000997)
EU contribution: €3
793 167.00
Coordinating beneficiary: Croatian Natural History
Museum (research institution)
Thematic priorities: Nature conservation
External link: http://www.euroturtles.eu/
This project focuses on the conservation of two priority sea turtle species, the loggerhead turtle
(Caretta
caretta
) and the green turtle (Chelonia
mydas).
Several important cross-country measures
are planned to reduce the impact of anthropogenic threats at nesting sites and fishery-related threats
in foraging grounds. These include the extension of marine Natura 2000 network sites in Croatia
and Italy to include current turtle ‘hot-spot’ areas, and the improvement of turtle management in
Croatia, Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Malta and Slovenia. The project is expected to protect more than
700 nesting sites annually and, by working with the fishing industry, reduce turtle by-catch and
ensure that more than 2 000 turtles accidentally caught in fishing nets are saved from death. It will
also establish an EU network for sea turtle conservation based on common objectives and methods.
b.
integrated projects
new type of intervention introduced by the LIFE Regulation:
these are action grant projects that act as a
catalyst
to implement environmental or
climate plans or strategies on a large territorial scale. These plans and strategies are
required by specific EU environmental or climate legislation, established pursuant to
other EU acts or developed by Member State authorities. Under the sub-programme
for environment, they focus on the implementation of specific directives related to
nature, water, waste, and air. Under the sub-programme for climate action, they
address climate mitigation and climate adaptation. They must involve multiple
stakeholders and leverage complementary financing by including climate and
environment objectives into other policy areas. They are awarded funding following
a two-step procedure
17
.
c.
technical assistance projects
(new type of project): these provide, by way of action
grants, financial support to help applicants prepare integrated project applications,
and in particular to ensure that those projects comply with the timing, technical and
financial requirements of the LIFE programme in coordination with other EU,
national, regional or private funds.
d.
capacity-building projects
(new type of project): these provide, by way of action
grants, funding for selected Member States to improve their capacity to participate
more effectively in the LIFE programme. According to the eligibility criteria in the
17
The applicant first submits a concept note summarising the key information of the project (context, objectives,
actions and resources, potential beneficiaries and stakeholders, long-term sustainability, major risks and
constraints), a full copy of the plan or the strategy that the project is aimed to implement and a financial plan.
To be eligible for LIFE financing, the integrated project has to cover a large geographical area, mobilise other
funds, involve all key stakeholders and aim at implementing specific environmental and climate plans or
strategies. If the concept note is retained, the applicant is invited to submit a full proposal, following a written
question and answer phase to allow applicants to clarify doubts. This is assessed taking into account the
technical and financial coherence of the action, the extent and quality of its contribution to the objectives, the
extent to which the proposed project will mobilise other funds (beyond the minimum eligibility criterion) and
the project’s potential to achieve results in other policy areas, create synergies with these policies and
integrate
environmental and climate action objectives in them.
14
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LIFE Regulation, 15 Member States are eligible to receive such funds under the first
MAWP.
e.
preparatory projects
(new type of intervention): these are identified by the
Commission in cooperation with Member States to support specific needs related to
the development and implementation of EU environmental or climate policy and
legislation. Such projects implement environmental priorities defined each year.
Member States are consulted and their comments taken on board as appropriate.
f.
operations funded by financial instruments
(new types of projects): implemented
by the European Investment Bank, these instruments fund projects in energy
efficiency and natural capital.
g.
operating grants:
these help to finance the operations of NGOs working on
environmental and climate issues at European level. The aim of the funding is to
enable NGOs to participate more in environmental/climate policy-making and
implementation.
h.
Commission procurement and support activities.
Through the procurement
activities, the Commission finances:
- the preparation and/or development of environmental and climate action policies
and related legislation (such as the definition of the circular economy package);
- technical assistance to Member States for the implementation and enforcement of
environmental and climate action policies and related legislation (i.e. peer
reviews, joint inspections, definition of national plans, etc.);
-
support for the EU’s role in international
fora (e.g. preparatory work for the 2015
United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris, COP21);
- other activities for environmental and climate action policies and related
legislation (e.g. communication, IT, etc.).
9.
A phasing-out of the national allocation system.
National allocations defining the
distribution of funds among Member States for all projects
other than integrated projects
under the sub-programme for environment are included in the LIFE Regulation. They are
determined on the basis of solidarity and responsibility-sharing, taking into account the
population and natural resources expressed in terms of Natura 2000 sites within a Member
State
18
. The final evaluation of the LIFE+ programme showed that:
a)
b)
c)
national allocations did not lead to a significantly more balanced distribution of
projects across the EU;
where progress was made in some countries, it was through the efforts of the national
contact points.
the EU added value was somewhat compromised by the system of national allocations
leading to compromises in the quality of projects financed.
18
See Annex I of the LIFE Regulation for the specific criteria governing the definition of the national
allocations.
15
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According to the LIFE Regulation, this system of a geographical distribution of project
funds is applied under the first MAWP 2014-2017 and will no longer be applied in the
2018-2020 MAWP.
2.4. The intervention logic
The intervention logic for LIFE 2014-2020 is summarised in Figure 2, for the four key
objectives of the LIFE programme, and for the two sub-programmes with their respective
priority areas, activities, and intermediate and final expected results.
Figure 2
Intervention Logic Diagram
The LIFE programme 2014-2017
ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE
CHALLENGES
Insufficient dissemination of
information about env and
climate change goals
Uneven and inadequate Limited support to
implementation of
eco-innovation
legislation in Member
States
Uneven integration
of environment and
climate objectives
into other policies
and Member States'
practices
Objectives
4. To support the implementation of the 7th
Environment Action Plan
1. To contribute to the shift towards
a resource efficient, low carbon and
climate resilient economy, to the
improvement of the quality of the
environment and to halting and
reversing biodiversity loss
2. To improve the development,
implementation and enforcement
of Union environment and climate
policy and legislation and promote
integration and mainstreamining
into other policies and practices
3. To support better
environmental and climate
governance at all levels, including
better involvement of civil society,
NGOs and local actors
4.1. To protect,
conserve and
enhance the Union’s
natural capital
4.2. To turn the
Union into a
resource-efficient,
green, and
competitive low-
carbon economy
4.3. To safeguard
the Union's citizens
from environment-
related pressures
and risks to health
and wellbeing
Subprogrammes
SUB-PROGRAMME FOR ENVIRONMENT
Priorities areas
ENVIRONMENT
AND RESSOURCE
EFFICIENCY
Activities
Financial
instruments
operations
NATURE AND
BIODIVERSITY
ENVIRONMENTAL
GOVERNANCE AND
INFORMATION
SUB-PROGRAMME FOR CLIMATE ACTION
CLIMATE
MITIGATION
CLIMATE
ADAPTATION
CLIMATE
GOVERNANCE AND
INFORMATION
Action grants
Operating
grants
Commission
procurement
and support
Min 81% of the budget
Intermediate Results
Natura 2000 sites
targeted by activities
restored or brought to
adequate management
Improved conservation
status of habitats and
species targeted by
specific activities
Implement of ENV/CLIMA
plans, programmes or
strategies targeted by
specific activities
Interventions suitable for
replication or transfer,
bridging the gap toward
the market
ENV/CLIMA synergies
with or mainstreaming
into other funding and
practices
Better governance,
dissemination of
information and
awareness of ENV/CLIMA
Expected Results / Impact
EU ENV/CLIMA policy
and legislation
developed, implemented
and enforced across the
EU
Roadblocks to efficient
implementation of
ENV/CLIMA key
instruments and plans
removed
Contribution to the shift
towards a resource-
efficient, low-carbon and
climate resilient
economy
Improved environmental
and climate governance
Substantial
improvements to the
state of the environment
Better solidarity and
responsibility sharing in
preserving the Union's
common good
Contribution to the halt
and reverse of
biodiversity loss
Catalytic effect
A minimum of 81 % of the resources devoted to activities is driven by demand, which is steered
through the MAWP and annual calls.
Taking into account the actual environmental external factors, environmental and climate issues
cannot be solved without a change in the mentality and behaviour of producers and consumers.
16
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This change cannot occur through a top-down approach. It requires the active participation and
involvement of the stakeholders.
This makes it difficult to predict in advance which activities will provide the intermediate and
expected results.
This is why a specific monitoring system was put in place to measure each project’s
contribution to the specific objectives of the priority areas (see box 2 below for more
information).
At this stage, the LIFE programme is implementing the different activities planned (action and
operating grants, procurement, operations funded by financial instruments). The programme’s
intermediate results (see Figure 2) are only expected to begin materialising in 2019 - 2020 when
the first projects are completed.
3.
M
ETHOD
This mid-term evaluation is designed to answer the evaluation questions (referred to below in
paragraph 5 as Q.1 to Q.16) in the Roadmap
19
. It is largely based on the external study by an
independent consultant (study required by the LIFE Regulation).
The results of the external study were complemented, where necessary, with background
information on the state of play
from the Commission’s databases that support the programme’s
management.
The external study was conducted between March 2016 and January 2017. It relied on:
-
-
qualitative assessment tools, including desk research based on available documents,
interviews, stakeholder surveys and a public consultation which ran for 12 weeks; and
quantitative assessment tools (based on the indicator database and the LIFE projects
database, which mostly include LIFE+ projects) and the data processing tools designed
to manage the LIFE proposals and projects.
The desk research consisted of a review of a certain number of thematic strategic documents
and reports, legislative texts and related accompanying documents, and included impact and
cost-benefit analyses
20
. It was used as the basis for structuring the external study, informing its
different parts.
The external study focused its analysis on those activities that consumed the largest portion of
the budget, i.e. on action grants, and particularly traditional and integrated projects which
represent 71 % of the available financial resources (see Figure 3 for additional details).
Various complementary consultation activities were conducted as part of the external study,
including a public consultation and five specific surveys and over 150 interviews of the key
stakeholder groups.
Table 2: Number of interviews and answers to the surveys and public consultation
19
http://ec.europa.eu/smart-regulation/roadmaps/docs/2017_env_001_evaluation_life_mt_en.pdf
.
The complete list is included in Annex C of the External and independent LIFE mid-term evaluation report.
20
17
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Answers to the surveys
Public consultation
Project beneficiaries
National Contact Points
Number of
answers
Number of
answers
256 Monitoring experts
208 Unsuccessful applicants
41 Project site visits
59
10
8
Interviews
Implementing bodies (Commission, Executive
Agency for Small and Medium Enterprises,
European Investment Bank, monitoring team)
36 Project beneficiaries
121
In addition to the consultation activities carried out during the external study, the European
Economic and Social Committee and the European Committee of the Regions provided an
opinion on the LIFE programme, which has been taken into consideration.
The aim of the consultations
was to gather information on the programme’s perceived
relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, EU added value and sustainability.
Analysis of the qualitative assessment tools was complemented with data from the monitoring
system (see Box 2) to estimate the expected project results.
Box 2
Monitoring system: how it works
The LIFE monitoring system started in the final year of LIFE+ and was continued and improved to respond to
the requirements of the new LIFE regulation. It is based on the following:
-
the outcome
21
indicators and 2017 targets for each thematic priority identified in the MAWP for 2014-
2017;
-
a system to catch, at project level, the qualitative and quantitative outcomes measured on the basis of
a comprehensive list of indicators and related parameters that correspond to each thematic priority.
For example, the MAWP includes the following list of qualitative/quantitative outcomes and targets for water:
Thematic priority: WATER
Quantitative Outcomes
Percentage of ongoing or finalised projects implementing replicable or transferable
actions and progressing towards good ecological status at project level
Water bodies (inland/transitional/coastal) covered by ongoing or finalised projects
implementing replicable or transferable actions set up to improve their ecological
status
2017
targets/
milestones
80%
100
*
* = It is expected that between 2015 and 2017, 6,900 waterbodies throughout the Union
will improve their ecological status, 1.4% of them (100) due to a LIFE contribution.
The data in the indicators database are based on a pre-defined list of environment and climate action output and
outcome indicators, descriptors, and related measuring units, which are aimed at making the results
comparable.
Every applicant is required to describe the measurable effects of his/her project (descriptors), and, where
21
Due to the bottom-up approach and the great variety of environmental and climate change challenges
addressed by the LIFE programme and the limited funds available to address them, the uptake of projects in
specific areas is uncertain. Quantitative targets cannot be defined ex ante for most of the priority areas covered
and objectives pursued, with the exception of the thematic priorities for nature.
18
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mandatory, identify the related values. The applicant is encouraged to provide descriptors and, where available,
also estimate values for indicators of complementary effects of his/her project.
For example, a project on ‘Water’ will need to provide values for one of the
water-related indicators. If the
project focuses on ‘Point source pollution’, the applicant will have to choose at least one pollutant (e.g. zinc
and its compounds) as a
‘descriptor’ and provide related values which are expected to be measured at the
outset, at the end, and 3 or 5 years after the end of the project with the corresponding measuring units. The
applicant will also have to choose from the related drop down list the targeted source(s) of this pollutant and
the key type(s) of measures envisaged.
The applicant can also provide complementary data, e.g.
on the project’s effects on an endangered species
affected by the point source pollution
22
.
In the application phase, the values are estimates. On the basis of actual measurements, the baseline values and
possibly also the estimates for the end and beyond the project are revised during the first 18 months of the
project. The external monitoring experts validate the revised data.
At the time of the evaluation, the LIFE indicators database contained records of 1 123 on-going and completed
projects, of which 143 are projects from the current programme with validated data. Most of the projects
providing data were financed under LIFE+
23
.
Additional quantitative data have also been sourced from two databases used by the
Commission for the technical and financial management of the applications
24
and LIFE
projects
25
and a third public online database of LIFE projects
26
designed for public consultation.
Limitations
This mid-term evaluation is required at a very early stage of the programme cycle. It is
therefore too soon to provide any actual results of the LIFE programme. This is because:
-
Available data relate to the 2014 and 2015 calls for proposals and their selected projects.
Most LIFE-funded projects are still in progress (98 % of the grants awarded since 2014).
-
The financial instruments started very recently (in 2015) and are in a pilot phase. Moreover,
for the Nature Capital Financing Facility (NCFF), two potential beneficiaries could not be
interviewed for reasons of confidentiality.
The following mitigation measures have been used to provide additional information for this
mid-term evaluation:
22
More information is available on line.
.
For LIFE+ beneficiaries, this was a voluntary exercise, since the programme previously required beneficiaries
to report on output indicators (e.g. number of prototypes built), and not outcome indicators (e.g. quantity of
water cleaned by filtering zinc out of it). .
eProposal is a system to create and submit LIFE proposals and is used by the contracting authority when
selecting projects for funding. It includes information on the proposals received, i.e. objectives, expected
results, budgetary information.
Butler is an information system of the Directorate-General for the Environment used to manage and follow up
on projects co-financed under the LIFE Regulations. It has filtering options for easy searches of LIFE projects.
It contains all the data on the projects being implemented including the reports, results of the monitoring visits
by the Commission and the monitoring experts, etc.
The LIFE projects database is available at:
http://ec.europa.eu/environment/life/project/Projects/.
It is a
searchable database (i.e. by theme, country, key words, etc.) which includes a short description of each project
financed by the LIFE programme and the project’s
beneficiaries. These databases have been used to complete
the available information and help interpret data.
23
24
25
26
19
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a. Who are the LIFE beneficiaries?
Grants are awarded to a wide range of different organisations: from small to large businesses
(44 % in total, out of which 33 % are small medium enterprises), to private non-commercial
organisations (24 %), and public bodies (32 %), as can be seen in the figure below.
Figure 7
Legal status of the beneficiaries:
data on 2014-2015 traditional projects
Source: Commission’s financial system
LIFE project beneficiaries must co-finance the project awarded EU funding. Data on this co-
financing show that total EU financing under LIFE of about EUR 438 million mobilised an
additional EUR 329 million in external co-financing (43 % of the total project cost
see Table
4 below). Data per priority area show that the percentage of co-financing ranges from 37 % for
nature and biodiversity projects to 49 % for projects under the priority areas climate change
mitigation and the environment and resource efficiency.
The maximum threshold for the EU co-financing rate in the LIFE programme is 60 % of the
eligible costs for all projects for the duration of the first multiannual work programme (MAWP
2014-2017)
28
However the co-financing rate is lower if compared with other similar EU
programmes, such as Horizon 2020, societal challenges 5, where the co-financing rate is up to
70% and for some actions can reach 100%.
28
LIFE finances a maximum of 60 % of eligible costs for all projects. This rate will be reduced to 55 % in the
second MAWP (2018-2020). Exceptions will be made for the nature and biodiversity projects for priority
habitats or species (up to 75 %) and capacity-building projects (up to 100 %).
23
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Table 4
Non-EU funds mobilised by traditional projects per priority area:
data on 2014-2015 traditional projects
Source: Commission’s financial system
b.
How are the priorities defined?
The calls for proposals include specific priorities which are defined differently in the
environment and climate action sub-programmes:
-
In the environment sub-programme, specific project topics which implement each
thematic priority included in Annex 3 of the LIFE Regulation are defined in the MAWP
and cannot be modified over its entire duration.
The thematic distribution of projects awarded funding under the sub-programme for
environment shows a certain concentration on some thematic priorities and project topics.
Based on the classification of projects per thematic area, the highest thematic
concentration of grants awarded is for resource efficiency projects implementing the
circular economy (23 %) and for nature and biodiversity projects to protect habitats and
species in Natura 2000 sites (38 %). Although the number of projects financed during the
first two years is rather limited, it is
relevant that one thematic priority ‘industrial
accidents’ and about 30
% of the project topics across all the priority areas have not yet
been targeted by a successful project.
-
In the climate action sub-programme, the Commission specifies non-binding key
priorities in the yearly call for proposals. For instance, the distribution of the projects
awarded funding in 2014 under the sub-programme for climate action shows a
concentration on priority sectors related to land use, land-use change and forestry
(LULUCF), energy and industries. Other priority sectors concern urban adaptation and
planning and adaptation in agriculture, forestry and tourism. In 2016, new key priorities
in the call for proposals triggered a number of proposals on climate strategies, fluorinated
gases and urban adaptation. Such proposals are important given the recent Paris
Agreement on Climate Change and the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol
29
.
How are traditional projects selected?
c.
The eligibility and award criteria applied to select the traditional projects are the result of the
programme’s 25 years of experience
30
:
To be eligible to receive LIFE funds, the proposed initiative needs either to propose an
innovation (which is the case of the pilot
31
, demonstration
32
and best practices
33
projects) or
29
The Kigali Amendment is a legally binding international agreement to reduce the consumption and production
of hydrofluorocarbons (commonly used in refrigeration and air-conditioning). Implementation of this
agreement is expected to reduce global warming by 0.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.
For a detailed description of the overall award process, see the 2014-2017 multi-annual work programme.
30
24
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address shortcomings in communicating the environmental/climate impacts that could hamper
an efficient utilisation of resources (information, awareness-raising and dissemination projects).
The merit of an eligible proposal is determined by taking into account the technical and
financial coherence of the proposed action and the extent to which it contributes to the specific
objectives. In addition, a proposal will score higher if it can demonstrate a specific EU added
value
34
and a catalyst effect by:
-
-
-
-
‘improving integration of specific environmental objectives in other policy area’
(mainstreaming);
‘including a specific strategy aimed at replicating or transferring the projects’ solutions
and mobilise a wider uptake’ (replicability
and transferability);
‘being transnational and/or ensuring an extensive application of green procurement
concepts’;
‘planning to take up the results of environmental and climate-related
research and
innovation projects financed by Horizon 2020
or by previous framework programmes’.
A proposal under the environment sub-programme will also receive additional points if it
addresses any priority project topics included in the MAWP.
These criteria are aimed to ensure that the programme is strategically focused because they
allow selecting well-conceived projects, with a high demonstrated potential in terms of EU
added value and catalytic effect.
Integrated projects
The integrated projects are a new feature introduced by the LIFE Regulation
35
. The LIFE
Regulation states that a maximum of 30 % of the budgetary resources allocated to action grants
may go to integrated projects with an indicative allocation of three integrated projects per
Member State.
31
Pilot projects are projects that apply a technique or method that has not been applied or tested before and that
offers potential environmental and climate advantages compared to current best practices.
Demonstration projects are projects that put into practice, test, evaluate and disseminate actions,
methodologies or approaches new or unknown in the specific context of the project.
Best practices projects
which apply appropriate, cost-effective and state-of-the-art techniques, methods and
approaches.
See also the paragraph ‘Novelties introduced in the grant management’ below.
Introduced by the LIFE Regulation, integrated projects tend to be more complex than a traditional project as
their aim is to act as a catalyst for the implementation of Union environmental or climate plans or strategies on
a large territorial scale with additional co-funding for complementary actions.
32
33
34
35
25
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-
Two in Italy and Poland (see Box 3) are aimed at implementing and monitoring air
quality plans as defined by Directive 2008/50/EC with the ultimate goal of contributing
to the national air pollution reduction programmes
39
,
One in Finland is implementing waste management plans and a waste prevention
programme as required by the Waste Framework Directive 2008/98,
One in Denmark supports the implementation of 21 municipal climate change
adaptation (CCA) plans and
One in Germany aims to better structure and optimise the implementation of the
country’s
climate action programme 2020 and the climate protection plan 2050.
Box 3. Example of an integrated project
Implementation of an air quality plan
for the Małopolska Region — Małopolska in a
healthy atmosphere (LIFE14 IPE/PL/000021)
EU contribution: 9 914
871.00 €
Thematic priority: Air quality
link:
Coordinating beneficiary: Małopolska
External
http://powietrze.malopolska.pl/en/life-ip/
Region (public local authority)
The purpose of this project is to implement an air quality plan in the province of Małopolska in
Poland, and regional and local air quality policies in the province of Silesia, and adjacent regions
in Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Specific aims include improving regional cooperation in these
air pollution hotspots, removing barriers to the mobilisation of funding to replace obsolete coal
boilers, building local capacity (through ‘eco-managers’ and a centre of excellence)
and raise
awareness about how to improve air quality.
The province of Małopolska struggles with very poor air quality, particularly during the winter
season. Along with Silesia and nearby regions in Slovakia and the Czech Republic, it is one of the
most polluted regions in the EU. The major source of air pollution in Małopolska is low-stack
emissions (combustion of solid fuels in obsolete household boilers).
At the national level, the anti-smog law passed in October 2015 allows local governments to adopt
their own local air quality regulations, and set parameters for the stoves allowed to be used in
particular areas and for the fuels used (including coal). The fundamental barrier at the local level to
the effective implementation of Małopolska’s
air quality plan is a lack of human resources,
organisational capacities and necessary know-how in the municipality.
Barriers at the regional level to the effective implementation of Małopolska’s air quality plan
include insufficient financial resources to eliminate low-stack emissions in individual houses and
to make energy-efficiency improvements in buildings.
In addition to the budget for the integrated project itself, the project will facilitate the coordinated
use of EUR 799 million in complementary funding from the European Regional Development
Fund (ERDF), the Polish National and Regional Fund for Environmental Protection and Water
Management, and other national and private funds, as applicable.
-
-
-
The proposals received for integrated projects for 2014 and 2015 represent a combined total of
LIFE and non-LIFE co-financing of EUR 283 million. This co-financing should facilitate the
coordinated use of about EUR 3.6 billion in total, as shown in table below.
39
National air pollution reduction programmes were part of the Air Package of 18/12/2013 and further
developed in the proposal for the National Emission Ceilings Directive, Annex III, Part 2 (National air
pollution control programmes).
27
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Table 5
Integrated projects 2014 and 2015: financial resources
LIFE Integrated projects/ Fund per source (in million EUR)
Priority
Year
area
Nature
Water
Nature
Nature
Air
Water
Nature
Nature
Waste
Air
2014
2014
2014
2014
2014
2014
2015
2015
2015
2015
2015
2015
2015
2015
2015
Total
European
European
European
European
European
Agricultural
Regional
Maritime Horizon
Investmen Public Private
INTERREG Social
LIFE
Non-EU
2020
Fund for Development
and
Fund
t Bank
cofinancing cofinancing Regional
Fund
Fisheries
LIFE project
11,40
8,50
11,98
10,00
9,91
11,99
10,13
13,40
11,11
9,97
10,47
9,74
9,75
7,01
8,16
153,52
7,60
7,21
7,98
5,94
5,10
7,99
6,75
13,88
7,69
6,83
6,98
20,29
8,36
6,40
10,84
129,86
33,75
1,02
1,87
75,21
0,00
10,45
43,16
0,00
0,23
130,18
0,83
9,10
1,88
0,00
65,11
372,79
0,00
0,00
0,14
0,50
757,33
21,00
28,20
0,00
1,96
679,17
0,00
0,00
0,00
2,70
29,90
1.520,90
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
2,50
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
3,40
5,44
0,00
2,68
20,08
34,10
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
1,00
0,00
10,30
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
11,30
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,60
0,00
11,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,30
13,74
0,00
0,00
25,64
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,75
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,17
0,00
0,00
16,19
17,11
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
0,00
22,67
0,00
0,00
169,79
26,55
2,25
3,10
37,00
139,50
63,90
0,00
7,20
41,05
50,32
56,00
237,99
180,80
166,56
0,00
0,00
0,05
5,80
0,00
52,50
0,00
12,00
0,00
0,00
90,30
0,00
0,00
11,60
6,29
178,55
Project
Total
Belgium
Germany
Finland
Italy
Poland
UK
Germany
Spain
Finland
Italy
222,55
43,28
24,28
100,56
809,35
248,28
152,13
60,58
28,19
867,21
162,29
101,04
294,40
211,19
323,12
3.648,46
Netherlands Nature
Sweden
Belgium
Denmark
Germany
Water
Water
Clima
Clima
22,67 1.182,01
Source: Commission’s database on projects
Other projects
In 2014 and 2015, the Commission financed 14 capacity-building projects to help countries less
successful in obtaining grants under the LIFE programme. These projects are now being
implemented. They cover all the Member States with lower uptake, except one which did not
submit any proposal. It is expected that, once completed, the projects will help improve the
quality and the quantity of applications from these Member States.
Technical assistance projects provide financial support to help applicants prepare integrated
projects. Seven projects were financed in 2014-2015, two of which under the sub-programme
for climate action. Three have already led to the successful submission of an integrated project.
Preparatory projects address specific needs for the development and implementation of EU
environmental or climate policy and legislation. For climate action, one preparatory project has
been funded on the reporting of emissions and removals from land use. Under the environment
sub-programme, five projects were funded in 2014 - 2015 on different topics of Commission
interest. These include the online bird portals data collection for displaying near-real-time bird
distribution across Europe and the financing of young volunteers doing nature protection and
climate adaptation activities (European Voluntary Corps
environment strand).
Novelties introduced in grant management
The LIFE Regulation introduced two main changes in grant management:
1. The transfer of the management of the bulk of grants to the Executive Agency for Small and
Medium-sized Enterprises (EASME)
Following a cost-benefit analysis, the Commission entrusted EASME with the management
of the operating grants, the traditional and the capacity-building projects under the two sub-
programmes and the integrated and the technical assistance projects under the climate action
sub-programme.
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The Directorate-General for Environment implements directly the integrated, the technical
assistance and the preparatory projects under the environment sub-programme as well as the
ongoing LIFE+ projects. The Directorate-General for Climate Action manages the
preparatory projects under the climate action sub-programme.
2. The introduction of a system to monitor project outcome and impact on the environment,
climate change, and societal and economic issues.
To assess impact, a comprehensive set of quantitative and, where possible, qualitative
indicators with related milestones, was included in the LIFE MAWP for 2014
2017. A
system to monitor these indicators has been developed and implemented at project level so
that the programme’s performance can be evaluated in an objective manner: Box 2 above
describes how it works.
The expected environment
and/or climate impact of a project’s results is therefore assessed
during the project selection phase. Specific award criteria are applied for this, and there is a
minimum pass score
40
. As a consequence, projects which are not expected to provide an
adequate impact cannot be awarded a grant. A specialised monitoring team validates the
expected impact and then continuously checks this during the project’s implementation and
after it ends.
4.2.
Financial Instruments
Two pilot financial instruments have been introduced to test innovative approaches:
-
-
the Private Finance for Energy Efficiency (PF4EE) supports investments to implement
Member States’ energy efficiency action plans through financial intermediaries;
the Natural Capital Financing Facility (NCFF) is designed to demonstrate that natural
capital projects can generate revenues or save costs. It intends to establish a pipeline of
replicable, bankable operations that will serve as a ‘proof of concept’ and demonstrate to
potential investors that such operations directly addressing biodiversity and climate
adaptation objectives are attractive.
Following an ex ante assessment analysing the potential demand and defining the best possible
conditions for its financing, the Commission and the European Investment Bank (EIB)
developed and signed specific delegation agreements.
Subsequently, in the case of the PF4EE, the EIB has started to make agreements with financial
intermediaries, which have then to develop their own portfolio to provide loans for energy
efficiency investments.
40
Two award criteria concern the environmental impact under the environment sub-programme:
1.‘EU added
value: extent and quality of the contribution to the specific objectives of the priority areas’ and 2.
‘Contribution to project topics’. Considered together, they envisage the attribution of 30 award
points out of
100, with a minimum pass score of 10 points. Under the sub-programme for climate action, two award criteria
refer to the climate impact: ‘EU added value: Extent and quality of the contribution to an increased climate
resilience and/or to
the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions’ and ‘EU added value: Extent and quality of the
contribution to the specific objectives of the priority areas of the LIFE sub-programme
for Climate Action’.
They envisage the attribution of 30 award points out of 100, with a minimum pass score of 15 points. See also
above the paragraph on ‘How are traditional projects selected?’.
29
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At the outset of PF4EE, the EIB expected there would be support for up to EUR 540 million in
total investment. However, on the basis of the six agreements signed since 2015 with local
intermediary banks and in view of the pipeline, the EIB now expects EUR 1 billion in
investments in energy efficiency (EUR 430 million from EIB and EUR 570 million from
financial intermediaries) in 10 Member States. There appears to be a high demand for this type
of loan.
The other instrument, NCFF, supports the financing of loans and equity for investments in
natural capital that help to achieve biodiversity and/or climate change adaptation objectives.
The aim is to develop a pipeline of projects that encourages greater uptake of such investments
in the market.
Since the launch of the instruments in February 2015, the EIB has scrutinised a significant
number of potential operations. The first operation was signed in April 2017, and two or three
further operations are expected for the remainder of 2017.
However, many potential operations that were scrutinised did not materialise, in particular
because of the difficulty of developing the business case. This confirms the challenges
identified in the ex-ante assessment. Greater use of the NCFF support facility to develop more
operations is planned for example, for promoting urban adaptation projects.
The recommendation to look into how grants can be used in combination with other type of
financing tools to make certain operations more viable
5.
A
NSWERS TO THE EVALUATION QUESTIONS
At this early stage of the programme’s implementation, it is obviously too soon to present
actual results. Therefore, the answers to all the evaluation questions take into account, where
appropriate, the activities being implemented, their expected outcomes, the processes in place,
the initial findings and/or the results of the stakeholder consultation.
The answer to each evaluation question is provided below under the respective evaluation
criterion. To make it easier to read, the questions are numbered and a summary is presented at
the end of each answer.
5.1.
Q.1.
Effectiveness
What are the outcomes likely to be achieved under LIFE 2014-2020
LIFE is implemented through two multiannual work programmes (MAWP) covering 2014-
2017 and 2018-2020 respectively. The first MAWP (1 January 2014 to 31 December 2017) was
adopted on 19 March 2014 by decision C (2014)1709.
All the calls planned in 2014, 2015 and 2016 were launched as planned, and the relevant budget
fully committed (see Table 3 above). This means that all the steps to implement the action
grants in the first half of the LIFE programme 2014 - 2020 have been taken.
To measure the likely outcomes to be achieved under the LIFE programme 2014-2020, the
external study analysed the values of the indicators provided by the project beneficiaries of the
2014 call for proposals. These indicators were validated by the monitoring team (see Box 2 for
more information). Although the projects awarded are ongoing and their outcome is expected in
4-5 years, the outcome is considered to be realistic.
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The results of this analysis were compared with the target milestones indicated as target for
2017 in the first MAWP. These can be found in the MAWP where for each priority area and
type of project, qualitative and quantitative outcomes, indicators and targets have been
established in line with Article 24 (2)(c) of the LIFE Regulation. Information on how they have
been defined appears in Box 4 below.
Box 4. Definition of the MAWP targets
The 2017 targets in the first MAWP were based on the evaluation of the estimated impact of the LIFE
programme and defined in consideration of the following:
-
-
the environmental or climate objectives to be reached by each project which will have to be at least
equivalent to or surpass the objectives set by the relevant Union legislation;
a projection of the number and scope of successful projects within a priority area based on the
estimated number of successful applications submitted.
Moreover, given that no project was expected to be finished by 2017, the milestones refer to on-going projects
and ‘consist in having set up the projects in such a way that they can reach the targets by 2020
41
’..
Based on their anticipated results, the 2014 projects already address 70 % of each target
milestone included in the first MAWP
42
.
The tables reporting the results of the comparison are included in Annex 5
Assessment of
indicators against targets.
While it is too early to assess the ambition of the targets, the fact that the planned milestones
are in some cases exceeded is a positive finding showing that the programme is well on track to
achieving its expected results.
Taking into account the links between evaluation questions 1 and 2, more information on the
expected outcomes of the activities and some specific examples are included in the next section
on question 2.
These anticipated results provide assurance that the LIFE programme 2014-2020 is on track to
contribute significantly to its general outcomes.
Q.1. What is the outcome likely to be achieved under LIFE 2014-2020?
In the absence of actual results, the analysis of the ongoing projects selected in 2014 shows that they already
address 70 % of each target milestone to be achieved for 2017 as indicated in the first MAWP.
These anticipated results provide assurance that the LIFE programme 2014-2020 will provide a significant
contributions to its expected outcomes.
Q.2. To what extent does the observed outcome correspond to its objectives and to the EU
2020 strategy on sustainable growth?
41
Commission Implementing Decision C(2014)1709 of 19 March 2014 on the adoption of the LIFE multiannual
work programme for 2014-2017. See in particular the annex, p.58.
The targeted milestones are considered to be achieved if the difference between the actual results and the
milestone value is ≤ 5 % of the provisional results.
42
31
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As actual results are not available yet, the expected results of the action grants awarded in 2014
and the activities which are being implemented and which target directly each general objective
of the LIFE programme, are presented below together with some specific examples.
The programme’s contribution to the EU 2020 strategy on sustainable growth is also analysed
taking into account the activities under implementation and their expected outcomes.
Objective 1
to contribute to the shift towards a resource efficient, low carbon and
climate resilient economy and to the protection of the environment
including biodiversity and Natura 2000
According to the results of the external study, the ongoing LIFE projects are expected to
contribute to this objective by, inter alia:
-
-
-
-
-
improving the conservation status of 59 habitats, 114 species and 85 Natura 2000 sites;
reducing adverse effects of chemicals on health and the environment for about 1.6
million people over 5 years;
reducing energy consumption
(about 600 000 MWh per year) by best practice solutions;
increasing the production of energy from renewable sources (about 500 000 MWh per
year from different sources);
targeting 35 million hectares with climate adaptation measures and developing best
practice solutions for adaptation in various areas.
These anticipated results might appear limited compared to the existing needs and challenges.
However, as in the case of its predecessor LIFE+, the LIFE programme has a limited size and is
not designed to solve all environmental and climate problems but to act as a catalyst for change.
This role of catalyst has been developed over the years along three different dimensions
43
:
-
in terms of disseminating best practice and knowledge (spreading effect), because LIFE
provides a platform to develop and exchange good practices and knowledge (see Box 5 for
a concrete example of how this is happening via LIFE+ funded projects), allowing Member
States and stakeholders to learn from each other about implementing EU legislation;
Box 5
Example of a traditional LIFE+ project on information and communication
ADEME
— European day ‘In town, without my car!’
(LIFE99 ENV/F/000459)
EU contribution:
€1
022 923.00
Coordinating beneficiary: French National Agency
for Environment and Energy (national authority)
Thematic priority: Air quality, transport
External link: http://www.ademe.fr/
43
Few examples of the catalyst role of the programme are taken from LIFE+ traditional projects, given that this
feature of the programme is being developed in continuation with the LIFE+ experience.
32
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Europeans are very worried about urban pollution and mobility.
The overall aim of the ‘In town without my car!’ campaign was to
encourage public awareness of the need to
act against pollution caused by the increase in motorised traffic in the urban environment. This involves not
just fighting atmospheric pollution or noise but also improving the quality of urban life.
Following on
from the success of an ‘In town without my car!’ operation launched in France in 1998, and
capitalising on the experience of other European cities, the project aimed to create a Europe-wide day on the
theme ‘In town, without my car!’ in 2000, financed by national
authorities and local communities.
This initiative helped to include environmental considerations in transport policies, in keeping with EU
policies in this area, in particular the Air Quality and Noise Directives. A pilot project was carried out in 1999
in a small number of volunteer cities, primarily in the project partner countries. This initial operation was a
test, providing feedback for the main operation in 2000. A number of indicators were defined to evaluate the
pilot project, e.g. city residents’
level of satisfaction, air pollution levels, measurement of traffic and noise
levels.
On the basis of this assessment, the theme day for 2000 was launched at a major European seminar. The
project partners consulted with the EU member countries to organise the European-wide day for 22 September
2000.
The initiative had a great success and many cities continue to organise each year a day without cars.
-
in terms of attracting other funds, given, for example, that LIFE financing (see Tables 4
and 5) is used to mainstream environmental and climate objectives into other EU policies
and public and private sector practice. This allows the informed inclusion of
environmental and climate concerns in the decisions that drive national, local and sectoral
policy, plans, investment and related rules, while addressing the specific needs of
environmental and climate action. This is the case, for example, of the integrated projects,
whose aim is to facilitate the implementation of environmental and climate plans and to
integrate these plans into comprehensive development strategies. It is also the case of the
two financial instruments which are expected to support private investments in energy
efficiency (PF4EE) and in natural capital operations. Such investments would normally
have difficulty obtaining financing from commercial banks because of their risk profile
(NCFF).
in terms of supporting actions to improve and accelerate changes directly targeting
environmental externalities, which result in
(a) private costs of production and consumption failing to account for all the
environmental costs;
(b) inadequate information on the environmental/climate impact preventing efficient
utilisation of resources, and
(c) a systematic discouraging of investments in eco-products/processes, thus limiting
their potential return.
-
LIFE intervenes to address these issues by:
(a) building up the capacity of the key stakeholders of the production and consumption
processes (see project in Box 8);
(b) by providing adequate tools (legislation, information, etc..
see examples of the
LIFE action in Boxes 9 and 15); and
(c) by supporting private players, in particular small and medium enterprises in testing
small-scale technologies and solutions (see the examples in Boxes 6 and 21).
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Box 6
Example of a traditional LIFE+ project on environmental policy and governance: the
Dyemond Solar project
EU contribution: €1
735 846.00
Coordinating beneficiary: NLAB Solar AB
(private company)
Thematic priority: renewable energy
External link: http://www.dyemondsolar.com/
The overall objective of the Dyemond Solar project (LIFE 09/ENVSE/000355) was to demonstrate a cost-
effective means of producing transparent dye-sensitised solar cells (DSCs). This was based on patented
technology that uses one-dimensional photonic crystals to improve the efficiency and colour of solar cells. The
project aimed to demonstrate a prototype production system at pre-industrial scales which could then serve as
a base model for an industrial-scale operation. The result: the solar technology led to quantitative
environmental improvements compared with the state-of-the-art technology. There was less embedded energy,
a lower volume of waste from production, and a reduction of CO2 emissions in comparison with silicon solar
cells. Moreover, it is expected to reduce the investment and operational costs by 50 %.
The upgrading of the prototype to an industrial-scale operation has a
potential value of over €100 million. The
process of marketing is still ongoing, and it is not yet possible to determine whether it will be successful. The
technology itself has many advantages compared to other types of solar panels, like silicon and thin film solar
cells.
The activities to develop, implement and enforce EU environmental policy and legislation (see
objective 2 below) and support better governance (see objective 3 below) further illustrate
LIFE’s role in moving
towards a resource-efficient, low-carbon and climate-resilient economy
and its contribution to environmental protection.
Objective 2:
improve the development, implementation and enforcement of EU
environmental and climate policy and legislation
The external study confirmed that the procurement activities launched by the Commission to
support the development, implementation and enforcement of environmental and climate policy
and legislation play a key role in achieving the LIFE programme’s second objective, especially
because they address all stages of the policy cycle (that might not be covered by demand-led
activities).
Evaluations and impact assessments provide evidence to inform and support the decision-
making process and are carried out in the preparation phase, before the Commission finalises a
proposal for a new/ revised policy or legislative act on environment and climate action. These
studies are carried out with the support of external expertise and directly funded by the LIFE
programme, under the procurement activities budget line.
The LIFE programme (and, partially, the LIFE+ programme) financed, for example, the
preparatory and related tasks (such as the impact assessment, stakeholders analysis,
communication, etc.) for the adoption of the circular economy package. The package lays the
basis for ‘closing the loop’ of product lifecycles by improving recycling and re-use.
LIFE also
financed work on the set of proposals for ‘Driving Europe’s transition to a low-carbon
economy’, which aims to accelerate the transition to low-carbon
emissions in all sectors of the
economy.
Box 7. Framework service contracts for more cooperation with national judges in the field of
34
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environmental law
National judges play a key role in implementing EU environmental law. The capacity of national courts to
guarantee the correct and efficient application of EU environmental law is an essential factor in addressing the
legitimate expectations of EU citizens in this domain.
It has also become more and more obvious that without efficient mechanisms to settle environmental matters at
national level, enforcement at EU level by the Commission is insufficient for an effective implementation of
EU environmental legislation across the EU. An effective implementation and enforcement of the
environmental law at national level would allow the Commission to focus on its core activities. On the one
hand the Commission should concentrate its resources on systemic, serious matters which cannot be addressed
effectively at national level or in only one Member State. On the other hand, the Commission should take
measures to ensure the spread of knowledge of EU environmental legislation at national level and help the
relevant national bodies to address enforcement effectively.
Appropriate knowledge of EU environmental law is key to this. Therefore, the Commission launched the
‘programme for cooperation with national judges in the field of environment law’. In the first phase (2008-
2012), training materials for various sectors of EU environment legislation, were developed, and several
workshops with judges and prosecutors from almost all Member States were organised. In a second phase,
additional training in environmental law was offered to national judges. This phase built on the results of the
first phase and extended the
programme’s scope. Steps were taken to consolidate the partnership with the
national judicial training centres and ensure that the project’s results were shared and disseminated at national
level.
So far about 500 judges and prosecutors from the courts of first instance to the supreme courts of all Member
States have attended the roughly 45 workshops organised. During these pan-EU seminars judges from various
Member States are able to exchange good practice and compare their experience.
Box 7 gives an example of how the procurement activities are used to support the enforcement
of the legislation, by providing training to judges and prosecutors. Box 10 describes a study
contract to inform Member States’ decision making on a new compliance-monitoring
mechanism in the Commission’s proposals on waste
44
. At the level of grants, the traditional
projects financed under all priority areas support the implementation or enforcement of specific
legislative acts. In particular:
-
The nature and biodiversity projects (a priority area) focus on Natura 2000 and nature
legislation (the Birds and Habitats Directives). The evidence gathered in the recently
finalised evaluation of the Directives (fitness-check) confirmed the strategic role that the
LIFE programme plays in supporting the implementation of the Directives.
The projects targeting the priority area environment and resource efficiency are
designed to make it easier to develop and share new solutions and best practices for
water, waste, resource efficiency
including soil and forests, green and circular
economy
set out in the Roadmap for a Resource-Efficient Europe and the 7th
Environment Action programme (see Box 19 below).
Projects under the priority area climate change mitigation aim to help develop and
implement climate-related
policy and legislation, and, in particular, contribute to ‘a
roadmap for moving to a competitive low carbon economy in 2050’. For this, the
projects focus, inter alia, on the emissions trading system, Member States’ efforts
to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), renewable energy and energy efficiency,
transport and fuels. Below is an example of an on-going project which focuses on GHG.
-
-
44
See COM/2015/0595 final. Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council amending
Directive 2008/98/EC on waste.
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Box 8
Example of a traditional project on climate change mitigation
LIFE BEEF CARBON
Demonstration actions to mitigate the carbon footprint of
beef production in France, Ireland, Italy and Spain (LIFE14 CCM/FR/001125)
EU contribution: €3
276 300.00
Coordinating beneficiary: Institut de l’Elevage
(national authority)
Thematic priority: climate mitigation
External link: http://idele.fr/index.php?id=2487
Beef production generates 6 % of all human-induced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. LIFE BEEF CARBON
is testing and promoting innovative practices to reduce GHG emissions and increase carbon sequestration in
beef farms in France, Ireland, Italy and Spain, countries that together account for 32
% of the EU’s cattle
population. The project will calculate the beef carbon footprint of over 2000 farms, representing the full range
of beef production systems. Carbon mitigation plans will be applied and evaluated on 172 beef farms as a
precursor to the development of national action plans. Implementation of these plans is expected to lead to a
15 % reduction of the beef carbon footprint of the four countries in 10 years. The project will thus make a
significant contribution to achieving the goals of the EU Effort Sharing Decision on GHG emissions as it
relates to agriculture, as well as to the proposed new legislation on integrating emissions from land use in the
2030 climate and energy framework.
-
The governance and information projects under both sub-programmes support the
development of cooperation platforms and the sharing of best practices for more
effective compliance and enforcement, including training programmes for judges and
public prosecutors (see Box 17 for an example). The projects also support the
development of policies, e.g. by funding actions specifically aimed at increasing the
level of understanding among stakeholders.
The 15 integrated projects selected in 2014-2015 (and presented above) help various players in
Member States implement key plans and strategies required by specific Union environmental or
climate legislation on a large territorial scale. While these projects have only just started, they
appear to ensure a systematic and coherent implementation of key environment or climate plans
by involving all the players on the ground and ensuring their integration in a comprehensive
strategy.
On this basis, taking into account the overall amount of resources involved, their results are
expected to be much larger than their limited budget would suggest (see Table 5).
Objective 3.
support better environmental and climate governance at all levels,
including better involvement of civil society, NGOs and local actors
The action grants financed under the priority areas environment and climate governance and
information are specifically aimed at broadening stakeholder involvement and promoting more
effective compliance with and enforcement of Union environmental and climate legislation (see
Box 7 for an example). This is obtained through the award process, e.g. by targeting
information and awareness-raising campaigns, capacity building of key stakeholders, activities
in support of effective control processes (i.e. enforcement, inspections and surveillance, non-
judicial conflict resolution) and measures to promote compliance
45
.
The external study confirms that governance is an integral part of many projects, especially in
nature and biodiversity, water, and climate action (see Q9 under Coherence). The analysis of
45
For further information, see the priority project topics in the first MAWP, pages 20-24.
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indicators at project level shows in fact that the beneficiaries are targeting specific outputs and
outcome indicators related to environmental and climate governance,
even if their project’s
main aim pertains to another priority area. On the basis of these indicators, the external study
estimates that the projects awarded in 2014 and their awareness-raising activities are expected
to impact dozens of millions of citizens
and more than 6 000 stakeholders.
Box 9. Example of a LIFE Environmental Governance and Information project
LIFE Legal Actions
Legal Actions on Clean Air (LIFE15 GIE/DE/000795)
EU contribution: €521
834.00
Coordinating beneficiary: Environmental Action
Germany (NGO)
Thematic priority: Air pollution
External link: http://www.right-to-clean-air.eu
The project aims to empower and motivate EU citizens and NGOs to campaign for effective air quality
measures. This means providing information about the sources and effects of air pollution and potential
solutions and providing advice on the right of citizens and NGOs to participate in decision-making processes
and take legal action if necessary when Member States are not in compliance with the Air Quality Directive.
The project’s targeted awareness-raising
activities are expected to reach 13 million citizens in seven EU
countries, with a particular focus on Germany and the Czech Republic. NGOs and citizens will participate in the
process of revising Air Quality Plans. LIFE Legal Actions will also motivate political decision-makers to
improve air quality legislation and implementation by advising them on existing national and European funding
schemes, promoting green public procurement (GPP) as part of a resource-efficient economy, and transferring
examples of best practice.
Furthermore, operating grants financed under the LIFE programme have enabled beneficiary
NGOs to operate and thus to be involved in shaping environmental and climate policy, to
mainstream climate and environmental policies into other areas and to increase the involvement
and knowledge of environmental and climate action priorities among citizens and EU policy
makers.
The procurement activities contribute to the third LIFE objective by building up the knowledge
base on environmental and climate issues, necessary to underpin policy decision-making (see
Box 10 for an example).
About 200 contracts are concluded every year under LIFE to support better environmental and
climate governance, including stakeholder involvement, at all levels.
Box 10. The early warning mechanism
Study contract to identify Member States at risk of
non-compliance with the 2020 target of the Waste Framework Directive and to follow up on
the exercise to promote compliance
This is a study on the state of implementation of the 2020 municipal waste recycling target. The purpose is to
identify Member States at risk of non-compliance with this 2020 target and provide a so-called early warning
report. The study is based on the idea of a new compliance monitoring mechanism included in the
Commission’s proposals on the waste targets review — the ‘early warning’ which would apply to the post-
2020 targets proposed. The study will conduct a comprehensive review of the waste management policy of
these Member States at risk of not meeting the 2020 target. It will include the reasons for underperformance,
looking at the policy measures introduced or expected to be introduced and how relevant these are in closing
the gap to the target. Based on the results of this study, detailed, country-specific recommendations will be
proposed to each Member State at risk of not meeting the target and included in the Commission’s ‘early
warning report’.
This would also help to ensure that the initiative receives the visibility it needs to be effective in anticipating,
ahead of the deadline for compliance, any difficulties Member States may have in reaching the proposed
targets.
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Objective 4:
support implementation of the 7th Environment Action Plan (EAP)
The activities mentioned under the other LIFE objectives also help to implement the 7th EAP,
because these activities target the first two objectives of the 7th EAP as well (see Figure 2
above). However, the third objective of the 7th EAP refers to safeguarding public health, and as
concluded in the external study, following the 2014 calls for proposals, no projects were
directly targeting the thematic area ‘environment and health’.
Support to the EU 2020 strategy on sustainable growth
According to the LIFE Regulation, the LIFE programme should contribute to the targets of the
Europe 2020 strategy
for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth’ (the ‘Europe 2020 strategy’).
According to the external study, the LIFE programme:
-
directly contributes to the
second pillar of the EU 2020 strategy on ‘Sustainable growth:
promoting a more
resource efficient,
greener and more competitive economy’ by helping
to sever the link between economic growth and the use of resources.
contributes to the other pillars of the EU 2020 strategy by making it easier
-
-
to convert new ideas into products and processes (Innovation Union) and
to develop new skills and
jobs
(Agenda for new skills and jobs).
-
Some of the most recent policy developments financed by LIFE through the 19 % of the budget
dedicated to procurement
namely the 2030 climate and energy framework adopted in 2014,
the circular economy package adopted in 2015 and the implementation of the Paris Agreement
ratified in 2016
are expected to help shape the future of the European economy in the
coming decades.
The LIFE programme’s support for the Europe 2020 strategy takes different forms:
-
All the LIFE projects already funded help to put the EU on a path to
resource-efficiency
and sustainable growth
46
. These are projects aimed at halting and reversing the loss of
biodiversity, improving resource efficiency, addressing environmental and health concerns,
moving towards a low-carbon and resilient economy and preventing the consequences of
floods, droughts, the rise of temperatures and sea levels
47
.
For example, the ongoing projects funded under the priority area ‘environment and resource
efficiency’ target the effective implementation of EU environmental policy by the public
and private sectors (in particular in the environmental
sectors covered by the ‘Roadmap to a
Resource Efficient Europe’) and are facilitating the development and sharing of new
solutions and best practices.
46
All projects contribute to the EU 2020 strategy because all the priority areas
biodiversity, adaptation
mitigation, environment and governance and information
contribute to resource-efficiency and/or
sustainable growth.
In connection with this,
‘The
implementation of green recovery measures in the EU’, Cambridge Econometric
et al (2011) assessed green measures focused on energy efficiency and climate change mitigation as part of
recovery packages. It was found these measures contributed to economic recovery and provided a temporary
boost to employment. The multiplier effects for green investment were similar to those from any other kind of
investment and supported the general conclusion for LIFE projects that they support growth and jobs.
47
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-
A contribution to
innovation
is expected from projects funded under all priority areas
aimed at developing policy or management approaches, best practices and solutions (so
called, demonstration and best practices projects
see, for example, Box 6). This includes
the development of innovative technologies for environment/climate challenges and the
contribution to innovation is happening by targeting specific types of projects.
The external study extracts from the indicator database that 61 % of the climate change
adaptation projects and over 80 % of all the climate change mitigation projects aim to help
develop innovative technologies, systems and/or instruments. The external monitors
confirmed that this is the result of more emphasis on the business perspective of projects
introduced in recent years.
Ongoing projects to promote innovation and investments in energy efficiency and the
PF4EE are designed to help reduce energy demand and thus to make the EU less energy
dependent, which is one of the objectives of the Energy Union.
Project beneficiaries and external monitors affirmed in their interviews that the LIFE
programme is a source of funding for innovation. They mentioned that if LIFE stopped
funding or withdrew it, one of the consequences would be less support for innovative
environmental solutions
48
.
-
Although
employment
is not the primary aim of the LIFE programme, the external study
estimates that a total of 139 projects, out of 280, have created jobs as a result of various
LIFE actions. This is based on the indicators database for 2014-2015 projects. At the
beginning of these projects a total of 330 jobs in FTE (full time equivalent) terms were
created. But the number of FTE jobs is expected to increase to more than a thousand by the
end of the projects.
The employment generated is generally temporary and directly related to the
implementation of the projects. It consists mainly of researchers and technicians but also
project managers, assistants, public relations experts, webmasters, accountants, etc. For a
large number of projects, it is specified that their implementation is not expected to lead to
the direct creation of permanent jobs. However, the projects are expected to stimulate
certain sectors and therefore have an indirect positive impact on employment.
There is also mention of some cases (relatively fewer) where long-term unemployed people
have been recruited (9 % of all projects reporting employment) including, in 3 projects,
people with reduced mobility.
48
According to LIFE project beneficiaries, there will be
‘less innovative pilot or demonstration technical
projects, less environmentally relevant innovation activities by SMEs in particular’
and ‘
What would
disappear is the support to provide solutions for pre-testing / pre-commercialisation (risk-sharing) of
innovative environmental solutions’.
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Table 6
Employment generated by LIFE and LIFE+ projects:
average figures per type of projects
LIFE 2014-2020
At the
beginning
Total average
Climate change adaptation
projects
Climate change mitigation
projects
Environment and resources
efficiency projects
Climate governance and
information projects
Environment governance and
information projects
2,5
4,8
At the end
13,5
25,7
Beyond
LIFE 2007-2013
At the
beginning
17,8
Total average
27,4
8,5
At the end
13,2
Beyond
8,6
2,2
9,5
8,2
2,4
14,8
30,5
Environment projects
3,1
12,2
10,9
0
5
0
Information projects
2,2
13,2
2,8
1,4
12,3
5,5
Nature and biodiversity projects
Preparatory projects
Integrated projects
2,6
6
1,2
9,4
2,2
26,8
7,8
1,3
Nature projects
8,8
Biodiversity projects
17,4
0,6
14,7
12,3
6,2
7
Source: External study
On average, 2.5 jobs in FTE equivalent were reported at the beginning of the project. This
is expected to increase to 13.5 FTEs at the end of the project and to 17.8 after the end of
LIFE funding
49
.
By thematic areas, at the end of project implementation, the largest average employment
per project is reported in integrated projects and climate adaptation projects. If this trend is
confirmed, it would be suitable to try to understand why these types of projects seem more
resource-intense than the other ones.
Employment after LIFE funding of environment projects ends is expected to double
compared to the employment generated at the beginning (30 FTE).
These figures are in line with the findings from the stakeholder consultation that show that
pilot or demonstrative environment projects are more sustainable and also score rather well
on replicability. Instead, nature and biodiversity conservation projects are mainly
replicated through non-market mechanisms, and therefore the employment created is not
always visible.
49
Other recent research estimates that one average LIFE project contributes to 3 full time equivalents (FTEs) per
year in the post-implementation phase (or 9 to 15 FTE in total). For every EUR 1 million from the EU budget,
a LIFE project would generate 2.5 FTEs per year ex post and between 17 and 25 during the implementation
phase. This has not been specified further per type of grant or priority area. See ‘LIFE past, present
and future
contribution to employment and economic growth. LIFE effectiveness and replicability’ NEEMO 2016.
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A comparison between the two programming periods (2007 - 2013 and 2014 - 2020)
provides interesting findings.
The external study examined 700 LIFE+ projects which reported on employment creation
for the years 2007-2013. The study found that the LIFE+ programme helped to create
56 000 jobs, of which almost 16 000 are sustainable (28 %).
A comparison between the previous and current programmes shows that for the current
LIFE programming period a lot more jobs are expected to be created on average in terms
of FTE after the project ends (17.8 FTE) compared to LIFE+ (8.6 FTE).
However, this finding might be due to the efforts made under LIFE 2014-2020 to ensure
replicability of results. Or another interpretation could be that LIFE+ projects, which have
been completed and/or are near completion, could have a better understanding of their
sustainability after the end of LIFE financing.
Q.2. To what extent do the observed outcomes correspond to the programme’s
objectives and
to the EU 2020 strategy on sustainable growth?
Actual results are not yet available at this stage of the programme’s implementation.
There is evidence that the anticipated results of the projects and the activities under implementation
are addressing all of the programme’s objectives. However, since 2014 call there have been no
projects awarded directly targeting the thematic areas under environment and health (one of the
objectives of the 7
th
EAP) In particular, the role of LIFE as a catalyst is built on the lessons learnt
from LIFE+ and results from the programme’s ability to attract other funding, to disseminate best
practice and knowledge (spreading effect) and to support actions to improve and accelerate changes
directly targeting environmental externalities. Some evidence from LIFE+ and LIFE confirms that the
programme is doing well in playing its role of catalyst.
Initial findings from the programme’s implementation show that the programme is supporting the
Europe 2020 strategy:
- by financing projects expected to contribute to resource efficiency and sustainable growth,
- by promoting innovation and
- by slightly contributing to employment, although job creation is not one of the primary aims of the
LIFE programme.
Some of the most recent policy developments financed by LIFE
namely the circular economy
package adopted in 2015 and the 2030 climate and energy framework adopted in 2014
are expected
to shape the future of the EU economy in the coming decades.
Q.3. What are the factors positively and negatively influencing the delivery of the
objectives?
Again, at this early stage of the programme’s implementation, it is not possible to determine the
factors that are influencing the delivery of the LIFE objectives.
Some of them are outside EU control (such as extreme weather conditions, the financial crisis,
etc.) and cannot be addressed by the LIFE programme itself.
However, the experience of these first years of implementation shows some factors which are
considered to have a positive and negative influence on the delivery of the objectives.
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Positive influence
The LIFE programme’s
flexibility to address emerging challenges and priorities, its mix of
activities and the support the programme has from the stakeholders are three factors which
positively influence the delivery of the objectives.
1.
The LIFE programme is flexible because it can finance projects of different sizes that
attract small, medium and large enterprises, universities, research centres, national and
local authorities, civil society and non-governmental organisations. The LIFE
programme’s recent contribution to the European Solidarity Corps shows that the
programme’s existing range of activities is able to rapidly respond to emerging needs and
opportunities.
The mix of activities combines:
-
the experience acquired during 25 years of programme implementation with
-
the new types of actions introduced by the LIFE Regulation to provide a more
comprehensive support (integrated projects), specific assistance (capacity-building
and technical assistance projects) and to test new forms of financing (financial
instruments).
The traditional projects are managed in accordance with a comprehensive package of
specific procedures
based on lessons learnt from experience
which enable the
project’s life to be followed closely:
-
In the award procedure, the applicant is required to identify the project’s expected
impact of the project, by using specific indicators and descriptors and providing
during-project and after–project values.
From the project’s earliest stages, the external specialised monitoring experts and
the EASME/Commission officials assist the beneficiary with the project’s
implementation. Besides the reporting, almost one monitoring visit per year on
average is organised to see how each traditional and integrated project is
performing, how each is progressing towards the expected impact and concretely
how the funds are being used.
2.
-
According to the initial findings for the programme’s first years of implementation, the
new types of activities have demonstrated a strong potential to be effective, thus
confirming the initial expectations:
-
-
-
Integrated projects are of a larger scale and have a larger outreach than the
traditional projects;
Financial instruments are pilot initiatives designed to help build the future of
financing energy efficiency and biodiversity/climate adaptation;
Technical assistance projects are improving the quality of integrated projects, and
capacity-building projects are investments to enable countries under represented
in the LIFE programme to participate more.
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The European Economic and Social Committee confirmed this in a recent draft opinion
50
.
Taking into account the information received from its constituencies, it welcomes the
LIFE programme’s high
degree of flexibility and adaptability to new challenges and the
experience the programme has gained in recent years.
3.
The results of the interviews with the project beneficiaries and the open public
consultation show a positive perception of the quality of the LIFE projects, which are seen
as a concrete answer to existing needs. This positive perception is shared also by
unsuccessful candidates, which also recognised LIFE as an important contributor to
biodiversity and nature conservation.
For more information on the support from the stakeholders, see Annex 4 and the answer to Q12
below.
Negative influence
Given that 81
% of the programme’s overall financial resources are devoted to projects, the
results of the LIFE programme are highly dependent on the projects. This is true for each
objective and priority area. The programme’s success will also be determined by the capacity to
replicate and transfer the project results and thus have a multiplier effect.
Some issues have been identified which can negatively affect the delivery of the objectives:
1.
In terms of coverage, LIFE has supported the definition, agreement and development of
new emerging priorities
such as the circular economy and the 2030 climate and energy
framework targets, the implementation of the Paris Agreement ratified in 2016 as well as
the EU’s adaptation strategy whose importance and ramifications
w
ere unknown when the
LIFE Regulation was adopted. These new priorities are de facto being addressed by
limiting the financing for other priority issues. This could represent a problem, particularly
in the near future, because of the need to adequately finance their implementation and
further development.
Taking into account the bottom-up approach which cannot anticipate the quantity and
quality of the proposals received or the size of the LIFE budget, which was defined when
the Regulation was adopted, there is a greater risk that not all the objectives and priority
areas will be adequately covered by projects. The competition for the limited available
resources is extremely strong. Following the 2014 and 2015 calls for proposals, under the
sub-programme for environment for example, projects addressing the thematic priorities
under environment and health and 30 % of the project topics have not received any
financing.
Thematic priorities and project topics were introduced in the current LIFE programme to
better focus key targets. However, even if it is premature to draw conclusions from the first
two years of implementation, some initial observations can be made. Given the available
financial resources, the scope of the priorities could be too broad for a critical mass to
trigger change on all the environmental and climate issues.
50
‘NAT/689 Halbzeitbewertung des LIFE-Programms’. European Economic and Social Committee. Section for
Agriculture, Rural Development and the Environment. Sustainable Development Observatory. See Box 16.
Moreover, the ESC also signalled the following changes introduced in the period 2014-2020:
focus on the
countries with greater implementation deficits; abolition of national quotas; better investment opportunities
for enterprises; greater emphasis on innovation; more synergies with other programmes, starting with the new
integrated projects introduced in 2014 [..]; use of entirely new environmental financial instruments (PF4EE,
NCFF), creating a climate dimension
’.
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However, the thematic priorities which reflect environmental needs in all Member States
cannot be reduced. There are two main reasons for this:
a) a reduction would mean that some aspects of the specific objectives would not be
covered;
b) a reduction could have a drastic impact in the Member State if the thematic priority no
longer covered reflected specific key needs.
On the project topics, besides the possibility of addressing any possible need, thought
should be given to introducing a better focus in the next MAWP. This could be done, for
example, by targeting specific project topics, to be selected year by year taking into
account targeted challenges and the results of previous calls for proposals.
2.
The second risk is related to the outcomes of the projects and to the replicability and
transferability of their results.
The potential for replicability and transferability is one of the project award criteria. This
criterion
ensures the programme’s strategic focus to increase its EU added value and its
catalytic effect.
Moreover, during the life of the project, there is close monitoring, and platform meetings
are organised to encourage the exchange of experiences and best practices. This makes it
easier to disseminate and transfer project results. Meetings are also organised with potential
investors so the beneficiaries can present their investment plans.
Before
the end of the project, ‘after-LIFE Plans’ are drawn up to organise
the continuation
of the activities after LIFE financing ends.
Despite these mitigating measures, there is the risk that a project will not produce the
expected results. This is particularly the case for nature projects where climatic conditions
could have an impact on the outcomes and/or duration of a project.
Indeed, it is not possible to overcome all the obstacles with these measures. This is the case,
for example, when beneficiaries lack financial resources and/or lack capacity/human
resources to plan an investment. Such a situation may limit the possibility to multiply the
project results.
The possibility of providing customised accompanying measures for those projects showing
a promising potential for replicability and transferability should be explored. More
information on project sustainability and replicability is provided in paragraph.6.6.
Q.3. What factors are positively and negatively influencing delivery of the objectives?
Although it is not possible
at this stage of the programme’s
implementation to definitively determine
the factors influencing delivery of the LIFE objectives, and given that some of these cannot be
controlled (such as extreme weather conditions, the financial crisis, etc..), the experience of these first
years of implementation shows that
-
On the positive side:
-
-
-
the programme is flexible and able to rapidly respond to emerging needs and priorities;
it involves a wide range of stakeholders, who are highly supportive of the programme.
the mix of activities combines activities based on lessons learnt from 25 years of experience
such as traditional projects
with new activities
such as integrated, capacity-building
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and technical assistance projects as well as financial instruments
which are expected to
increase the
programme’s effectiveness.
-
On the negative side:
-
given the new emerging challenges, the bottom-up approach and the available financial
resources, there is a risk that not all the priorities will be covered by adequate projects. The
possibility of more flexible project topics could be explored.
Risks that the projects will not deliver the expected outcomes exists. However, a bulk of
measures covering the entire project life cycle is in place to reduce this risk. The introduction
of customised accompanying measures to overcome the obstacles that limit the possibility to
replicate/transfer the results of the most promising projects could be explored.
-
Q.4.
To what extent is the geographical distribution of projects effective?
The distribution of LIFE projects between Member States is pursued through three main
mechanisms:
(a) national allocations;
(b) capacity-building projects;
(c) geographical balance for the integrated projects.
(a) Indicative national allocations are established for projects, other than integrated projects,
under the sub-programme for environment
51
during the first multi-annual work programme.
At present, some Member States have reached or are close to reaching their quota of funds
according to the national allocations. However, the system of national allocation is not
exclusive: if funds remain available after the award of a grant to all the successful projects from
the Member States which have not exhausted their national allocations, they are redistributed on
the basis of merit. As a consequence, two Member States (Spain, Italy) share more than a third
of the entire LIFE budget allocation for traditional grants for 2014 and 2015. This further
confirms that the national allocations are not effective in ensuring a more balanced distribution
of projects.
Also, Spain and Italy submitted the biggest number of proposals and have a reduced percentage
of success in comparison to other Member States. As the interviews with project beneficiaries
have revealed, one of the reasons for such a strong participation from these two countries is the
lack of local public funds for environment and climate action. The proactive action of the
national contact points is also thought to play a role in Spain and Italy’s active participation.
National allocations will be abandoned in the second multiannual work programme because, as
emerged during the impact assessment for the LIFE programme, they ‘have not led to a more
balanced distribution of projects across the EU (e.g. projects from Italy, Spain and Germany
51
These national allocations are determined on the basis of the principles of solidarity and responsibility-sharing.
They take into account the criteria defined in Annex I of the Regulation and are based on the population and
natural resources expressed in terms of Natura 2000 sites within the territory of a Member State.
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receive most of the funding under LIFE+), [..] they may lead to selecting projects of lower
quality, which would have an impact on the effectiveness of the Programme to provide EU
added value and had a perverse impact on smaller Member States (smaller allocations do not
encourage submission of proposals)’
52
.
(b) capacity-building projects are aimed at enabling selected Member States
53
to build up their
capacity to submit more good quality projects by strengthening the role of the network of
national players
the national contact points (NCPs)
.
The NCPs provides institutional support to prepare and implement projects, and their work is
appreciated. Nevertheless, the consultations carried out for the external study confirm that the
applicants across Europe receive varying degrees of support, depending on the quantity and
quality of the resources made available by each Member State.
There need to be minimum standards for all Member States on providing assistance for the
submission of proposals. Many NCPs also need to adopt a more proactive approach.
The capacity-building projects have been put in place in anticipation of the phasing-out of the
national allocations by 2018, mentioned earlier. They are action grants used to finance training,
capacity-building activities, external expertise, the dissemination of information and
administrative support.
Of the 15 Member States eligible, 14 submitted a proposal which has been financed and is in
progress.
(c) a geographical balance of integrated projects, which is to be achieved by indicatively
allocating at least three integrated projects to each Member State under both sub-programmes.
Q
.4. To what extent is the geographical distribution of projects effective?
Two Member States (Italy and Spain) share more than a third of the entire LIFE budget for traditional
grants for 2014 and 2015.
There was an uneven distribution of funds among Member States also under the previous programme,
with Italy, Spain and Germany receiving most of the grants.
One of the reasons for such a strong participation is the lack of local public funds for environment and
climate action. The interviews with project beneficiaries confirmed this. Another reason is the role
played by the NCPs, which are more proactive in some countries than in others.
However, in view of the phasing-out of national allocations in the second MAWP that were
introduced in LIFE+, different mechanisms have been put in place to ensure a more equitable
distribution and greater effectiveness of LIFE funds between Member States. These mechanisms
include capacity-building
projects to boost selected Member States’ capacity to submit more good
quality projects and a geographical balance of the integrated projects. However being the
52
See Commission staff working paper ‘Impact assessment accompanying the document ‘Proposal for a
Regulation on the establishment of a Programme for the Environment
and Climate Action’
(LIFE)COM(2011)874 final, page 18.
The eligibility criteria for the capacity-building projects are defined in the LIFE Regulation.
53
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programme’s implementation at its early stage, it is not possible to make definitive statements on the
effectivity of the projects geographical distribution.
These mechanisms are expected to start producing some results during the next MAWP (2018-2020).
Q.5. What is the role of LIFE in bridging uneven integration of environmental and climate
action objectives among Member States?
The situation in the Member States differs widely when it comes to:
- the availability and use of natural resources and the speed at which they are depleted;
- the degree to which environmental and climate concerns are taken into account in their
policies.
54
.
Addressing the uneven integration of environmental and climate action objectives is a long-
term challenge in a constantly evolving context where environmental and climate legislation
and policies are playing a leading role.
As underlined
in the reports of the European Environment Agency, ‘emissions of specific
pollutants to the air, water and soil have generally been reduced significantly. These
improvements are to a substantial degree a result of the comprehensive environment legislation
established across Europe
55
’.
Since 1992, the only dedicated funding programme, which has systematically supported and
accompanied environment and climate legislation and policies, is LIFE.
The LIFE programme’s role in bridging the uneven integration of environmental and climate
action objectives between Member States is twofold:
(a) on the one hand, the programme provides customised solutions designed to respond to
the specific problems of each Member State by taking into account the existing
situation;
(b) on the other hand, it coordinates at EU level the vision, targets and requirements needed
to define, implement and enforce EU environmental and climate legislation and policies.
(a) For the customised solutions, specific actions are defined through a flexible bottom-up
approach which takes into account the local situation while targeting the implementation of
existing environmental and climate policies and legislation or better governance. This is the
reason why 81
% of LIFE’s overall financial resources are devoted to grants, which are mainly
projects conceived by different stakeholders to solve the needs they perceive (see above answer
to question Q.2 for the activities in support of the second and third objectives of the LIFE
programme).
54
The cross-
country comparisons in the report ‘The European environment — state and outlook 2015’ present
some of these differences, from air pollution to biodiversity, greenhouse gas emissions and resource
efficiency. See for further details, ‘SOER 2015 —
The European environment
state and outlook 2015-
Cross countries comparisons’
European Environment Agency.
Ibidem.
Executive
Summary.
55
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The integrated projects are also specifically meant to provide examples of good practice for an
efficient and well-coordinated implementation of EU environmental and climate policy in
Member States and regions, with the involvement of all stakeholders.
(b)
EU-level coordination is mainly ensured through the procurement activities, which are
based on a top-down approach: the needs are defined by the Commission with the aim to
support the coordinated definition, implementation and enforcement of EU environmental and
climate legislation. The procurement activities help target uneven integration of environment
and climate action in the practices of Member States by:
-
identifying targets for specific legislative acts or policies (see above under Q.1,
objective 2, for the LIFE programme’s contributions to the EU environmental and
climate policy and legislation) which take into account the situation in the different
Member States (see Boxes 10 and 15 for possible examples).
providing specific inputs to Member States on their implementation of environmental
and climate policies and legislation and supporting the exchange of solutions and best
practices (see Boxes 3 and 11 for concrete examples).
Box 11
LIFE support to Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy
The Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy initiative (see
http://www.covenantofmayors.eu/index_en.html) supports the efforts by local authorities to implement
sustainable climate and energy policies. LIFE funding is used to run the Covenant of Mayors initiative together
with funding from Horizon 2020 and the Foreign Policy Instrument.
By signing up to the Covenant, local authorities commit to implement EU objectives in the 2030 climate and
energy package: new signatories have to commit to action to support implementation of the EU 40 %
greenhouse gas-reduction target by 2030 and the adoption of a joint approach to tackling mitigation and
adaptation to climate change. To date, there are more than 800 signatories that have signed up to implement the
2030 and climate change adaptation targets.
The Covenant of Mayors provides capacity-building to local authorities to design and finance integrated
strategies to reduce CO2 (and possibly other greenhouse gas) emissions and adapt to climate risks. This
includes providing information and guidance on funding available from the European budget to support the
implementation of strategies.
A concrete example of a capacity-building activity is the twinning programme which offers cities, regions and
provinces across Europe the opportunity to take part in exchanges to increase local authorities’ capacity and
knowledge to mitigate and adapt to climate change. There is also a help desk to provide assistance to
signatories.
The LIFE action grants for climate change adaptation and integrated projects also encourage implementation of
projects that implement the Covenant framework.
-
Q.5. What is the role of LIFE in bridging uneven integration of environmental and climate
action objectives among Member States?
The situation in the Member States differs widely when it comes to the availability of natural
resources and defining, implementing and enforcing environmental and climate legislation and
policies.
EU environmental and climate legislation and policies are already contributing to the integration of
environmental and climate objectives into Member States by setting up a comprehensive
48
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environmental legislative framework. The definition, implementation and enforcement of these set of
laws have all been supported in a range of ways via the LIFE programme. .
LIFE’s role in bridging the uneven integration of environmental and climate
action objectives between
Member States is twofold:
(a)
on the one hand, the programme provides customised solutions to respond to the specific
problems of each Member State by taking into account the existing situation. This is done mainly
through the 81 % of its resources which are devoted to support bottom-up actions such as grants and
financial instruments.
(b)
on the other hand, LIFE helps to coordinate at EU level the vision, targets and requirements of
EU environmental and climate action. This is done mainly through procurement activities which aim
to support the definition, implementation and enforcement of EU environmental and climate
legislation and policies as well as the exchange of solutions and best practices.
5.2. Efficiency
56
Q.6. To what extent are the costs (especially management) of the LIFE programme
justified, given the effects which have been achieved, and are likely to be achieved, by the end
of the LIFE programme?
To analyse the programme’s efficiency, the external study estimated
the value for money of the
anticipated results of a series of ongoing LIFE projects from the 2014 call. The estimated value
for money was compared to the programme’s overall cost.
In particular, the external study estimated the benefits derived from the conservation of 17
million hectares of Natura 2000 sites and the reduction of 489 000 tonnes of CO2 (including
methane and the reduction of electricity consumed). The study used the social cost of carbon
(SCC) approach and calculated the quota attributable to LIFE’s financing (i.e. 75
% for nature
projects and 60 % for climate change mitigation projects on the basis of the related EU co-
financing rates).
On the basis of this estimate, the benefits derived from LIFE 2014 financing the conservation of
Natura 2000 sites would reach EUR 1.5 billion and the benefits from financing the reduction of
CO2 would lead to a savings of EUR 0.2 billion for society.
The relevant projects selected under the 2014 calls for proposals would therefore contribute to a
societal benefit of EUR 1.7 billion. This represents four times the cost of the overall LIFE
budget for 2014 (EUR 405 million) and shows the
programme’s high
value for money.
On the programme’s management, the cost-benefit
analysis that led to the transfer of
management of most of the LIFE grants to EASME in 2014 estimated that the cost of managing
56
The replies to questions Q.6, Q.7 and Q.8 provide
an overview of the programme’s efficiency. The first and
second questions concern the programme as a whole, with the first focused on the justification of the
programme’s costs in terms of a cost/benefit analysis and the second on the state of play of the
measures
introduced to increase the efficiency of the current LIFE programme. The third question considers aspects
related to the grant management, which mostly concern the Commission and the applicants/beneficiaries.
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the programme would be reduced, compared to managing LIFE+. This has now been confirmed
by the actual data (see the reply to Q.7).
Moreover, the analysis included an estimate of the management costs for different programmes.
This implies that some comparisons can be made
57
.
These results were elaborated to determine the human and financial resources needed by
EASME in 2014-2020 to manage the implementation of each programme delegated to the
Agency.
The data show that LIFE is less costly to manage than other programmes.
Indeed, for the programmes managed by EASME, when comparing the costs of the various
programmes as a percentage of the total budget managed, LIFE costs significantly less to
manage than COSME
58
, EMFF
59
and Horizon 2020
60
. This can be seen from the figure below.
Figure 9. Costs of various programmes managed by EASME
Source: Analysis based on data from the financial statement of COM(2013)9414.
57
These comparisons are useful to provide an overall idea of the costs of managing a programme. However, it is
clear that the comparisons do not have an absolute value, given that each programme has a different mix of
activities, such as procurement, grants, etc., which have implications for the related workload
.
58
EU programme for the Competitiveness of Enterprises and Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs).
European Maritime and Fisheries Fund.
The EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation.
59
60
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These costs are based on the scenarios analysed when management was transferred from the
Commission to EASME and do not include all the costs necessary for the
programme’s
implementation. These are costs such as those related to the work environment (buildings,
equipment and other operating expenditures), the other costs (experts, studies, audits,
information and communication, IT, etc.) and the costs of supervision by the Commission.
These costs are expected to increase progressively
61
and are estimated at EUR 80 million for
2014-2020. They therefore represent 3.6 % of the overall amount of EUR 2.25 billion managed
by EASME for the LIFE programme.
In terms of utilisation of funds in the projects, the results of ex-post controls on LIFE+ and on-
site monitoring of LIFE projects shows that the
‘error rate’ —
namely the amount that is
considered at risk
is well below the materiality benchmark
62
threshold of 2 % and is
declining: it was EUR 2.27 for every EUR 100 spent in 2012, falling to EUR 1.24 in 2015 and
even further to 0.44 EUR in 2016.
Q.6. To what extent are the costs (especially management) of the LIFE programme justified,
given the effects which have been achieved, and are likely to be achieved by the end of the LIFE
programme?
Although it is premature to establish whether the LIFE programme provides value for money at this
early stage of implementation, the external study has examined a series of projects selected under the
2014 calls for proposals. The study estimated that the anticipated results of these projects would have
a societal benefit of EUR 1.7 billion. This would cover four times the cost of the overall LIFE budget
for 2014.
Further, on the management of the LIFE programme, the reduction of costs linked to externalisation
of the management of the programme has exceeded expectations (see the answer to Q.7).
Moreover, in comparative terms, taking into account the financial resources attributed to EASME as a
percentage of the funds transferred by the Commission to EASME for the management of the
different programmes, the external study has concluded that the LIFE management structure appears
to be less costly than the management structure of other EU-funded programmes.
Q.7. Have the changes made between LIFE+ and the current LIFE programme improved
efficiency?
It is too soon to estimate the impact that the changes introduced in the LIFE programme have
had on the programme’s efficiency in
comparison with LIFE+.
However, given that the major change to increase the programme’s efficiency was the transfer
of most of the grant management to EASME, some considerations can be derived from the cost-
benefit analysis.
61
See table 7 for more details on the estimated and real figures in 2014, 2015 and 2016.
Materiality benchmark is the threshold above which missing or incorrect information in financial statements is
considered to have an impact.
62
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The transfer to EASME is considered to bring efficiency to the management of the programme,
because it allows for economies of scale when implementing a large number of homogenous
and standardised operations to manage grants. It allows the Commission to focus on policy-
making and develop, implement and enforce EU environmental and climate policy and
legislation.
As mentioned in the financial statement accompanying Commission Decision
COM(2013)9414
63
, the results of transferring part of the management of the LIFE programme
to EASME was expected to bring an overall efficiency gain of EUR 8.2 million in the period
2017-2020. This is in comparison to a scenario where the grant management would have
remained inside the Commission.
The difference between the initial estimate and the actual data on the
programme’s
implementation shows a further increase of the efficiency gain for the first 3 years, as can be
seen in the table below.
Table 7: Transfer from Commission to EASME: estimates and real figures (2014-2016) in EUR.
Estimated figures/years
Total delegated amount (A)
Total management costs (B)
Percentage (B/A)
Real figures/years
Total delegated amount (A)
Total management costs (B)
Percentage (B/A)
2014
226,840
3,476
1.5%
2014
233,050
3,088
1.3%
2015
240,444
5,727
2.4%
2015
249,811
5,609
2.2%
2016
258,638
7,956
3.1%
2016
271,511
7,170
2.6%
Possible negative side effects of transferring management to EASME, such as the lack of
continuity and the loss of input from projects for policy-making and vice versa, have been
prevented.
This has been done by transferring key human resources from the Commission to EASME and
by working on a policy-integration strategy which includes recurrent and one-off activities to
ensure that:
-
-
policy needs are reflected in the programme and project implementation;
relevant outputs and findings from projects reach and can be used by policy-makers.
The strategy includes activities such as training for Agency staff on specific policies, joint
thematic cluster meetings with projects, shared reflection on policy needs in the calls for
proposals, provision of feedback on project outcomes relevant for policy-making, etc.
The transfer of most of the LIFE grants to EASME is taking place in line with the initial
planning. Respondents to the public consultation reported that the transfer of grant management
63
Commission Decision of 23.12.2013 delegating powers to the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized
Enterprises with a view to performance of tasks linked to the implementation of Union programmes in the
field of energy, environment, climate action, competitiveness and SMEs, research and innovation and ICT,
comprising, in particular, implementation of appropriations entered in the general budget of the Union.
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to EASME was done smoothly, and different
stakeholders perceive the Agency’s work as
valuable. Thus, externalisation does not seem to be affecting quality.
Q.7. Have the changes made between LIFE+ and this LIFE programme improved efficiency?
As this stage of the programme’s implementation, the major change involves the
transfer of part of the
management of the LIFE programme from the Commission to EASME.
For 2014-2020 the transfer is expected to result in a EUR 8.2 million gain in efficiency compared with
a scenario where the grant management would have remained inside the Commission. Initial figures
for actual costs are already indicating that efficiency gains may be even greater than estimated
Further, the transfer was done smoothly, and LIFE
stakeholders perceive EASME’s work as valuable.
Lack of continuity and loss of input from projects for policy-making and vice versa have been
prevented by transferring key Commission staff to EASME and by promoting activities such as
training of Agency staff on specific policies, joint thematic cluster meetings with projects, shared
reflection on policy needs in the calls for proposals, provision of feedback on project outcomes
relevant for policy-making, etc.
Q.8.
Is there scope for efficiency gains, simplification and burden reduction?
Following the LIFE+ evaluation which highlighted the demand to simplify the application
process and reporting, the following simplification measures were introduced:
-
-
-
a two-step award procedure for the integrated projects;
a reduced burden to present some certificates;
a streamlining of the system for the electronic submission of proposals (e-proposal).
The two-step award procedure for the integrated projects is particularly appreciated by both the
applicants and the Commission: a complete proposal is submitted only for projects which, after
a first screening, are eligible for a grant. This simplifies the work of the applicant and the
evaluation and makes possible an interaction between the Commission and the applicant to
strengthen specific aspects of the proposals.
Recently the requirement to submit an external audit certificate and/or the VAT certificate was
waived. Particularly for the audit certificate, the beneficiaries will be able to save time and
money by no longer having to contract out/select/support the work of an external auditor,
whose reports did not always meet the Commission’s expectations. The beneficiaries reacted
very positively to this simplification.
E-proposal is a useful tool for the applicants to build and submit LIFE project proposals and for
the Commission/EASME to organise and run the award process.
According to the beneficiaries, e-proposal has reduced the administrative burden of submitting
proposals and conducting the award process in general. It has also led to increased
communication among applicants/beneficiaries and the Commission/EASME during the award
phase. However, according to unsuccessful applicants, the submission of proposals is perceived
to be still too complicated, requiring an unnecessary amount of information from the start.
It can be concluded from the overall results of the consultations process that, although e-
proposals introduced some improvements, there is still a widespread demand to simplify LIFE
procedures for grants. This came through in the interviews with all stakeholders.
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The requirements on participating in the calls for proposals and managing the projects are based
on the lessons progressively learnt from twenty five years of implementation of the programme
but need to be further streamlined.
Some possible measures envisaged by the external study to reduce the burden include:
-
waiving for all applicants the requirement to submit at the start of the process a
complete proposal by introducing a two-step award procedure for traditional projects for
priority areas where the demand is particularly high;
adapting reporting requirements in proportion to the length and complexity of projects
and the value of the grant. This would reduce the administrative burden for small
projects or for projects of a limited duration. A more supportive role of the monitoring
experts could also be envisaged here;
simplifying the project topics and the indicators database, which project beneficiaries
see as particularly cumbersome.
-
-
Some of these concerns may be addressed by fine-tuning internal practices in EASME or the
Commission. In this context the second LIFE MAWP (2018-2020) to be adopted at the end of
2017 will offer the opportunity to address some specific concerns such as the methodology for
project selection and the definition of priority topics and related indicators.
For LIFE communication activities, the external study found that the mix of actions is
reasonably appropriate at project level. Moreover, project beneficiaries rate the LIFE
communication activities as ‘good’ or ‘very good’, in particular the LIFE website (75
%) and
the LIFE best project publications and awards (72 %).
However, it appears that there is some room for improvement, especially when it comes to the
Commission’s
social media activities, press releases and best practice events.
The main shortcomings are:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
reliance on passive one-way communication tactics,
vague definition of target audiences,
lack of objective-specific and target-specific key messages,
lack of structured coordination between the several players involved in the delivery of
the communication actions,
absence of a procedure to keep the strategy responsive to the needs of target groups and
strategic needs,
lack of an approach based on results-driven communication, and
emphasis on the type and number of activities rather than on the importance of results-
driven communication.
These strategic weaknesses potentially reduce the value of all communication activities and risk
limiting their potential contribution to the LIFE programme’s policy objectives.
Q.8. Is there scope for efficiency gains, simplification and burden reduction?
As far as grant management is concerned, there is still a widespread demand to further streamline
LIFE procedures, as not all the simplification measures originally proposed by the Commission for the
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LIFE programme in 2014-2020 have been introduced and further improvements are possible in the
application process and project management.
The external study, therefore, identified some measures to reduce the burden for the submission of
proposals, reporting requirements and indicators. The measures could be introduced by fine-tuning
internal practices in EASME or the Commission, or through the second LIFE MAWP (2018-2020).
Need for improvement was also identified for the LIFE communication strategy to ensure a more
active and responsive approach, better targeting audiences and delivering objective-specific and
target-specific key messages.
5.3. Coherence
Q.9. To what extent does the LIFE programme have a coherent structure taking into
account its two sub-programmes, its priority areas and the various types of interventions
(internal coherence)?
The internal structure of the LIFE programme is consistent with EU policies and priorities,
covering the most relevant climate and environmental topics:
-
The introduction of the climate action sub-programme and the 75:25 allocation of funds
between the two sub-programmes have helped to respond to the Union request of increasing
the climate-related proportion of the Union budget to at least 20 % for all different policies.
The level of demand across the three priority areas for climate action since their
introduction has further demonstrated that the allocation of funds is adequate because:
-
-
It has allowed the programme to respond to an increased demand in absolute value for
climate action projects;
There are fewer proposals in comparison to the proposals presented to the other sub
programme (13 % of the total demand for projects and 23 % of the project overall up-take)
and overall value (8 % of the total project demand and 19 % of the overall up-take) to the
one for the projects under the environment sub-programme priority areas.
In terms of value, the total of the EU funding request at the proposal level for the calls 2014
and 2015
64
presented under the sub programme for environment was €3.093.966.224 (the
total EU co-financing for ENV proposals for 2014-2015
was €353.770.241
)
while the EU
funding request at the proposal level for the call for 2014 and 2015 presented under the sub
programme for climate action was €383.049.723 (the total EU co-financed
for CLIMA
proposals for 2014-2015
65
was €83.928.508).
The results of the calls for proposals do not show any need to revise the ceiling of 81 % of
the programme’s budget devoted to projects, which is in line with the 78
% applied under
LIFE+. In addition, no sign of concern emerged from the public consultation on the 81 %
ceiling.
The priority areas nature and biodiversity, environment and resource efficiency, climate
mitigation and adaptation
as defined in the Regulation
are intended to address a range
of issues of importance to various key stakeholders'.
For traditional projects
Idem
-
-
-
64
65
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The priority areas environmental and climate governance and information are a response to
more cross-cutting needs. They address the market failure arising from the lack of
information, contribute to compliance with and enforcement of legislation and broaden the
participation of stakeholders in the consultation on and implementation of policies.
This difference is reflected in the type of activities financed for each priority area, as shown
in Figure 10 below.
Figure 10. Types of activities per priority areas (LIFE 2014-2015)
Source: Commission’s databases
For an optimal use of resources and to produce a combined effect, the LIFE Regulation calls for
cooperation on actions under the environment sub-programme and climate change adaptation
and mitigation measures under the climate action sub-programme. Moreover, the Regulation
underlines that projects financed by the LIFE programme should help to achieve the specific
objectives of more than one priority area.
In this context, the external study
—by
analysing the database of indicators
documented
cases of a combined effect, i.e. synergies between the priority areas and/or the thematic
priorities and confirmed that these synergies are consistent with the objectives per priority area.
In particular:
-
-
Nature and biodiversity projects also contribute very strongly to water and marine
environment, climate adaptation and information and governance indicators;
Resource-efficiency projects contribute significantly to waste indicators, and waste projects
contribute a lot to resource efficiency as well as to environment and health indicators and to
climate mitigation;
Climate mitigation projects contribute a lot to nature and biodiversity and air quality but
also to resource efficiency and climate adaptation indicators. In turn, climate adaptation
projects also contribute to nature and biodiversity;
Water and marine environment projects contribute a lot to climate adaptation but also to
nature and biodiversity, resource efficiency and environment and health.
-
-
The figure below shows this synergy: the numbers stated are percentages (the amount is 100 %
for each row).
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For instance, the first row indicates the percentage of projects from other priority areas that
have contributed to nature and biodiversity indicators. The colours indicate the frequency (i.e.
in the first row between 12 to 20 resource-efficiency projects have declared an impact on at
least one biodiversity indicator. This represents 6 % of the overall contribution from projects of
different priority areas to biodiversity indicators).
Figure 11
Extent of synergies in LIFE projects
Source: External study
Q.9. To what extent does the LIFE programme have a coherent structure, taking into account
its two sub-programmes, its priority areas and the various types of interventions (internal
coherence)?
As this stage of
the programme’s implementation, no particular problem of coherence in the internal
structure of the programme was detected.
The external study has documented combined effects or synergies between the priority areas and/or
the thematic priorities based on indicators, finding that much of the ongoing projects contribute
strongly to other priority areas. For example, as required by the LIFE Regulation, climate mitigation
projects contribute to climate change adaptation, nature and biodiversity, air quality and resource
efficiency.
Also the 75:25 allocations of funds between the two sub programmes has been demonstrated to be
adequate.
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Q.10. To what extent is the LIFE programme complementary and enjoying synergies with
other relevant EU funding programmes (i.e. the European Structural and Investment Funds
ESIF, Horizon 2020) (external coherence)?
LIFE is the only EU dedicated funding programme for environment and climate action.
Taking into account its overall features and as envisaged in the LIFE Regulation, LIFE is
designed to be complementary to other EU funding programmes. This is particularly the case
for Horizon 2020 (the framework programme for research and innovation), the European
Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the European Agricultural Fund for
Rural Development (which work to support economic development across all EU countries, in
line with the objectives of the Europe 2020 strategy) and the European Maritime and Fisheries
Fund.
As this stage of all the programmes’
implementation,
it is not possible to conclude on the
external coherence of LIFE. Even small changes in how one action is implemented can trigger
more or less complementarities with other ongoing actions. Nonetheless, the possible risk of
overlap is limited because the programmes have different scopes.
In particular, the LIFE Regulation mentions explicitly the need to develop synergies with
Horizon 2020 and to ensure coordination to prevent double funding. Moreover, it underlines
that the LIFE programme should also encourage the uptake of the results of environmental and
climate-related research and innovation under Horizon 2020.
In this context, the transfer of the relevant part of the two programmes from the Commission to
a sole executive agency represents the best possible answer to this need for synergies and
coordination.
EASME recently undertook an analysis
66
to identify areas of synergies and potential overlaps.
The analysis confirmed that LIFE and Horizon 2020 contribute to common objectives in
different
and in some cases complementary
ways. During these first years of
implementation, LIFE and Horizon 2020 have functioned in a mutually reinforcing manner.
Under Horizon 2020, environmental and climate action research is tackled by a series of actions
and opportunities
for collaboration under the societal challenge ‘climate action, environment,
resource efficiency and raw materials’. Moreover, specific activities could also be financed
under the societal challenge ‘secure, clean and efficient energy’ or under relevant
cross-cutting
priorities for 2016-2017 (i.e. the circular economy).
66
Uptake of the results of EU-funded research projects in the LIFE NAT 2014-2015 portfolio.
EASME
Ares(2016)4835449 - 29/08/2016
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Box 12: Example of uptake in LIFE projects of research-funded activities
The project ‘Re-establishment
of the Ribbed Limpet (Patella ferruginea) in Ligurian Marine
Protected Areas
by Restocking and Controlled Reproduction’ (LIFE15 NAT/IT/000771 —
RELIFE
project) built upon the experience and the results of two FP7 projects: ENRICH and RESURCH. The
coordinator of these two projects is also the Scientific Coordinator of RELIFE. The ENRICH project
aimed at optimising sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus rearing, in order to enrich pre-existing
aquaculture farms (based on sea bass, bream, and/or different bivalves). RESURCH focused on the
technology required to make commercial sea urchin production a reality across Europe. Experience
gained and techniques developed in both projects are expected to be used in P.ferruginea rearing by
RELIFE.
The genetic studies to be undertaken in the project ‘Conservation and restoration of mediterranean
Taxus
baccata woods (9580*) in the Cantabrian Mountains’ (LIFE15 NAT/ES/000790 —
LIFE
BACCATA) will make use of the outcomes of the FP6 project EVOLTREE and the Biodiversa-
funded LinkTree project. The experience from these projects will be integrated in the actions
planned in LIFE BACCATA. Lessons from this project will help develop best practice for
conservation by providing indicators and guidance to LIFE BACCATA.
‘The rescue of endemic priority plant species Minuartia smejkalii’ (LIFE15 NAT/CZ/000818 —
Life
for Minuartia) project, to be implemented in the Czech Republic, will follow the latest results from
Horizon 2020 projects dealing with climate change. The project plans to include these results in their
network. In addition, in the context of its work to model the impact of climate change on Minuartia
smejkalii, the project plans to use the findings of three FP7 projects on climate change (CCTAME,
Past4future and Carbon-extreme) as well as data from the Copernicus climate change information
service and from the EU Climate Adaptation Platform Copernicus service.
The project ‘Improvement of habitats and population connectivity for endangered amphibians in the
city-region
of Aachen’ (LIFE15 NAT/DE/000743 —
Amphibienverbund) will implement the results
of the BiodivERsA-funded project RACE
Risk Assessment of chytridiomycosis to European
amphibians
in some of its activities. This will particularly be the case with compliance with
standards on health checks to be performed on the donor population.
The results of the FP7-funded project SCALES were used to plan the methodology for the location
of ecological corridors between protected areas proposed in the project ‘Osprey conservation in
selected SPA Natura 2000 sites in Poland’ (LIFE15 NAT/PL/000819 —
LIFEPandionPL). This was
particularly the case for planning and selecting potential areas for settlement by ospreys.
The project ‘Conservation and management of freshwater fauna of EU interest within the ecological
corridors of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola’
(LIFE15 NAT/IT/000823 —
IdroLIFE) plans to take up the
lessons learnt from the implementation of the EU-funded research projects WISER, MARS,
REFRESH, BIOFRESH and REFORM. These are projects on water management, freshwater
ecosystems and climate change. Three of these projects specifically aimed to support the
implementation of the Water Framework Directive. Further links with relevant Horizon 2020
projects will be pursued.
However, the possible risk of overlap is limited because of the programmes’ different scopes,
the transnational nature of most Horizon 2020 projects, its special targeted priorities, and the
different average sizes and lengths of projects
67
.
67
Horizon 2020 supports projects with an average EU contribution of around EUR 5 million (societal challenge
5
even if in the case of societal challenge 3 the bracket is slightly lower at EUR 3-4 million) and a duration
of 24-36 months. In comparison, the average EU contribution for LIFE traditional projects, which tend to
last 36-48
months, is around EUR 1.5 million. Moreover, in the case of Horizon 2020’s SME instrument, the
target beneficiaries are small and medium enterprises, while LIFE also targets big enterprises, public and civil
society organisations.
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Respondents to the survey addressed to the LIFE beneficiaries found that the LIFE programme
is largely coherent with other EU programmes and they saw synergies especially with Horizon
2020.
To encourage synergies, LIFE provides for a mechanism to promote the uptake, into LIFE
projects, of the results of environmental and climate-related research and innovation under
Horizon 2020 and previous framework programmes for research: during the award process, an
extra point is granted to proposals that plan to take up results generated through EU-funded
research projects. In this perspective, LIFE gives an incentive to implement and scale up
knowledge and solutions developed, tested and deployed through EU-funded research activities.
According to EASME’s analysis of the results of the 2014 and 2015 calls for proposals for
LIFE nature, 32 % of the successful projects from the 2015 call (which corresponds to 13
projects out of the 41 funded
68
) linked their activities to the results of EU-funded research
projects. Moreover, 18 % (15 projects) of all the LIFE nature projects financed in 2014 and
2015 have planned in some way to take up the results of EU-funded research projects and/or to
network with them during implementation (see Box 12 for some examples).
Box 13: Example of a LIFE integrated project
LIFE-IP RBMP-NWRBD UK
Integrated water management approach to delivery of the North West
England river basin management plan (LIFE14 IPE/UK/000027)
EU contribution: €11
988 811.00
Thematic priority: Water
Coordinating beneficiary: Environment Agency
External link: http://naturalcourse.co.uk/
(national authority)
One third of the poorest quality rivers in England and Wales is currently found in the North West (England)
river basin district (NW RBD). A range of factors combine in the NW RBD, which create several significant
challenges to meeting the requirements of the Water Framework Directive (WFD), such as:
-
-
-
-
-
high urban population densities located at relatively short distances from the sea;
wastewater discharges with high phosphorous concentrations;
highest trade effluent flows in England and Wales;
extensive diffuse pollution issues from agriculture and other rural sources;
historic chemical and metal pollution in river sediments mobilised in high-flow conditions.
These factors make the NW RBD an ideal location for implementing actions to help improve delivery of WFD
Annex VII (river basin management plans) and to demonstrate solutions for problems relevant to the rest of
Europe.
In particular, the project will address barriers holding back the achievement of
‘good’
ecological status for the
region’s water bodies,
as required by the Water Framework Directive. The project aims to build stakeholder
capacity, reduce policy conflicts, identify water and flood management measures that produce multiple
benefits
thus allowing greater use of relevant funds
and improve knowledge of innovative measures such
as sustainable drainage systems.
In addition to the LIFE integrated project budget, the project will facilitate the coordinated use of EUR
37  050  000 of complementary funding from the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development
(EAFRD) and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), EUR 139  500  000 in national public funds and
EUR 52  500  000 in private sector funds.
68
Most of them were financed under the 7th framework programme (FP7).
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As far as the European Structural and Investment Funds (ESIF) are concerned, the main areas
of potential intersection are with the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the
Cohesion Fund (CF), the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD) and the
European Maritime and Fisheries Funds (EMFF).
Box 14: Example of rural development-funded projects piloted in LIFE
In Belgium (Wallonia Region), grasslands / moors / bogs / mires have been purchased and/or
restored by some 25 LIFE projects, including those still ongoing, using a little over EUR 60 million
in EU money. Most of these LIFE projects involve removing shrubs and spruce pine from Natura
2000 priority habitats (bogs, various grasslands, heaths, etc.). The restored areas need to be regularly
grazed or mowed to prevent them from being overgrown and degraded and to protect the long-term
sustainability of these considerable investments (EUR 60 million from the EU and almost as much
from the Wallonia Region). Building on this, the Walloon rural development programme created a
specific measure for extensive grazing of Natura 2000 sites.
In Bulgaria, LIFE project LIFE09 NAT/BG/230 on red-breasted geese successfully developed and
trialled an agri-environment measure specifically for this priority species. National authorities have
included it in the rural development programme. Apparently, it is well liked by the local farmers, as
already in the first year 240 have applied for it. This covers some 18 000 ha of wintering red-
breasted geese habitats, mobilising EUR 1.8 million this year alone (EUR 3.5 million and 40 000 ha
if one includes the more general wintering geese measure). This is a great success for this highly
endangered species (the entire world population winters in a small part of north east Bulgaria and
feeds in the fields near the coast).
In Ireland, within measure 16 (cooperation) of the rural development programme an action for the
hen harrier and fresh water pearl mussel supports Natura 2000 implementation. This is because of
the precarious state of the hen harrier and fresh water pearl mussel and the fact that there are real
pressures from agriculture and land use on them. This project builds on a LIFE project for the fresh
water pearl mussel (http://kerrylife.ie/) and another project in the south-west of Ireland that embraces
the hen harrier (http://duhallowlife.com/raptor-life/ ). Moreover, the Burren project, also in Ireland (
LIFE04 NAT/IE/000125), successfully piloted a conservation farming scheme to boost the high
nature value of important limestone habitats in the west of Ireland. It laid the foundations for a large-
scale environmental farming initiative for the whole region, which is now underway. The project’s
overall objective was to develop a blueprint for sustainable agricultural management of the Burren’s
priority habitats. The project resulted in its continuation and mainstreaming under the (2010-12)
Burren farming for conservation programme (BFCP), where EUR 3 million were allocated by the
Department of Agriculture and Food to support high environmental value farming, with tourism
spin-offs.
In general, the common provisions regulation (CPR) of the ESI Funds acknowledges this
complementarity and contains a special section (in Annex I.4, common strategic framework
see below) on coordination and synergies between the ESI Funds and LIFE.The ESI Funds
focus to a significant extent on major investments with benefits for smart, sustainable and
inclusive growth. LIFE, on the other hand, is more focused on management approaches,
environmental restoration (especially for nature and ecosystems) and demonstration of new
solutions to environmental and climate problems. Thus, LIFE works as a gap filler, as can be
seen in Table 4 on integrated projects and from the example in Box 9.
The consultation specifically mentioned the ERDF as complementary to LIFE and a way to
follow up funding of actions piloted in LIFE projects after they end.
Given that they are mostly implemented in shared management by national authorities,
eligibility criteria (e.g. beneficiaries, types of measures to be funded) vary from one Member
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State to another, depending on the various programmes that are agreed with the Commission
and in line with the Funds’ Regulations.
Complementarity with the LIFE programme is systematically checked in all the programming
documents (such as the partnership agreement and the operational programmes), and where
necessary, a specific mention is added.
A link between LIFE and EAFRD has been successfully established for 12 Member States that
have opted for integrated projects on nature, air and water. This is mobilising a total budget of
EUR 373 million of which EUR 153 million from LIFE
For the EMFF, coordinating mechanisms have been established to ensure that measures (e.g.,
more sustainable fishing practices) tested by LIFE can be scaled up by EMFF and to address
environmental problems in integrated projects.
At this stage of the programme’s implementation, it is difficult to make an appropriate
assessment on whether this works and to what extent.
Some empirical evidence of how the complementarity works in practice can be derived from
previous LIFE programmes:
-
-
there are several examples of actions funded by rural development programmes, which
were at first piloted in LIFE (see Box 14 above)
some beneficiaries of traditional projects
69
reported having obtained Interreg funding.
Q.10. To what extent is the LIFE programme complementary to and enjoying synergies with
other relevant EU funding programmes (i.e. the European Structural and Investment Funds
ESIF, Horizon 2020) (external coherence)?
LIFE is designed to be complementary to other EU funding programmes (in particular Horizon 2020).
But at this
stage of the programme’s implementation,
the complementarity and synergies cannot be
strongly established.
However, initial results show that LIFE and Horizon 2020 contribute to common objectives in
different and in some cases complementary ways. The risk of overlap is limited because of the
programmes’
different scopes, the transnational nature of most Horizon 2020 projects, its special
targeted priorities, the different average sizes and lengths of projects. Preliminary findings provide
evidence that LIFE is successful in encouraging the uptake of the results of projects financed by
previous research programmes. Since the 2014 LIFE call for proposals evaluation process, one extra
point is granted to projects that plan to take up the results of environmental and climate-related
research and innovation projects financed by Horizon 2020 or by previous framework programmes.
Data based on the results of the 2015 LIFE calls for proposal show that almost 32 % of the successful
projects are linking their activities to the results of EU-funded research projects (corresponding to 13
projects out of 41 funded). This was reported in an EASME study released in August 2016.
As for ESIF, these funds are mostly implemented in shared management by national authorities, with
criteria and contents which vary from one Member State to another. They tend to focus to a significant
extent on major investments with benefits for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth.
The ERDF is highlighted as being complementary to LIFE, acting as a source of follow-up funding
after actions piloted in LIFE projects have come to an end.
69
LIFE00 NAT/F/007277; LIFE03 NAT/UK/000042; LIFE03 NAT/SLO/000077; LIFE05 NAT/D/000056;
LIFE05 ENV/DK/000155; LIFE07 ENV/D/000222.
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For the EMFF, coordinating mechanisms have been established to ensure that measures tested by
LIFE (e.g. more sustainable fishing practices) are scaled up by the EMFF and to address marine-
related environmental problems in integrated projects.
5.4. Relevance
Q.11. To what extent are the programme objectives pertinent to the needs, problems and
issues addressed?
This evaluation question is linked to Q.14 ‘To what extent do the issues addressed by the
intervention continue to require action at EU level’ and to Q.15 ‘What would be the most likely
consequences of stopping or withdrawing
the existing EU intervention’. To avoid repetition,
more to address this question can be found in the related answers.
The fact that there is a high level of demand for funding projects and at the same time a
relatively low level of co-financing compared with other programmes underlines the continued
interest in LIFE
70
. Following the results of the various consultations, the applicants choose
LIFE to submit their proposals even if it meant their projects would be financed at a lower rate
than in other programmes, because LIFE addresses specific needs which are not addressed by
other programmes.
This emerged from the interviews of the beneficiaries and from the questionnaire completed by
the unsuccessful applicants who consider LIFE funding vital for the realisation of the projects:
for example, one of the respondents stated in the open question section of the public survey
that: ‘
I find that it is difficult to find alternative funding programmes addressing problems of
conservation and biodiversity, i.e. not addressed by other funds on European, national or
regional level
’.
The participation of a wide range of beneficiaries of LIFE projects, which include private
enterprises (SMEs, etc.), public authorities and private non-commercial organisations (see
Figure 7 above), demonstrates that the programme is capable of answering different needs and
attracting extremely different stakeholders concerned with climate/environmental policies.
In this respect the Committee of the Regions
‘notes that local and reg
ional authorities are
amongst the main beneficiaries of the LIFE programme and make direct use of it by
implementing LIFE projects and developing regional and local partnerships. What makes the
programme attractive to regional and local authorities is the broad range of thematic priorities
funded, the possibility of cooperating with a large number of stakeholders and the diversity of
funding models’
71
.
The external study shows that the specific objectives for each priority area and the thematic
priorities under the sub-programme for environment are able to address ongoing challenges
such as the ones linked to the implementation of the EU biodiversity strategy
72
and recent
70
71
On the opinion to the European Commission on the mid-term evaluation of LIFE (ENVE-VI/016), the
Committee of the Regions invites the EC to better align the co-financing rates of LIFE with the rates of other
both directly and jointly managed EU funding programmes increasing LIFE the co-financing rate in the next
LIFE programme
ENVE-VI/016, Draft Opinion, Mid-term evaluation of the LIFE programme,
Committee of the Regions. 121st
plenary session, 8-9 February 2017.
The mid-term
review of the EU biodiversity strategy to 2020 concludes that ‘the LIFE programme remains a
small but highly effective funding source for nature and biodiversity’.
72
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policy developments, such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)
with LIFE
expected to provide a contribution to 11 SDGs (see Annex 7).
LIFE also contributes to the Europe 2020 strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth,
because LIFE projects help to promote innovative environmental and climate technologies,
develop new beneficial work skills and, to a limited extent, create jobs.
Box 15. LIFE study contract on ‘methods and considerations for the determination of
greenhouse gas emission reduction objectives for international shipping’
On 12 December 2015, the international community agreed in Paris to common objectives to adapt
to climate change and mitigate its impact. State parties notably emphasised the urgent need for
measures to hold ‘the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2
°C above pre-
industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial
levels’. After Paris, discussions on greenhouse gas reduction objectives were re-opened
at the
International Maritime Organisation (IMO). This was triggered by submissions from the shipping
industry of Belgium, Germany, France, Morocco, the Marshall Islands and the Solomon Islands. At
the April 2016 session of the Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC), the EU, some
other developed countries, several small island developing states and a few others supported the calls
to determine a contribution for shipping to the global efforts to limit climate change and to develop a
work plan and timetable (as proposed by Belgium and others) to determine shipping’s contribution.
MEPC adopted a roadmap for the adoption of an IMO comprehensive strategy to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions from shipping
73
. To define such an emission reduction objective requires sound
methodology, and a number of issues (such as reduction potentials of technical and operational
measures, cost implications, projections of future growth in world trade, impacts on least developed
countries, etc.) have to be taken into account to facilitate global agreement.
The Committee of the Regions, after consultation of its constituency, also confirmed this in the
recent opinion mentioned above
74
when it said that it
‘believes that the LIFE programme plays
an important role in developing new solutions in the area of environmental protection and
climate, promoting eco-innovation and building capacity for new instruments such as green
infrastructure and nature-based solutions. The Committee of the Regions encourages the
Commission to continue this approach both under the current multiannual programme and
after 20
20’.
Procurement activities continue to support the new and emerging needs related to the
development of the knowledge base and/or related to international development/issues (see Box
15 for a concrete example).
Q.11. To what extent are the programme objectives pertinent to the needs, problems and issues
addressed?
As emerged from the results of the external study, the LIFE programme responds to the needs of a
wide range of beneficiaries, who submit a proposal to be financed by the LIFE programme, even if it
offers a lower co-financing than other programmes.
LIFE in fact enables project beneficiaries to tackle issues and problems which are not covered by
73
Although the roadmap does not include specifically a reference to the setting-up of a contribution objective for
the sector, a number of proposals made in view of the forthcoming meeting at MEPC in July 2017 (sponsored
by some EU MS, small island developing states, Canada, Japan and key industry representatives) call for the
inclusion of such a reduction objective in the initial IMO strategy. This is to be developed in 2018, either as a
binding or aspirational objective.
Ibid.
74
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other programmes.
The objectives of the LIFE programme are highly relevant to ongoing and new challenges such as
those identified in the mid-term review of the EU biodiversity strategy (2015) or in the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development (in particular, in sustainable development goal 11).
LIFE also contributes to the Europe 2020 strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, because
LIFE projects help to promote innovative environmental and climate technologies, develop new
beneficial work skills and, to a limited extent, create jobs.
Q.12. To what extent do stakeholders support the LIFE interventions?
Among the LIFE stakeholders, EU citizens strongly support climate and environmental
policies. The 2015 Eurobarometer survey on the environment reported that:
-
95 % of EU citizens surveyed consider that protecting the environment is important to
them personally and there is a strong consensus on the importance of environmental
protection in the European Union.
Most Europeans think that decisions on the environment should be made not only at
national level but jointly within the EU.
Over three quarters of respondents (77 %) agree that European environmental
legislation is necessary to protect the environment in their country.
Over eight out of ten respondents (84 %) believe that more EU funding should be
allocated to support environmentally-friendly activities.
-
-
-
The importance attributed to the environment by EU citizens mirrors the appreciation of the
LIFE programme: taking into account the different stakeholder consultations for this mid-term
evaluation, all the stakeholders are supportive of what the LIFE programme does
75
, because
they see it as responding to their needs and providing concrete results.
The results of the open public consultation show that an overwhelming majority of respondents
(between 94 % and 99 % of 256 respondents) acknowledges that the LIFE programme
addresses environment and climate action needs and that the programme is necessary.
Different stakeholder groups, in particular the project beneficiaries and LIFE national contact
points, rate the importance of the objectives that LIFE pursues as very high. They are of the
view that the programme’s objectives and types of activity are very well suited to the needs in
the different priority areas.
In its recent opinion
76
the Committee of the Regions also supports the LIFE programme’s
activities and
b
elieves that LIFE is a small but flexible programme, with ambitious
environmental and climate targets which are not covered directly by other EU programmes or
are implemented in another area by such programmes. With its support for specific projects at
regional level, the programme is an excellent catalyst for carrying out other projects and for
mobilising national and private funds [..]
The Committee of the Regions ‘reiterates
its strong
support for LIFE, as an independent, directly managed funding programme, entirely dedicated
75
In this specific case the ‘LIFE programme’ could also refer to previous programmes, given that the opinion of
the stakeholders could be related to their experience with previous LIFE programmes.
Ibid.
76
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to the environment and making a significant impact in terms of creating jobs and growth, to be
continued after 2020, and for a serious increase in its budget
’.
The European Economic and Social Committee also echoes this opinion
77
, as can be seen in the
box below.
Box 16
Extract from European Economic and Social Committee on the Mid-term evaluation of the
LIFE programme
— —
NAT/689
‘’
Over the last 25 years, the LIFE programme has been instrumental in European environmental policy, and
increasingly in sustainability policy as well. It is fair to say that it has become part and parcel of the EU’s
environmental policy, which it has strengthened considerabl
y. […] LIFE projects have
-
directly contributed to achieving direct and tangible successes: for example, certain endangered
species that are protected under EU law have been protected from outright extinction thanks to
projects funded by LIFE;
given local p
eople an illustration of the positive concepts underlying the EU’s environment policy, and
the benefits of this policy for people, nature and the environment. LIFE has thus become a kind of
‘bridge’ between EU policy and the ‘Europe of citizens and regions’, which is particularly important at
a time when the added value of Europe is increasingly being called into question.
-
The LIFE programme, which is particularly appreciated for its constant adaptation to new challenges, has also
demonstrated that there is within civil society great deal of potential and a real willingness to get involved in
implementing and developing the EU’s environmental and sustainable development policies. The
implementation of EU law is far more than just a legislative act that the Member States have to put into effect.
Environmental and sustainable development policy stands and falls on public acceptance; it must be publicised
and made transparent, which is another area where LIFE can make an extremely valuable contribution.[..]
The
implementation of the UN’s 2030 Agenda (the SDGs) in European policy is one of the major challenges
facing the EU over the next few years. LIFE will need to support this process [..] in order to turn the much-
discussed integration of environmental and nature protection in other policy areas into a reality.[..]
The permanence of the LIFE programme is paramount to the effectiveness and credibility of the EU’s
environmental policies, which must be safeguarded by the horizontal integration of the 7th Environment Action
programme, the UN’s sustainability agenda and the Paris climate resolutions into all other European policy
areas and funding programmes. The EESC would point out that it has also repeatedly called for a greener and
fairer European Semester. […]
Q.12.
To what extent do stakeholders support the LIFE interventions?
The importance assigned by the stakeholders helps to show that the programme remains relevant..
In line with EU citizen support for EU action on the environment, there is strong evidence of
stakeholder support for LIFE activities. The main reasons mentioned to justify such support are that
the programme responds to their needs and provides concrete results.
The results of the public consultation show that the LIFE programme addresses environmental and
climate action needs and that the programme is necessary. This position is further echoed by the
European Economic and Social Committee and the European Committee of the Regions.
77
‘NAT/689 Halbzeitbewertung des LIFE-Programms’.
European Economic and Social Committee. Section for
Agriculture, Rural Development and the Environment. Sustainable Development Observatory.
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5.5. EU added value
Q.13. What is the additional value resulting from the EU intervention(s), compared to what
could be achieved by Member States at national and/or regional levels?
The EU added value of the LIFE programme is embedded in its core target and in its approach
and focus. This makes its activities especially well-suited to environmental and climate needs.
This EU added value can be summed up as follows:
1. more effective knowledge-sharing: as an EU platform to exchange practices and knowledge
on implementing EU legislation and policies, LIFE enables players across the EU to learn
from each
other’s
experience in addressing specific environmental and climate problems
more effectively and efficiently. LIFE attracts partnerships that would otherwise be difficult
to set up, for example providing capacity-building to local authorities across Europe to
design and finance integrated strategies to reduce CO2 (and possibly other greenhouse gas)
emissions and adapt to climate risks. This includes information and guidance on funding
from the European budget to support the implementation of strategies (see Box 13 above
and Box 17 below). There are often economies of scale in undertaking efforts at EU level
for capacity building, research, information and data gathering, knowledge transfer,
exchange of best practice (i.e. by making more green technologies available and known, by
financing peer reviews, by coordinating cooperation between judges, etc.).
2. better distribution of solidarity and responsibility sharing: environmental assets are often of
a public good nature (environment, climate) and are unevenly distributed across the EU
78
.
LIFE allows for a better distribution of responsibility and solidarity in preserving the EU
environmental common good. It does this by assisting Member States that have the most
valuable EU natural capital, disseminating solutions and best practices and promoting
innovative environmental and climate change technologies (see Box 1 for a concrete
example).
3. better response to trans-boundary or transnational environmental problems, which cannot be
adequately addressed by Member States acting alone: for example, by financing the
preparation of international conferences (i.e. the Paris agreement), LIFE has helped to reach
important commitments at international level on the environment/climate and avoid
coordination failures (see the example in Box 15).
4. increased coherence of EU action: LIFE ensures the coherence of EU environmental and
climate legislation and policies, supporting implementation in Member States. LIFE assists
Member States in progressing towards common targets through positive incentives (i.e. by
financing peer reviews, coordinating cooperation between judges, helping to enforce
environmental and climate legislation and policies in Member States, etc.
see Box 7) and
negative incentives (fines
see Box 19). Several studies investigated the contribution of
LIFE projects to the implementation, dissemination and further development of EU
environmental policies and legislation across all stages of the policy development and
78
Article 8 of the Habitats Directive explicitly links the delivery of conservation measures to the provision of
EU co-financing.
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implementation process (see, for example, the studies on LIFE water
79
, waste
80
and soil
81
projects).
5. catalyst and leverage effects: LIFE acts as a catalyst for action, providing one-off
investment needed in a specific area, eliminating initial barriers to the implementation of
EU environmental and climate policy and testing new approaches for future scaling-up.
LIFE helps Member States and stakeholders to accelerate and improve the implementation
of EU legislation by creating complementarity and synergies between the LIFE programme
and other Union funding programmes and national funds while levering additional public
and private sector resources (i.e. integrated projects
see Box 4 for a concrete example).
LIFE also raises the visibility of EU environmental and climate action and brings the EU
closer to citizens by showing the EU’s commitment to environmental and climate objectives
and making those objectives more relevant at national and local level (see Box 9).
In the case of action grants, EU added value is ensured at all the stages of the project life cycle:
-
The EU added value is analysed when the project is awarded the grant and represents
between 50 and 60 points out of a total of 100 points. Projects have to be of high quality
individually, and their impact should have a demonstrated potential to produce a
multiplier effect through dissemination and sharing of project results. The results should
reach a maximum number of policy-makers and stakeholders across the EU.
During implementation, monitoring experts check and provide impulse to the project’s
added value. Platform meetings and other initiatives, such as Green Week, are all
opportunities where projects are invited to share their experience.
At the end of the project, after-LIFE plans are also drawn up to ensure that the results
are sustainable and to define how the project will continue to disseminate the achieved
results.
-
-
The LIFE programme’s added value is further confirmed by previous evaluations of LIFE+.
Box 17
Example of a traditional project on environmental governance and information
LIFE-ENPE
European Network of Prosecutors for the Environment (LIFE14 GIE/UK/000043)
EU contribution: €643
439.00
Coordinating beneficiary:
(national authority)
Environment
Agency
Thematic priority: Governance and information
External
https://www.environmentalprosecutors.eu/
link:
Interpol and the United Nations Environment Programme estimate the cost of international environmental
crime to be $213 billion per year. This problem affects the EU as it does other regions. High levels of
environmental crime can be partly attributed to inefficient and ineffective prosecution and sanctioning.
Wildlife crime is notoriously difficult to prosecute because the law in this area is complex and because
criminal circles are small, highly organised, closed and hard to penetrate. Chemical pollution and waste crimes
also adversely impact biodiversity, and many EU rivers are falling short of Water Framework Directive targets.
79
Contribution of LIFE ENV/INF/NAT projects to the implementation, dissemination and further development
of EU environmental policies and legislation. Water sector (2012).
Contribution of LIFE ENV/INF projects to the implementation, dissemination and further development of EU
environmental policies and legislation, focusing in particular on resource efficiency. Pilot study on waste
(2012).
Contribution of LIFE ENV/INF projects to the implementation, dissemination and further development of EU
environmental policies and legislation. Pilot study on soil.
80
81
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Additionally, large-scale pollution incidents are complex, requiring transnational cooperation to successfully
prosecute.
LIFE-ENPE is a 5-year project (starting date 2015). Its objectives are to develop its network and to undertake a
programme of support for the operative work of prosecutors. It aims to improve compliance with EU
environmental law by addressing uneven and incomplete implementation across Member States through
improvements to the efficiency and effectiveness of prosecutors and judges in combating environmental crime
and fostering a greater culture of transnational cooperation between prosecutors and judges. The England-
based Environment Agency (EA) in Bristol runs this project, which involves a consortium of four other
partners: the European Union Forum of Judges for the Environment (EUFJE); the Irish Environmental
Protection Agency; the Office for Serious Fraud and Environmental Crime of the National Public
Prosecutor’s
Office (FP, Netherlands) and the National Environmental Crimes Unit at the Swedish Prosecution Authority
(REMA).
The Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council on the
Mid-term review of the LIFE+ Regulation
82
stated that the programme achieves added value by
improving the implementation of EU environmental policy at national, regional or local levels
and by providing EU-wide exchange of information. Most environmental and climate problems
in fact are of a cross-border nature and cannot be adequately solved by Member States alone.
Furthermore,
the Member States note that LIFE+ has been ‘a successful instrument with
significant EU added value’
83
, leading to:
- improved conservation and restoration of some 4.7 million hectares of land;
- improved water quality over an area of approximately 3 million hectares;
- more healthy air quality for some 12 million people;
- waste prevention of some 300 000 tonnes and recycling of a further 1 million tonnes;
- 1.13 million tonnes in reductions of CO2 emissions per year
84
.
The EU added value of the LIFE programme is largely confirmed by the results of the public
consultation. The overwhelming majority of the respondents confirm that the programme has
significant EU added value because it:
-
-
-
-
-
responds to European and global environment and climate challenges, which are unlikely
to be addressed by a Member State alone (98 % of the respondents);
supports the coherent development, implementation and enforcement of EU environment
and climate policy and legislation, (98 % of the respondents);
tackles environmental and climate problems more efficiently (98 % of the respondents);
preserves EU environmental resources which, even if unevenly distributed across the EU,
benefit the EU as a whole (94 % of the respondents);
helps to leverage the funds for environmental protection and climate action (97 % of the
respondents),
82
See Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council ‘Mid Term Review of
the LIFE+ Regulation. COM(2010) 516 final.
See Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council ‘Final evaluation of
Regulation (EC) No 614/2007 concerning the Financial Instrument for the Environment (LIFE+)’.
COM/2013/0478 final.
Ibid.
83
84
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-
contributes to EU-wide sharing of
‘best practices’,
knowledge transfer, demonstration, and
awareness-raising (99 % of the respondents).
Q.13. What is the additional value resulting from the EU intervention(s), compared to what
could be achieved by Member States at national and/or regional levels?
Based on the external study findings and drawing on views of all the stakeholders, the LIFE
programme improves the implementation and enforcement of EU environmental and climate policy
and legislation at national, regional and local levels and promotes an EU-wide exchange of
information. By doing this, the programme provides:
-
more effective knowledge-sharing: as the EU platform to exchange practices and knowledge
on implementing EU legislation and policies, LIFE enables players across the EU to learn
from each other’s experience in addressing specific environmental and climate problems
more
effectively and efficiently;
a better distribution of solidarity and responsibility sharing: environmental assets are often of
a public good nature (environment, climate) and are unevenly distributed across the EU;
a better response to transboundary or transnational challenges which are unlikely to be
addressed by a Member State alone;
coherence for EU environmental and climate legislation and policies by analysing problems
and issues with a comparative view, defining common targets and contributing to their
implementation and enforcement;.
a catalyst and leverage effect by eliminating initial barriers to the implementation of EU
environmental and climate policy and testing new approaches for future scaling-up.
-
-
-
-
Although final results are not available yet:
tools are in place to select the projects with the most relevant EU added value and to check them in all
phases of the project life cycle
the EU added value of the programme is confirmed by the results of previous evaluations and
acclaimed by the overwhelming majority of respondents to the public consultation.
Q.14. To what extent do the issues addressed by the intervention continue to require action
at EU level?
EU environmental and climate policy and legislation are delivering substantial improvements to
the state of the environment.
However, major environmental and climate challenges remain. Only by addressing these
challenges will Europe be able to harness the full potential linked to an efficient use of available
resources
85
.
As stated in the LIFE Regulation, other EU funding programmes cannot address all specific
needs relating to the environment and climate action.
For example, the evidence gathered in the recently finalised evaluation (fitness-check) of the
EU Birds and Habitats Directives
86
(the
‘Nature Directives’)
confirmed the strategic role that
the LIFE programme plays in supporting the implementation of the Directives.
85
See above for the existing potential related to the reduction of the cost of inaction linked to climate change and
the savings which could be derived by implementing the circular economy.
The Bird Directive is the oldest piece of EU legislation on the environment and one of its cornerstones.
Amended in 2009, it became Directive 2009/147/EC. Habitat loss and degradation are the most serious threats
86
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‘Apart from the allocation under the LIFE programme there is no earmarking of funds for
nature and biodiversity under different EU funds and that, as Member States are not obliged to
fully avail of the opportunities for financing Natura 2000 available under different EU funds,
this can result in relatively low levels of allocation in the context of national programmes.
Furthermore it reports that limited information is available about how efficiently the EU
available funding instruments are delivering outcomes that help achieve the objectives of the
Directives. An exception is represented by the LIFE fund, whose projects are closely monitored
in relation to delivery of results in the implementation of the Nature directives’
87
.
LIFE therefore remains the key funding instrument that most focuses on supporting
implementation of the Nature Directives (especially for Natura 2000) through demonstration
and best practice projects. The programme also expands the knowledge base to enable more
informed decision-making on measures and targets.
Grants and procurement activities under LIFE aim at addressing these needs (see the example in
the box below).
According to the public consultation, very little of what LIFE projects have achieved would
have been possible without the programme’s support, in particular for nature and biodiversity.
On this, see also the European Economic and Social Committee opinion in Box 16.
Box 18. Modelling of biophysical and economic impacts of EU water policy implementation
scenarios (hydro-economic modelling)
This contract will ensure the direct input of crucial knowledge and expertise in policy evaluation (the
refit/review of the Water Framework Directive) and policy formulation (future Water Framework
Directive implementation support strategy on which the Directorate-General for Environment will work
in parallel with the Water Framework Directive review).
In particular, it will provide the resources to:
1. continue ongoing hydro-economic modelling work and strengthen it;
2. ensure continuous support for the tender to develop an integrated policy assessment method and
software linked to models of the freshwater and marine environment and to assess the economic
benefits of EU water policy and the costs of its non-implementation (BLUE2 Study).
Q.14. To what extent do the issues addressed by the intervention continue to require action at EU
level?
LIFE is the only EU programme which has a core focus on environment and climate action.
The other EU funding programmes do not address all specific needs relating to the environment and
climate action.
This makes LIFE the key funding instrument to address some crucial challenges such as the existing
gaps in the implementation of the Birds and Habitats Directives.
to the conservation of wild birds, of which 500 species live in Europe and one third of the population is not in
good condition. The Directive therefore places great emphasis on protecting habitats for endangered and
migratory species. It establishes a network of Special Protection Areas (SPAs) including all the most suitable
territories for these species. Since 1994, all SPAs are included in the Natura 2000 ecological network, set up
under the Habitats Directive 92/43/EEC.
87
Commission staff working paper, Fitness check of the EU Nature Legislation (Birds and Habitats
Directives),SWD(2016) 472 final, pg. 52.
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According to the recent fitness-check, LIFE plays a strategic role in implementing the Directives.
This is confirmed by the results of the public consultation, which highlight that very little of what LIFE
projects have achieved would have been possible without the programme’s support, in particular for
nature and biodiversity.
Natural capital is not distributed equally across Member States but it is an EU common asset which
provides shared benefits. This implies the need of an action at EU level and confirms the relevance of
the programme for solidarity and responsibility-sharing on natural capital resources.
Q.15. What would be the most likely consequences of stopping or withdrawing the existing
EU intervention?
The evaluation results of LIFE + highlighted that according to many applicants the programme
was a key funding mechanism for promoting and implementing nature conservation throughout
the EU since its primary objective was protecting nature. They noted that in other programmes
this objective was secondary. LIFE+ helped to adopt management plans, restore valuable
habitats, recover emblematic species and develop the Natura2000 network. It also helped to
create collaborative platforms that enhance partnerships and therefore facilitate the transfer of
best practice between stakeholders and decision-makers. The biodiversity strand was an
important instrument to finance the implementation of the biodiversity action plan with a focus
on the conservation of biodiversity at large
88
.
Furthermore, according to most of the external monitoring experts and national and regional
contact points consulted (97 % and 79 % of 59 and 41 respondents respectively), very little of
what the LIFE projects have achieved would have been launched or achieved without the
programme’s support. This is also confirmed by other stakeholders.
As underlined by the project beneficiaries during the interviews, LIFE is the EU funding source
devoted specifically to the environment.
Two thirds of the stakeholders also believe that the main consequences of stopping or
withdrawing LIFE activities would be mostly negative. According to them, discontinuing the
LIFE programme would have major consequences, as several environmental and climate-
specific needs will be not addressed by other EU financial instruments. In addition, the
following issues were mentioned in relation to a discontinuation of the programme:
-
-
-
Member States’ capacity —
and in some cases commitment
— to pursue the EU’s
objectives on environmental protection and climate action would be reduced;
the impact on employment and economic growth would be negative; and
there would be less support for innovative environmental solutions
89
.
The end of LIFE support would have serious consequences, particularly for NGOs which
receive operating grants covering a maximum of 70 % financing of their annual work
programme. These organisations are of key importance when it comes to developing
88
Communication from the
Commission to the European Parliament and the Council ‘Mid Term Review of the
LIFE+ Regulation. COM(2010) 516 final.
According to LIFE project beneficiaries, there will be ‘less innovative pilot or demonstration technical
projects, less environmentally
relevant innovation activities by SMEs in particular’ and ‘What would
disappear is the support to provide solutions for pre-testing / pre-commercialisation (risk-sharing) of
innovative environmental solutions’.
89
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environmental and climate legislation and policies. Without alternative funds, they would have
to downsize their activities.
Box. 19. Support to the Commission on analysis of information and related follow-up to the
fulfilment of the requirements of EU water legislation
The Commission has conducted several assessments of Member State implementation of the Water
Framework Directive and its related directives on groundwater and priority substances. These
assessments have highlighted many gaps/shortcomings in the implementation of legislation. In
response, the Commission published recommendations for improvement in view of the 2016 update
of the river basin management plans (RBMPs). When these recommendations are not followed up or
accepted, the Commission undertakes legal action where necessary. However, before seizing the
Court with an infringement, the Commission has to conduct the pre-litigation phase from the so
called
‘pilots’
to reasoned opinions. In these exchanges with the Member State concerned, the
Commission seeks further detailed or additional clarification on a specific issue or group of issues.
Pilot cases may also be opened by the Commission following a complaint from the public or a
European institution, to which the Commission must be able to respond. In this context, large
amounts of information are exchanged, at times only in the language of the Member State concerned.
The Commission needs technical assistance to help assess the information at issue and prepare its
reaction to
the Member State’s
submissions. The Commission also regularly receives complaints or
petitions that involve analysis of large volumes of information claiming bad implementation of EU
water legislation. The technical assistance should help the Commission to assess whether such
complaints are well founded.
For the procurement activities, the absence of LIFE funds would imply that other possibilities
would have to be found to finance the activities needed to fulfil commitments to
environmental/climate legislation and policies and/or to fulfil international commitments (see
box below). One may ask if it would be suitable to have such funding through programmes
whose primary objective is not environment or climate action.
Q.15. What would be the most likely consequences of stopping or withdrawing the existing EU
intervention?
According to the public consultation, very little of what LIFE projects have achieved would have been
possible without
the programme’s support, in particular on nature and biodiversity.
Discontinuing the LIFE programme would have major consequences, as several environmental and
climate-specific needs would not be addressed by other EU financial instruments. In particular,
stopping the LIFE programme would reduce Member States’ capacity —
and in some cases
commitment
— to pursue the EU’s objectives on environmental protection and climate action and
would affect related economic growth and employment. It would also reduce the support to innovative
environmental solutions
Stopping or withdrawing the existing LIFE activities would reduce the capacity of NGOs to advocate
environmental protection and climate action.
Other sources of funding would be needed for certain procurement activities that allow the
Commission to fulfil existing commitments at EU and international level.
5.6. Project sustainability, impact and/or replicability to date
Q.16. To what extent are the positive effects of projects likely to last after EU funding ends,
especially the demonstration effect and what is the scope for replication of the projects?
The final evaluation of LIFE+ showed that ‘many projects demonstrated technical feasibility
and to be economically viable, however there is evidence that the demonstration potential being
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present was often not fully released or exploited because the necessary dissemination of
activities and results did not take place or at least only to a limited extent
90
’.
This is why the current procedures for implementing the LIFE programme pay special attention
to the potential of projects to be sustainable/replicable in different stages of the project life:
1. During the award process, the multiplier effect of the projects, namely their potential for
replicability and/or transferability, is assessed on the basis of a specialised award criterion
91
.
Projects which do not anticipate results which can be replicated/transferred or which do not
include an adequate strategy for this replication/ transfer to materialise, will not be awarded
the grant. For the LIFE environment and climate mitigation projects in particular, this has
resulted in a shift toward close-to-the-market projects
92
which are meant to contribute to
innovative solutions on water, waste, air, chemicals and resource efficiency. This makes it
possible to promote innovative eco-products/processes which could be discouraged by the
market rules (see Box 20 below).
Box 20. Example of a traditional project on environment and resource efficiency
LIFE BIOPOL
Production of leather-making biopolymers from biomasses and industrial by-products,
through life cycle designed processes (LIFE15 ENV/IT/000654)
Total budget: €3
879 018.00
EU contribution: €2
147 863.00
Coordinating beneficiary: CODYECO SPA (private
company)
Thematic priority: Waste
External link:
http://www.codyeco.com/biopol.html
LIFE BIOPOL is a close fit with the goals of EU circular economy policy. It will demonstrate
industrial symbiosis by designing, building and validating an industrial pilot plant to recycle waste
biomass from the leather treatment process and agro-food industries, turning it into new biopolymers
for leather tanning and fat-liquoring applications.
The new process will also allow the substitution of hazardous chemicals currently used in leather
tanning.
2.
During the implementation of the projects, platform meetings are organised to encourage
replication and transfer results between beneficiaries or with other stakeholders. In specific
cases, selected beneficiaries are offered the opportunity to present their investment plans to
potential investors. Some platform meetings have already taken place.
90
Ex-Post Evaluation of Projects and Activities Financed under the LIFE Programme. Final Report. Part 6:
Conclusions and Recommendations, page 6.
For the award criterion ‘EU added value: replicability and transferability’ 10 points out of 100 can be given,
with a minimum pass score of 5 points. Replicability and transferability are the potential the project has to be
replicated and transferred during and after its implementation. Successful replication and transferability
require a strategy that includes tasks to multiply the impacts of the projects’
solutions and mobilise a wider
uptake. The aim is to reach a critical mass during the project and/or in a short and medium-term perspective
after the end of the LIFE project. This goes beyond transfer of knowledge and networking. It involves putting
the techniques, methods or strategies developed or applied in the project into practice elsewhere.
Projects with technology readiness level (TRL) equal or higher than 7. .
91
92
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A close-to-market task force has been set up within the LIFE unit of EASME. The first
result is a number of ongoing activities to reinforce the framework to help promising
projects reach the market by, e.g.:
-
-
-
creating a framework to attract investors for the continuation of projects and using
business coaching to help the projects with market uptake;
using the Europe Enterprise Network (EEN) to support LIFE close-to-market projects
(C2M) and to diffuse information about the LIFE programme
93
;
establishing cooperation in the framework of the European Fund for Strategic
Investment (EFSI) to tunnel promising projects benefiting from various EU-
programmes, including LIFE, to the European Investment Project Portal (EIPP). The
aims is to increase the visibility of projects to possible investors and business partners,
diversify financing sources, support project screening processes, etc.
3. The sustainability/replicability/transferability is also checked/encouraged by the monitoring
team and Commission officials just before the end of the project. The beneficiaries are
asked
to draft an ‘after-LIFE’ plan, detailing
how the project activities will continue when
LIFE funding ends. The impact of these plans cannot be assessed at this stage of the
programme, but the plans have proved to be effective for LIFE+ projects.
A recent report
94
shows that on average 83 % of projects are sustainable
95
after the end of LIFE
funding and three quarters have good potential for replication.
According to this report, sustainability and replicability are highly correlated and, based on an
econometric analysis, there are some variables that affect them both such as:
-
the number of project partners: a higher number of (associated) partners has a significantly
negative impact on sustainability and replicability, as it probably complicates the
management of the project after the grant period. Therefore, smaller partnerships that are
easier to manage have a greater chance of successful replication;
the level of innovation shows a non-linear (U-shaped) relation with sustainability and
replicability. This implies an optimal region of values that maximises
the variable’s
influence on the project’s potential to be sustainable and replicable: in a scale of innovation
of 0 to 9, the peak influence is obtained around a value of 7.4 and, in the case of prototypes,
a middle value gives the highest positive influence on both sustainability and replicability;
the amounts spent on prototypes: projects that either do not focus on prototypes at all, or
focus on them heavily, tend to be both more sustainable and more replicable. Projects that
-
-
93
On-going activities are, for example, the presentation of the LIFE programme and the 2017 call at the EEN
Environmental Sector Group in Berlin (March 2017); a presentation to EEN Circular Economy Thematic
Group in Brussels (autumn 2017), and ongoing work with the EEN communication team to promote LIFE
calls and the C2M dimension.
Report on LIFE past, present and future contribution to employment and economic growth: LIFE effectiveness
and replicability. NEEMO 2016. This analysis is based on LIFE+ projects and does not take into account the
expected improvements in the current LIFE programme.
Sustainability is perceived as the ability to continue or to follow up on the activities performed during the
project’s life; i.e. it is the viability of the project after the end of LIFE financing —
the continuation or follow-
up is ensured by the beneficiary itself, its partner or successor.
94
95
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focus on prototypes heavily are the most sustainable and replicable
96
. On the contrary,
projects perceiving any prototype only as a by-product of their primary activities or where
prototype construction is not their primary point of focus are the most likely to be less
sustainable and replicable.
Concerning sustainability and replicability separately, the report
97
mentions that:
-
-
The duration of the projects exhibits a hump-shaped effect, meaning that extremely short or
too long lasting projects tend to be less sustainable.
Projects in which personnel costs represent ca. 50 % of the overall budget are, on average,
more replicable. Reversely, projects either too reliant on the personnel budget or not enough
are more likely to be less replicable.
In terms of the economic sector, projects relevant for the manufacturing and construction
sectors are significantly more sustainable as these are more performance and output-
oriented. Similarly, the share of infrastructure costs out of the total costs is positively linked
to the level of replicability.
Water projects show positive sustainability, while health sector projects are significantly
more replicable, probably because their goal usually matches global and currently relevant
issues which makes it easier to get sufficient financing for them.
In contrast, energy and waste projects are shown to have a lower level of replication as they
might be constrained by institutional and legal boundaries specific to individual countries
and the market structure (including disruptions such as a monopoly, lobby, etc.).
-
-
-
The data on the overall sustainability and replicability are confirmed by the responses collected
during the survey. They reveal that for the majority (78 %) there is either good or very good
potential for demonstrating and transferring the results of LIFE projects.
Most of the new LIFE projects analysed in the external study are planning a follow-up by
transferring project activities to new entities or projects, new sectors or different geographical
areas. As for the related funds, interviews of about 70 project beneficiaries revealed that 40 %
of them report that they will/already have attract(ed) funding to further develop project results
after the end of EU funding.
Box 21
Example of a LIFE traditional project on climate change adaptation: climate-
resilient construction materials with a market potential
Total budget
€2
476 158.00
Thematic priority: Climate change adaptation
External link: http://www.lifeherotile.eu/
EU contribution
€1
442 784.00
Coordinating beneficiary: Industrie Cotto Possagno
S.p.A. (private company)
The overall objective of the LIFE HEROTILE project (LIFE14 CCA/IT/000939) is to design and
produce two types of roof tiles (Marseille and Portuguese roof tiles, which cover more than 60 % of
pitched roofs in Europe) with a shape characterised by higher air permeability through the overlap of
96
However, this data should be regarded with caution because the substance of high prototype costs is driven by
only a limited number of projects of the dataset.
Report on LIFE past, present and future contribution to employment and economic growth: LIFE effectiveness
and replicability. .
97
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the tiles and improved energy performance through under-tile ventilation.
The project’s ultimate aim is to demonstrate that the designed tiles can help cool buildings
while
saving up to 50 % of the energy used for cooling.
The tiles are tested in real environments in the Mediterranean region (Italy and Israel) to compare
performances with standard rooftop materials. This includes comparing rates of heat disposal in the
summer season. The next steps include implementation of a pilot plant for tiles production.
The project has also developed practical and free software for architects and technicians to model the
energy performance of buildings by changing only the roof configuration.
Respondents to the public consultation were also asked whether projects under LIFE have led to
long-term positive effects. Over 80 % of the respondents felt that projects had medium or great
positive long-term effects.
The consultations
revealed, however, that obstacles to a project’s continuation after its end are
related to the lack of beneficiaries’ financial resources. This is combined with a lack of
capacity/human resources for planning an investment (including possible loans), a lack of
interest and sense of urgency from decision-makers and a lack of information and
communication within the programme.
Although ‘after-LIFE’ plans are seen as a positive improvement, a systematic follow-up
of all
projects to identify best practices and cost-saving measures and a comprehensive customised
support for the most promising ones could allow the replication/sustainability potential to
further materialise.
Q.16. To what extent are the positive effects of projects likely to last after EU funding ends,
especially the demonstration effect, and what is the scope for replication of the projects?
Following the final evaluation of LIFE+ which showed a need to understand the full demonstration
potential, considerable attention is paid to project sustainability and replicability in all phases of the
project cycle.
A recent report shows that on average 83 % of projects are sustainable after the end of LIFE funding
and three quarters have a good potential for replication.
According to this report, sustainability and replicability are highly correlated and, based on an
econometric analysis, there are some variables
such as the number of project partners, the level of
innovation, the investment in prototypes
which affect them both. Further variables relevant for
sustainability or replicability are the duration of the project, the share of personnel costs, the economic
sector in which they operate.
This is confirmed by the result of the external study: most of the projects analysed envisage a follow-
up by transferring project activities to new entities or projects, new sectors or different geographical
areas. As for the related funds, the interviews of about 70 LIFE project beneficiaries revealed that
40 % of them report that they will/already have attract(ed) funding to further develop project results
after the end of EU funding.
Moreover, the consultations revealed that obstacles to a project’s continuation after EU funding ends
are related to beneficiaries lacking financial resources. This is combined with a lack of
capacity/human resources for planning an investment (including possible loans), a lack of interest and
a sense of urgency from decision-makers and a lack of information and communication within the
programme.
In this respect, LIFE projects could have a greater potential for replication, in particular, if there were
a systematic follow-up of all projects and comprehensive support for the most promising ones.
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6.
C
ONCLUSIONS
This evaluation comes at an early stage of the programme’s implementation: most projects have
yet to start and few projects have finished, given that the average duration of a LIFE project is
between 4 and 5 years. The first actual results are expected in 2019-2020.
This is why this mid-term evaluation has focused mainly on the processes put in place to reach
the programme’s objectives, the ongoing activities (such as contracts/projects already financed)
and, where relevant, their anticipated results.
Despite these limitations, the external independent evaluation provides reasonable assurance
that the programme’s implementation is progressing in the right direction.
The evidence collected shows that the LIFE programme is on track to being:
-
effective,
because it is well placed to meet the stated targets and deliver on environmental
and climate objectives, thus contributing to the Europe 2020 strategy. Ongoing projects
expect to reach 70 % of the milestones envisaged for 2017. They are doing this by, for
example, targeting the improvement of the conservation status of 59 habitats, 114 species
and 85 Natura 2000 sites. The evidence gathered in the recently finalised evaluation of the
Birds and Habitats Directives (fitness-check) confirmed the strategic role that the LIFE
programme plays in supporting
the Directives’
implementation.
The new features introduced by the LIFE Regulation
especially the sub-programme
devoted to climate action and the integrated projects
are seen to respond to existing
needs and to improve the
programme’s
effectiveness.
-
efficient,
because the projects are expected to provide value for money. It is estimated that
the benefit to society of some of the projects selected following the 2014 call for proposals
will amount to EUR 1.7 billion, which represents four times the cost of the overall LIFE
budget for 2014.
Moreover, the transfer of most of the grant management from the Commission to the
executive agency EASME is exceeding the expected efficiency gain of EUR 8.2 million
initially planned for 2014-2020.
The complementary financial resources mobilised by the integrated projects are extremely
high, thus confirming that the programme is playing the role of catalyser very well.
Taking into account the low error rate, the funds are being used so far according to the
rules.
-
relevant,
because the ongoing projects address some crucial challenges such as halting the
loss of biodiversity, deriving savings from the circular economy, reducing the costs of
inaction related to the consequences and effects of environmental degradation and climate
change.
LIFE is consistent with EU policies and priorities, covering the most relevant topics on
climate and environment, and being the framework in which some of the most recent policy
developments
such as the circular economy package and the targets of the 2030 climate
and energy framework -, have been prepared. It is also contributing to innovation and job
creation, although these are not its primary aim.
LIFE is a flexible instrument, which finances projects of different sizes and is able to attract
large and small enterprises, universities, research centres, national and local authorities,
civil society as well as various non-governmental organisations. As demonstrated recently
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with the European Solidarity Corps
98
, which includes a specific environmental strand, LIFE
is able to react very quickly on many political and societal needs.
-
complementary
to other programmes, as the potential overlaps are limited and there are
documented synergies: LIFE has encouraged using the results of the projects financed by
research programmes and are further developing and disseminating the results of LIFE
projects via the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD).
The existence of synergies between the projects of the different priority areas has been
documented.
Moreover, the LIFE programme shows a substantial and unanimously recognised
EU added
value,
because it helps to make the application of EU environmental and climate legislation and
policies is consistent across the EU. It provides a way to respond effectively to cross-border
challenges which a Member State is unlikely to address alone. Initial evidence also confirms
that the programme is successfully playing its role of catalyst, promoting activities to exchange
best practice and knowledge and to improve the utilisation of project results as well as the
transfer of know-how.
Projects show a good potential for
sustainability and replicability
and good value for money,
as they are addressing the reduction of emissions and energy consumption and promoting
biodiversity activities by improving species conservation status.
The evaluation also highlights aspects which need to be improved. This involves:
-
-
-
-
simplifying grant management procedures, in particular the application and reporting
processes;
increasing the strategic focus of the demand-driven part of the programme, e.g. by targeting
topics not covered by the projects funded in previous years;
doing more to reproduce the projects and transfer their results, e.g. by developing the
capacity to plan and implement investments and addressing the lack of financial resources;
improving the communication strategy to better target audiences, deliver more objective-
specific and target-specific key messages and ensure more structured coordination between
players.
The results of the LIFE mid-term evaluation exercise will help to improve these aspects under
the next multiannual work programme (MAWP 2018-2020) and in the next multiannual
financial framework.
98
See COM(2016)942 final.
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Annexes
Annex 1: Procedural information concerning the process to prepare the evaluation
................. 77
Annex 2: Requirements for the Mid Term Evaluation set out in the LIFE Regulation
.................. 79
Annex 3: Methods
........................................................................................................................... 81
Annex 4: Synopsis report on the Stakeholder consultation
.......................................................... 85
Annex 5: Table of assessment of indicators against targets
.......................................................... 91
Annex 6: Total amount non-deductible VAT reimbursed per Member State
............................... 96
Annex 7: LIFE's Programme contribution to Sustainable Development Goals
............................. 97
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Annex 1: Procedural information concerning the process to prepare the evaluation
Lead DG: European Commission Directorate General Environment, DG ENV
Co Chef de File: European Commission Directorate General Climate Action, DG CLIMA
Agenda planning reference: ENV/2017/001
Organisation:
Preparation for the evaluation began on July 2015. The initial phase of the evaluation focused on the
preparation of the Evaluation Roadmap that was finalized at the end of July, after the approval of the
Inter-service Steering Group and published in October 2015
99
by the Secretariat General. Immediately
after the approval of the Roadmap, the preparation of the terms of reference for carrying out the external
and independent mid- term evaluation of the LIFE Programme started. The drafting of the terms of
reference involved a large number of colleagues from different DG ENV units and from DG CLIMA as
well as the European executive agency on small and medium sized enterprise. Finally it was approved
by the Inter-service Steering Group in December and a service request under a framework contract was
launched towards the end of 2015
100
. The service contract was awarded to a consortium of experts led by
ECORYS and the contract was signed on March 2016 with duration of ten months (end of the contract:
21 January 2017)
The findings come from several major sources: the draft final report of the mid-term evaluation carried
out by the contractor, the impact assessment of the LIFE Programme, two databases used by the
Commission services for the technical and financial management of the applications and the LIFE
projects and the online database of the LIFE projects. The indicator database was as well a major
source.
A Steering Group of relevant Commission Services was established to oversee the evaluation and had
contacts throughout the entire evaluation period. The Steering Group was composed of DG ENV,
CLIMA, GROW, AGRI, RTD, ECFIN, BUDG, REGIO, ENER, ECHO, SG and EASME. The task of
the Steering Group was to check the key elements of the service contract, to support and monitor the
evidence gathering and stakeholder consultation process, to review the draft evaluation report as well as
the Commission draft staff working document and to assist with the quality assessment of the
contractor's evaluation report.
Consultation of the Regulatory Scrutiny Board
The Regulatory Scrutiny Board has discussed the file at its meeting on the 15 February 2017 and issued
a positive opinion on the 17
th
February 2017.
101
The Board highlighted aspects for improvement:
addressing a number of key shortcomings, using the information from the evaluation study and
incorporating the longer-term results of the LIFE+ programme.
The main considerations of the Board were in relation to design and methodology, effectiveness,
efficiency, simplification, coherence and EU added value.
All the issues identified by the Board have been taken into account when finalising the Staff Working
Document
99
http://ec.europa.eu/smart-regulation/roadmaps/docs/2017_env_001_evaluation_life_mt_en.pdf
SPECIFIC CONTRACT No 07.020300/2016/SI2.727892/SER/E.4implementing Framework contract
ENV.F.l/FRA/2014/0063
Ref Ares(2017)892697
100
101
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RSB comment
Better explain and justify the
scope of the mid-term evaluation
and why it does not address all
the questions of the MFF
Action taken
Where in the SWD
The scope of the MTE has been Introduction, state of play,
made clearer and where possible effectiveness, sustainability, EU
LIFE + examples have been added value
brought up to support evidence of
the continuity between LIFE+ and
LIFE. Given that more than half of
the LIFE+ projects are underway,
the long term effect of LIFE+
cannot be fully covered. However,
where possible, the results of the
LIFE+ project and the anticipated
long term effect have been
included in the Staff Working
Document.
The effectiveness part has been Implementation
expanded to adequately explain Paragraph 5.1
how the LIFE Programme
strategic focus is ensured. An
assessment on the effectiveness of
the pre-allocation of funding has
been also carried out.
state
of
play
To provide evidence as to
whether and how the LIFE
Programme has achieved a
strategic focus (e.g. in thematic
priorities, programme structure,
multiannual work programme).
To demonstrate the catalytic role
More information and concrete
examples have been used to
of the LIFE Programme
demonstrate the catalytic role of
the LIFE Programme in mobilising
additional funding (with IPs and
traditional
LIFE+
projects),
integrating environmental and
climate objectives into other
policies (with nature traditional
projects), and in spreading good
practices in particular under
effectiveness (replicability and
continuation)
To provide a full analysis of the
Programme's
actual
implementation costs or its
simplification potential (e.g.
lump sums, VAT, selection
procedure)
To explain the EU added value
of the LIFE Programme and the
synergies with other funding
programmes
Paragraph 2.2.Problems that LIFE
intends to solve; paragraph
2.3.Background of the LIFE
Programme;
effectiveness
paragraph 6.1,
The discussion of simplification Efficiency
potential has been strengthened
and the analyses of the actual
implementation costs have been
reported.
The section on the EU added value EU added value, paragraph 6.5.
has been expanded and new and coherence, paragraph 6.3
examples have been provided.
LIFE + traditional projects have
been also used to show the
continuity
with
the
past
Programme.
Examples
of
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synergies with other EU funding
programmes have been included in
the SWD.
Annex 2: Requirements for the Mid Term Evaluation set out in the LIFE Regulation
Extract from the Regulation (Eu) No 1293/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11
December 2013 on the establishment of a Programme for the Environment and Climate Action (LIFE)
and repealing Regulation (EC) No 614/2007
Recital 38:
With a view to simplifying the LIFE Programme and reducing the administrative burden for applicants
and beneficiaries, more use should be made of flat rates and lump sums without compromising the
eligibility of VAT and of permanent staff costs under the conditions laid down by Regulation (EU,
Euratom) No 966/2012. As per current practice, the sum of the public organisations' (as coordinating
beneficiary and/or associated beneficiary) contributions to the project should exceed by at least 2 % the
sum of the salary costs of the personnel of national administrations charged to the project. Union funds
should not be used to subsidize national budgets, for example, to cover VAT costs. However, only
limited information is available on the amounts of Union funds used to cover VAT. The Commission
should, therefore, provide an overview, in the mid-term and ex- post evaluations of the LIFE
Programme, of VAT reimbursements per Member State that project beneficiaries under the LIFE
Programme have requested at the final payment stage.
Relevant articles:
Art. 9
2. [..]The Commission shall review and, if necessary, revise the thematic priorities set out in Annex III
at the latest by the mid-term evaluation of the LIFE Programme referred to in point (a) of Article 27(2).
Art. 17
5. A maximum of 30 % of the budgetary resources allocated to action grants in accordance with
paragraph 4 may be allocated to integrated projects. That maximum percentage shall be re-evaluated in
the framework of the mid-term evaluation of the LIFE Programme referred to in point (a) of Article
27(2) and accompanied, if appropriate, by a legislative proposal
Art 20
2 […]The Commission shall provide an overview, in the mid-term
and ex-post evaluations of the LIFE
Programme, of VAT reimbursements per Member State that project beneficiaries under the LIFE
Programme have requested at the final payment stage.
Art. 24,
4. The Commission shall, by means of an implementing act, review the multiannual work programme at
the latest by the mid-term evaluation of the LIFE Programme. That implementing act shall be adopted in
accordance with the examination procedure referred to in Article 30(2).
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Art. 27
2. The Commission shall submit to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and
Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions the following reports:
(a) no later than 30 June 2017, an external and independent mid-term evaluation report of the LIFE
Programme (and its sub-programmes), including qualitative and quantitative aspects of its
implementation, the amount of climate-related expenditure and biodiversity-related expenditure, the
extent to which synergies between the objectives have been reached, and its complementarity with other
relevant Union programmes, the achievement of the objectives of all the measures (at the level of results
and impacts, when possible), the efficiency of the use of resources and the Union added value of the
Programme, with a view to taking a decision on the renewal, modification or suspension of the
measures. That mid-term evaluation report shall also include a quantitative and qualitative analysis of
the contribution of the LIFE Programme to the conservation status of habitats and species listed under
Directives 92/43/EEC and 2009/147/EC. The evaluation shall additionally address the scope for
simplification, its internal and external coherence, the continued relevance of all objectives, as well as
the contribution of the measures under the LIFE Programme to the Europe 2020 Strategy objectives and
targets and to sustainable development. It shall take into account evaluation results on the long-term
impact of LIFE+. The mid- term evaluation report shall be accompanied by remarks by the Commission
including the manner in which the findings of the mid-term evaluation shall be taken into account when
implementing the LIFE Programme, and, in particular, the extent to which the thematic priorities set out
in Annex III need to be modified.
The mid-term evaluation report shall contain or be accompanied by a thorough assessment of the extent
and quality of the demand for, planning and implementation of integrated projects. A special focus shall
be given to the realised or expected success of integrated projects in leveraging other Union funds,
taking into account, in particular, the benefits of increased coherence with other Union funding
instruments, the extent to which stakeholders have been involved and the extent to which previous
projects under LIFE+ have been or are expected to be covered by integrated projects.
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Annex 3: Methods
The external evaluation report covers in total 44 evaluation questions, however, the main questions
addressed by the mid-term evaluation are those mentioned in the Roadmap. The evaluation questions are
structured according to 6 evaluation criteria, namely: Effectiveness, Efficiency, Coherence, Relevance,
EU added value, Sustainability. They main questions are the following:
Effectiveness:
Q.1.
Q.2.
Q.3.
Q.4.
Q.5.
What is the outcome likely to be achieved under LIFE 2014-2020?
To what extent does the observed outcome correspond to the objectives?
What are the factors positively and negatively influencing the delivery of the objectives?
What is the distributional effectiveness?
What is the role of LIFE in bridging uneven integration of environmental and climate
action objectives among Member States?
Efficiency:
Q.6.
To what extent are the costs (especially management) of the LIFE Programme justified,
given the effects which have been achieved, and are likely to be achieved by the end of the
LIFE Programme?
Have the changes made between LIFE+ and this LIFE Programme improved efficiency?
Is there scope for efficiency gains, simplification and burden reduction?
Q.7.
Q.8.
Coherence:
Q.9.
To what extent does the LIFE Programme have a coherent structure taking into account its
two sub-programmes, its priority areas and the various types of interventions (internal
coherence)?
To which extent is LIFE Programme complementary and enjoying synergies with other
relevant Union funding programmes (i.e. the European Structural and Investment Funds
(ESIF), Horizon 2020) (external coherence)?
Q.10.
Relevance:
Q.11.
Q.12.
To what extent the Programme objectives are pertinent to needs, problems and issues
addressed?
To what extent do stakeholders support the LIFE interventions?
EU Added Value:
Q.13.
Q.14.
What is the additional value resulting from the EU intervention(s), compared to what could
be achieved by Member States at national and/or regional levels?
To what extent do the issues addressed by the intervention continue to require action at EU
level?
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1812757_0087.png
eProposal tool
reports on the system;
Delegation agreement with the ЕIB for the financial instruments;
Memorandum of Understanding between EASME, DG CLIMA and DG ENV regarding the
grants implemented by EASME.
In-depth interviews
Interviews were held with LIFE and LIFE+ beneficiaries, IP project coordinators, Commission Services
and EASME officials, NEEMO stakeholders, Financial Instruments stakeholders, and other
stakeholders.
For all stakeholder groups specific interview guidelines were developed with questions to guide the
semi-structured interviews. These questions are generally related to the following issues:
the thematic area of the project;
financial aspects, and problems during the application process if any;
sustainability to date;
impact to date (other than quantitatively derived from the indicator analysis); and
opinion
regarding
simplification
of
any
aspects
of
the
project
life
cycle.
After all interview exchanges had been transcribed into a common template, the software-tool ATLAS.ti
to analyse the transcriptions was used. Content analysis is a method utilized to interpret meaning from
the content of textual data, in order to identify themes and topics and assess the extent to which they are
emphasised or not in the responses. In this case, it implied using pre-defined codes or labels that are
linked to the evaluation questions prior to analysing how strongly those elements appear in the interview
responses. Whenever necessary for newly encountered themes, or sub-themes, new codes were created.
The interview results are aggregated and documented in a structured manner to facilitate the
‘triangulation’ and thematic analysis activities.
More than 120 interviews were conducted with LIFE and LIFE+ beneficiaries for each priority area. The
beneficiaries have been randomly selected using as first criteria an equal split per sub-programme
(similar to LIFE budget distribution, e.g. a higher number of NAT beneficiaries), secondly by an even
split across all 28 MS and thirdly per MS a distribution across the priority areas.
102
Stakeholder questionnaires
In addition to the open public consultation, six questionnaires targeting the following stakeholder groups
were implemented:
1.
LIFE and LIFE+ beneficiaries;
2.
National and Regional Contact Points;
3.
NEEMO monitoring experts;
4.
Unsuccessful applicants to traditional projects;
5.
NGOs benefitting from Operating grants;
6.
LIFE Capacity building project beneficiaries.
The development of the questionnaires consisted of the following steps. Firstly key questions mainly
related to general aspects of the programme were developed and i.e. how stakeholders are
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involved/informed. Secondly, sub-questions that varied between the questionnaires were elaborated to
provide additional in-depth insight on specific issues
Regarding the analyses, standard statistical tools were used to produce descriptive statistics.
Furthermore, for the beneficiaries, NCPs, NEEMO and unsuccessful applicants a separate report was
prepared (similar to the public consultation); these are included in the Annex D of the external report.
The results from the various questionnaires have been integrated in the cross-analysis using also the
results from other actions, e.g. interviews, in order to come to conclusions on each evaluation question.
LIFE Indicator Database
The LIFE Indicator Database was provided by the external monitoring team NEEMO, who is
responsible for the monitoring and control of LIFE projects and the maintenance of LIFE Indicator
Database website (life.idom.com). To obtain the available data, a relational database management
system (SQL) server was developed and the data were extracted by SQL queries. Additionally, in order
to facilitate the wider use of the tables for analytical purposes a large excel table was prepared.
Financial Instruments
The MAWP 2014-2017 provides the basis for two financial instruments: the Natural Capital Financing
Facility (NCFF) and the Private Finance for Energy Efficiency (PF4EE). Both are implemented by the
European Investment Bank (EIB) on the basis of delegation agreements between the Commission and
the ЕIB. For PF4EE three operations have so far been signed. Regarding NCFF no contracts have been
signed yet although two are in the final negotiations. This implies that for this interim evaluation it is too
early to present any findings on achieved results and impacts at project level for the financial
intermediaries and clients or final recipients.
For this interim evaluation an approach consisting of several elements has been used:
Using the key evaluation criteria from Evalsed and OECD DAC as leading and grouping the
evaluation questions from the European Commission (EC) (from the Terms of Reference) as
much as possible under the main evaluation criteria;
Desk research and analysis:
documentation of EIB regarding the applications for NCFF and
PF4EE was consulted. This included (where possible) delegation agreements, applications of
intermediaries, eligibility letters, appraisal reports and due diligence reports provided by EIB..
Furthermore, literature on similar financial instruments and experiences of other institutions
(such as the EBRD) was reviewed;
A theory of change based upon economic analysis and causalities was designed in order to
identify the key outputs, results, and intermediate and ultimate impacts. For NCFF insights to
the interviews based upon economic analysis were added, as well as project finance experience
and specific literature regarding the assessment of relevancy of the instrument;
Interviews. The
valuators have conducted two interviews with EIB staff
one for each
instrument
interviewed the technical assistance provider for PF4EE (Adelphi company) and
spoke with two intermediary financial institutions for PF4EE. These were Komercni Banka
(from the Czech Republic) and Crédit Coopératif (from France). There were no agreements yet
signed with intermediaries of NCFF and no beneficiaries have yet been financed and started as a
result of the Irish Equity Fund.
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Annex 4: Synopsis report on the Stakeholder consultation
The stakeholder consultation activities have been undertaken between the mid-June and October 2016.
Depending on the stakeholder groups different types of consultation activities were identified, as
envisaged in the consultation strategy:
Open Public consultation
Interviews with relevant LIFE Programme stakeholders
Surveys addressed to specific stakeholder groups
-
-
-
-
Participation at specific events were stakeholders were approached during the following events:
The annual NCP training organised by EASME on the 2 and 3 June 2016 in Brussels
The Life Info Day on the 17 June in Brussels
The Life Committee meeting held on the 5 July
Platform meetings on specific topics.
Table 1: Number of interviews and answers to the surveys
Number
of
answers
256
208
41
Monitoring experts
Unsuccessful applicants
Project site visits
Number
of
answers
59
10
8
Answers to the surveys
Public consultation
Project beneficiaries
National Contact Points
Interviews
Implementing
bodies
(Commission,
Executive Agency for Small and Medium
Enterprises, European Investment Bank,
monitoring team)
36
Project beneficiaries
121
Open Public Consultation
In line with the Better Regulation Guidelines, an open public consultation was launched on the 15
th
of
June 2016 to collect through an online survey, the views of citizens and associations of citizens, as well
as of all other interested stakeholders. The public consultation has been published for 12 weeks on the
Your Voice in Europe website. In total 256 replies were submitted.
Moreover, the public consultation elicited contributions from various stakeholders. In total 35
documents were received, including two from public authorities (the Coordination Committee for
International Environmental Policy
CCIEP; and the Autonomous Region of Azores), three from
citizens, six from organisations registered in the Transparency register of the European Commission
(EDF, VERBUND Hydro Power GmbH, SUEZ Groupe SAS, WWF-UK, the Bulgarian Society for the
Protection of Birds, Birdlife International), and six from non-registered ones (the Chartered Institution
of Wastes Management, the Association de la Ville et des Communes de la Région de Bruxelles-
Capitale asbl, Eco Innovation AB, Platform for climate adaptation & disaster risk reduction, The Nature
Laboratory, and the European Water Platform
WssTP). The responses and contributions of those who
agreed to publish will be made available to the public.
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Regarding the distribution of the respondents by place of residence, the most represented countries were
Spain and Italy, followed by Belgium, France, and Germany, whereas only a few came from
Luxembourg, Latvia and Ireland.
30%
26%
25%
20%
16%
15%
10%
8%
8%
4%
2% 1%
1%
1%
0,4%
8%
5%
1%
1% 0,4% 1% 0,2% 1% 1%
2% 2% 2%
1%
2%
1%
3%
2% 2%
5%
0%
The participation of different stakeholder categories was overall balanced with about one third of the
responses coming from private organisations, citizens, and public authorities, and the rest from other
entities, including National and Regional Contact Points, European Commission staff, and NGOs.
Likewise, the distribution of responses per thematic area was overall balanced, with a slight predominance of
nature and biodiversity, climate change, natural resources management and water, and few respondents
coming from the area of noise, industry, health and chemicals.
Other consultation activities:
In addition to the public consultation, six complementary surveys were carried out in parallel, targeting
specifically the following stakeholder groups:
National and Regional Contact Points (the survey was
distributed during a specific workshop for NCP’s
and some of the main results were presented during a workshop for the LIFE Committee);
External monitoring experts (NEEMO);
Unsuccessful applicants to traditional projects;
NGOs benefitting from Operating grants;
LIFE Capacity-building project beneficiaries.
LIFE and LIFE+ project beneficiaries;
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The surveys consisted of a series of specific questions addressing the criteria of effectiveness, efficiency,
relevance, coherence, EU added value, sustainability. The respondents were asked to indicate, for most of the
questions on a predefined scale, to which extent they agreed to a specific statement. The surveys also
included a number of open questions to allow the respondents to further express their opinion on the LIFE
Programme.
Feedback on the Roadmap:
An
individual
feedback
was
received
on
the
Roadmap
(http://ec.europa.eu/smart-
regulation/roadmaps/docs/2017_env_001_evaluation_life_mt_en.pdf). The comment was treated as not
strictly related to the mid-term evaluation roadmap as the comment was addressed to the next LIFE multi
annual work programme (2018-2020). The feedback will be assessed in the context of the preparation of the
LIFE multi annual work programme instead, as the subject of the request was to give more relevance to the
status of the invertebrate species of the Habitat Directive, under the sub programme for Environment.
Summary of all the consultation activities undertaken between mid-June and October presented for
each key evaluation criteria:
Effectiveness
The results of the interviews with the project beneficiaries confirm a positive perception of the quality of the
LIFE projects, which are seen as a concrete answer to local needs and further identify a "quality mark" for
the projects awarded with a LIFE grant, which makes it easier for them to mobilise additional resources
afterwards. According to the beneficiaries interviewed, LIFE is known for delivering results and having a
substantial impact on the ground.
Efficiency
While overall the costs for the management of the LIFE Programme were deemed to be relatively low by the
majority of stakeholders (also compared to other EU funding programmes), other stakeholders argued that
the set-up
with external monitoring contractors acting as a kind of “third” layer of management increases
overall costs and that the internalisation of these tasks and costs into the workings of EASME might be more
efficient. The analysis of the consultation activities has overall highlighted that there is room for realising
efficiency gains if the external contractor for monitoring and communication and EASME streamline their
cooperation.
The decision to phase out national allocations over a 4-year period, as seen in the 2014-2017 MAWP, was
much welcomed by NCPs. However, the distribution of LIFE projects across thematic priorities and across
Member States and regions is not balanced, as shown by clustering of countries that specialise in either
Nature or Environment projects, and by a significant number of Nature funds that are directed to regions of
low conservation priority (e.g. in Northern or Central Europe), while Southern and Eastern States may have
been underfunded.
LIFE is a funding programme that is close to the market and that demonstrates technical and commercial
solutions. Private sector participation to LIFE calls for proposals and (co-)funding mobilised by the private
sector can still be improved according to various stakeholder target groups.
The roles of all main stakeholder groups in the implementation of the LIFE Programme are overall clear and
sufficiently distinct from each other (only the role of EASME, although being perceived as overall effective,
needs to be further communicated). Some stakeholders pointed out that that there is some overlap in the
distribution of tasks among EASME or the Commission on the one hand, and the external contractor for
monitoring and communication, on the other. As resulted from the survey, the beneficiaries are particularly
satisfied (over 90%.) with the extensive support received from the external contractor for monitoring and
communication during all project stages. NCPs are considered overall as useful in particular during the
application phase with critical remarks made only by individual project beneficiaries, however large
differences in capacity and performance exist across Member States. The EIB appeared rather unknown to
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the consulted stakeholders. The majority of beneficiaries is also not aware of the existence and role of the
external communication consultants.
With regards to the LIFE Communication activities, despite the fact that improvements are needed, project
beneficiaries rate it as “good” or “very good”. Particular high appreciation is given to the LIFE website
(75%) and the LIFE best project publications and awards (72%).
Coherence
The majority of the stakeholders found that LIFE is both internally and externally coherent. Indeed for some
parts of the LIFE Programme, such as Nature and Biodiversity, LIFE is the only source of funding at Union
level and thus is highly coherent with the remaining EU programmes as it fills a niche.
Found project overlaps in topics are perceived positive by more than 51% of the beneficiaries who took part
to the survey, indicating that they are not undesired, but rather lead to complementarities and synergies.
Especially where a project builds on the results and experiences of previous projects, or a second project
replicates the results of a previous project in a new location with the challenges it faces, an overlap in topic is
occasionally found.
Concerning external coherence with other EU programmes, according to stakeholders, overlaps between
LIFE and H2020 and the ERDF are found not to lead to deadweight, but to synergies. The programmes have
distinct goals and activities, yet these are interrelated and mutually consistent suggesting they are highly
coherent. Increased emphasis on the business perspective of LIFE projects is in line for the EU 2020 Strategy
and it has allowed an increased involvement of the private sector, which looks at LIFE as a continuation of
the support received under the CIP-Eco-innovation.
The majority of stakeholders (more than 51%) agree that LIFE functions as a catalyst, providing a source of
funding projects that can later be funded by other, larger EU, national or regional funds. However, the
analysis of the consultation activities also highlight that the potential catalytic role is not fully exploited at
present and should be further enhanced, bridging the gap to larger EU funds, i.e. ERDF (including
INTERREG).
The European Regional Development Fund (ERFD) is specifically mentioned as being complementary, and
as a source for follow-up funding after the LIFE Programme. This means that the LIFE Programme is very
coherent with the ERDF and its sub-programmes (including INTERREG). This is in contrast to the national
level, where across the EU there are few national programmes focused on LIFE themes.
Relevance
The results of the open public consultation shows that an overwhelming majority of respondents (between
94% and 99%) agreed that the LIFE Programme is relevant and it addresses needs, problems and issues in the
area of environment and climate action at regional, national and EU level, especially for countries where
(national) budgets are insufficient to address these issues. This is especially found to be the case in the areas
of biodiversity, habitat protection, sustainable resource use and preventing/ adapting to climate change.
Where at programme level LIFE is seen by most stakeholders as “a very important instrument to adapt
to and
focus on environmental and climate priorities” and considered fully relevant for EU 2020 Strategy and the
7th EAP, at project level relevance is not always undisputed. A limited budget and broad policy goals means
that not all policy objectives can be addressed in an equal manner (pointing to a need for prioritisation), and
replication and dissemination is often insufficient. Furthermore, some individual stakeholders also noted that
improvement is needed in terms of the project topics implementing the thematic priorities which, according
to an observer where often “badly written/designed, responding more to a short term policy priority need that
LIFE is not designed to deliver”.
As noted before, in many of these areas, LIFE is largely perceived by stakeholders to be the most relevant
source of funding for their activities (85% of the unsuccessful applicants stated that it is
difficult to find
alternative funding programmes addressing problems of conservation and biodiversity)
. LIFE is overall
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considered to be an important instrument in supporting the second pillar of the EU 2020 Strategy on
sustainable growth, and its projects result in jobs and in the development of new work skills. This is
supported by stakeholders’ acknowledgement of the increased
emphasis put on the business perspective of
projects.
Finally, different stakeholder groups, in particular the project beneficiaries and the LIFE National Contact
Points, rate the importance of the objectives that LIFE pursues as very high, and deem that
the programme’s
objectives and types of interventions are very well suited to the needs in the different priority areas.
EU added value
In the open public consultation the stakeholders largely acknowledged (95%) the catalytic role that LIFE is
playing for better solidarity and responsibility-sharing in preserving the common good of the Union's
environment and climate, leading to a less costly implementation of environmental and climate change
policies, in particular for the implementation of Natura 2000 and of the EU Biodiversity Strategy. Notably,
the added value of the Programme lies in the EU co-funding that enables project beneficiaries to deliver
results that in most cases would either not be realised at national, regional and/or at local level, or would be
pursued at slower pace and on a lesser scale, especially in MS that have fewer financial mechanisms in place
or when these mechanisms are difficult to access.
In addition, the overwhelming majority of the respondents to the public consultation confirm that the
programme has an important EU added value because it:
-
-
-
-
-
-
responds to European and global environment and climate challenges, which are unlikely to be
addressed by a Member State alone (98% of the respondents);
supports the coherent development, implementation and enforcement of Union environment and
climate policy and legislation, (98% of the respondents);
tackles environmental and climate problems more efficiently (98% of the respondents);
preserves EU environmental resources which, even if unevenly distributed across the EU,
benefit the EU as a whole (94% of the respondents);
contributes to leveraging the funds for environmental protection and climate action (97% of the
respondents),
contributes to EU-wide sharing of 'best practices', knowledge transfer, demonstration, and
awareness raising (99% of the respondents).
Many beneficiaries noted during the interviews that the enforcement of Union policy and legislation is one of
the core tasks of the LIFE Programme, which is fulfilled effectively.
The consultation also highlighted that the main consequences of stopping or withdrawing the existing LIFE
interventions would be mostly negative, reducing MS’ capacity –
and in some cases commitment
to pursue
the Union’s objectives in the area
of environmental protection and climate change, but also negatively
affecting employment and economic growth.
Furthermore according to the majority of the external monitoring experts and of the National and Regional
Contact Points consulted (respectively 97% and 79%) very little of what LIFE projects have achieved would
have been launched or realized without the programme’s support, in particular for nature protection and
biodiversity conservation.
Stakeholders also believe that the main consequences of stopping or withdrawing the existing LIFE
interventions would be mostly negative, including the reduction of Member States' and NGOs' capacity to
pursue the Union's objectives in the area of environmental protection and climate action or the failure of the
Commission to meet the commitments taken on the basis of EU environment or climate legislation or at
international level.
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Sustainability
Responses collected during the survey reveal that the demonstration and transferability potential of the results
of LIFE projects are for the majority (78%) either good or very good.
However, according to the beneficiaries, the main barriers for the replicability of project results, are linked to
the lack of financial means, to the lack of interest and sense of urgency from decision makers, to lack of
specific information and communication on transferable solutions and applications or business models, as
well as to the lack of capacity/human resources at project level.
The replication potential of LIFE project results by the private sector is perceived as significant, but could be
further enhanced. According to interviews with beneficiaries the private sector uptake could be improved
through raising of awareness about results and by providing specific financial support.
The recently introduced After-LIFE plans are considered by stakeholders as a positive step in improving
sustainability of the LIFE programme.
As for the related funds, during the external study, the interviews of about 70 project beneficiaries revealed
that 40% of them report that they will/already have attract(ed) funding to further develop project results after
the end of EU funding.
Respondents to the public consultation were also asked whether projects under LIFE have led to long-term
positive effects. Over 80% of respondents feel that projects had medium or great positive long-term effects.
According to LIFE project beneficiaries, especially LIFE Environment projects contribute significantly to job
creation and (sustainable) growth, as the thematic areas industry, resource efficiency and waste management
appear to have higher chances for commercialisation of project results (products or methods). Nature projects
lead to a limited increase in direct employment after ending of LIFE funding and mainly contribute to
indirect job creation through preservation or restauration of recreation areas. Half of the LIFE Climate Action
projects are expected to contribute to job creation. The impact of information and awareness raising on job
creation was found difficult to quantify, as job creation will to a large extent be indirect and linked to creation
of networks.
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Annex 5: Table of assessment of indicators against targets
A. LIFE 2017 MILESTONES
NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY INDICATORS
Table 1 Data on the indicators of LIFE Programme (2014, 2015 call for proposals) and
LIFE+ Programme (based on a sample of projects)
Comparison item
LIFE
(2014, LIFE+ (sample of 2017 Milestone
2015 projects)
2007-2013 projects)
98%
100 %
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 98%
projects set up to improve the
conservation status within the meaning
of Council Directive 92/43/EEC on the
conservation of natural habitats and of
wild fauna and flora and Directive
2009/147/EC on the conservation of
wild birds
Percentage of habitats targeted by 46%
ongoing or finalised projects that are
progressing towards an improved
conservation status
Percentage of species targeted by 66%
ongoing or finalised projects that are
progressing towards an improved
conservation status
Percentage of Natura 2000 sites targeted 26%
by ongoing or finalised projects that are
progressing towards an improved
conservation status
63%
10 % of the
habitats targeted
30%
10 % of the
species targeted
21%
10 % of the
Natura
2000
sites/ha of Natura
2000
sites
targeted
Contribution of other projects to Nature Climate Change Information
and -
and Biodiversity indicators
Actions (53%) awareness
(22%);
Water (24%)
Governance (21%)
Water (17%)
AIR QUALITY MILESTONES
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Table 10 Data on the indicators of LIFE Programme (2014, 2015 call for proposals) and
LIFE+ Programme (based on a sample of projects)
Comparison item
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects)
Milestone
63%
80%
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 77%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards reaching or surpassing the
relevant Union air quality target on
project level
- in Air Quality zones where 38% (66% if only air 43% (58% if only air
pollutant levels are above targets projects
are projects are accounted)
established by law: projects foresee accounted)
to reach/surpass these targets on
project levels;
- where Air Quality policies are being 77%
developed and implemented: projects
foresee to develop new measures,
methods or techniques that can serve
as models for Union policy
development.
Persons covered by ongoing or 99%
finalised
projects
implementing
replicable or transferable actions
progressing towards reaching or
surpassing the relevant Union air
quality target.
Contribution of projects in other
areas to Air indicators
Climate
actions
(34%); Environment
and heath (17%);
Waste (13%)
63%
99%
-
Climate actions (30%); -
Environment and heath
(14%); Waste (14%);
Governance (15%)
Source: Indicator database and own calculations
CHEMICALS AND NOISE INDICATORS MILESTONES
Table 2 Data on the indicators of LIFE Programme (2014, 2015 call for proposals) and
LIFE+ Programme (based on a sample of projects)
Comparison item
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects) Milestone
86%
80%
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 76%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards reaching or surpassing the
relevant Union chemical substance
target on project level
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Comparison item
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects) Milestone
99%
-
Percentage of persons covered by 78%
ongoing
or
finalised
projects
implementing replicable or transferable
actions set up to reduce adverse effects
of
chemicals
on
health
and
environment, including estimates over
the long term effects - after 3 or 5 years
Contribution of projects in the other Water
(40%);
sectors to the reduction/substitution of Climate
Change
chemicals
Actions (20%) and
Resource efficiency
(20%)
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 67%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards reaching or surpassing the
relevant Union noise reduction target on
project level
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 33%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions targeting noise
reduction progressing towards reducing
noise exposure by at least 3 dB
Number of the persons benefitting from 4.000
ongoing
or
finalised
projects
implementing replicable or transferable
actions set up to reduce noise levels by
at least 3 dB
Source: Indicator database and own calculations.
Waste (36%) and -
Water
(21%),
Resource efficiency
(13%)
71%
80%
43%
-
10.000
RESOURCE EFFICIENCY INDICATORS MILESTONES
Table 3 Data on the indicators of LIFE Programme (2014, 2015 call for proposals) and LIFE+
Programme (based on a sample of projects)
Comparison item
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects) Milestone
75%
80%
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 76%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards implementing aspects of green
circular economy
Percentage of additional companies 77%
covered by ongoing or finalised projects
implementing replicable or transferable
actions set up to implement green
circular economy
77%
-
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1812757_0098.png
Comparison item
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects) Milestone
71%
80%
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 91%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards maintaining or improving soil
functions
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 67%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards
implementation
of
the
European Forest Strategy
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 70%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions set up to provide
data for the European Forest Data
Centre (EFDAC)
Contribution of other projects to Climate
Change
resource efficiency (not including soil Actions
(29%);
and forest)
Waste (24%), Water
(22%)
Contribution of other projects
resource efficiency
Soil
to Climate
Change
Actions
(56%);
Nature
and
Biodiversity (22%);
to Nature
and
Biodiversity (43%);
Climate
Change
Actions (35%)
65%
80%
100%
80%
Climate
Change -
Actions
(30%);
Waste (36%), Water
(12%)
Nature
and -
Biodiversity (26%);
Climate
Change
Actions
(21%);
Governance (19%)
Nature
and -
Biodiversity (66%);
Climate
Change
Actions (12%)
Contribution of other projects
resource efficiency
Forest
WASTE INDICATORS MILESTONES
Table 4 Data on the indicators of LIFE Programme (2014, 2015 call for proposals) and LIFE+
Programme (based on a sample of projects)
Comparison item
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects) Milestone
65%
80%
Percentage of ongoing or finalised 76%
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing
towards adequate waste management
Percentage of municipalities or regions 89%
covered by ongoing or finalised projects
implementing replicable or transferable
actions set up to reach adequate
78%
-
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1812757_0099.png
Comparison item
management of waste
Contribution of other projects to waste
indicators
LIFE (2014, 2015 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
projects)
2007-2013 projects) Milestone
Nature
and
Biodiversity (23%);
Resource efficiency
(23%); Water (17%)
Climate
actions
(18%) Nature and
Biodiversity (16%);
Resource efficiency
(16%); Water (16%)
WATER INDICATORS MILESTONES
Table 5 Data on indicators of LIFE (2014) and LIFE+ Programme (based on sample of projects)
Comparison item
LIFE
projects)
(2014 LIFE+ (sample of 2017
2007-2013 projects)
Milestone
Percentage of ongoing or finalised
projects implementing replicable or
transferable actions and progressing 63%
towards good ecological status at project
level
Number and percentage of water bodies
(inland/transitional/coastal) covered by
ongoing
or
finalised
projects 49 (70 total)
implementing replicable or transferable 70%
actions set up to improve their
ecological status
Contribution to water indicators or to
improvement of water bodies by
projects, funded in other sectors (non-
water)
61%
80 %
245 (627 total)
41%
100
103
Nature
and
biodiversity (48%), Nature
Climate
actions biodiversity
(28%),
Waste Waste (9%)
(10%)
and
(62%), -
Table 25 - Percentage of increase of stakeholders and citizens targeted by awareness-raising projects
implementing replicable or transferable actions becoming aware of the environmental policy objectives
pursued by these projects as measured in ex-ante and ex-post surveys (carried out by LIFE projects or
other entities) (2014 call for proposals) and LIFE+ programme (based on a sample of projects)
LIFE (2014 projects)
567%
Source: Indicator database and own calculations.
LIFE+ (sample of 2007-2013 2017 Milestone
projects)
510%
25%
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It is expected that between 2015 and 2017, 6,900 waterbodies throughout the Union improve their ecological
status, 1,4% of them (100) due to a LIFE contribution
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Annex 6: Total amount non-deductible VAT reimbursed per Member State
The following amounts of VAT reimbursements per Member State, requested by beneficiaries at the
final stage can be reported:
EUR 181.135,72
It should be noted that very few (19) final reports have been processed until the date of this report in
relation to the LIFE programme 2014-2020.
Breakdown per Member States
AT
BE
CZ
DE
IT
NL
SE
UK
€4.403,37
€88.731,21
€5.056,09
€15.563,80
€22.983,51
€24.315,67
€7.007,70
€13.074,37
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Annex 7: LIFE's Programme contribution to Sustainable Development Goals
LIFE is at the heart of the SDGs, taking into account their strong environmental and climate dimensions.
The LIFE programme supports
SDG 2.
"End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and
promote sustainable agriculture"
because it encourages an environmentally friendly agriculture, in view
of the protection, preservation and improvement in the quality of water, air and soil and the protection of
bio-diversity.
To improve resource efficiency in food production and reduce impact on water resources, LIFE is also
promoting sustainable nutrients management in agriculture.
Moreover, the National Emission Ceilings Directive for air pollutants, the Member States' targets to
reduce Greenhouse Gas emissions as well as the proposal to integrate the land use sector into the EU
2030 Climate and Energy Framework are aimed at incentivising Member States to take additional
sustainable action in their agriculture sectors.
On
SDG 3
"Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages", with
environmental
stressors having significant impacts on health, LIFE complements Member States' action through
legislation and other initiatives on environment related health problems, which are linked to air quality,
industrial emissions, chemicals, waste and water.
Examples include the 7th Environment Action Programme, the EU Biodiversity Strategy to 2020, or the
rules on the sustainable use of pesticides which underline the link with health policy aspects.
The EU Chemicals Policy also covers regulation on persistent organic pollutants; trade in hazardous
chemicals; fluorinated gases; and hazardous waste. The so-called "REACH" framework aims to improve
the protection of human health and the environment from the risks that can be posed by chemicals, while
enhancing the competitiveness of the EU chemicals industry.
In view of
SDG 6
"Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all",
the
EU water policy is a cornerstone of the LIFE Programme and provides for a framework to address water
protection and achieve good ecological status for inland surface waters, transitional waters, coastal
waters and groundwater. It comprises regulation including on drinking water, bathing water and urban
waste water, prevention of pollution caused by nitrates, industrial emissions, pesticides and persistent
organic pollutants.
The transition to a circular economy should also lead to greater resource efficiency for example by
improving the conditions for water re-use in several sectors.
Through the circular economy package, LIFE addresses economic and environmental concerns by
maximizing efficiency in the use of resources, and thus contributes to
SDG 8
"Promote sustained,
inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all".
Moreover, the 7th Environment Action Programme confirms that EU prosperity and healthy
environment stem from an innovative, circular economy where nothing is wasted and where natural
resources are managed in a sustainable way, and biodiversity is protected, valued and restored.
LIFE also contributes to
SDG 9
"Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable
industrialization and foster innovation":
The 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework strives for a competitive low-carbon and climate-
resilient economy and the EU Strategy on Adaptation to Climate Change identifies resilient
infrastructure as a priority action area under the strategic objective of mainstreaming adaptation
measures.
The circular economy fosters eco-innovation and sustainability objectives.
As regards as
SDG 11 "
Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable
",
the 7th Environment Action Programme has as a horizontal priority objective to make the Union's cities
more sustainable.
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Other environmental and climate policies and legislation are vital for sustainable urban development
such as Noise Legislation, the EU's Biodiversity and Green Infrastructure Strategies, Drinking Water
and Urban Wastewater Treatment, the framework on energy performance of building, the strengthen of
the resilience of urban settings through climate related risks.
Urban energy consumption generates about three quarters of global carbon emissions. Therefore, cities
play a crucial role in terms of energy and climate policy (the Clean Air Package, Air Quality, etc..). The
EU Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy is a bottom-up local and regional action for tackling in
an integrated manner climate change mitigation and adaptation, and access to secure, sustainable and
affordable energy.
Moreover, the circular economy package contributes to this SDG under many aspects, such as by
addressing sustainable waste sorting and recycling and by shifting energy consumption onto more
sustainable pathways.
In view of reaching
SDG 12
"Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns", r
esource
efficiency and circular economy actions aim to decouple economic growth from resource use and
environmental degradation. By covering the whole cycle from production and consumption to waste
management, they are at the core of the LIFE actions under the priority areas Environment and Resource
Efficiency.
Moreover, the 7th Environment Action programme has as a key objective to turn the Union into a
resource-efficient, green, and competitive low-carbon economy. Another related key objective is to
safeguard EU citizens from environment-related pressures and risks to health and wellbeing.
Concerning
SDG 13
"Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts", c
limate change
mitigation and climate change adaptation are two priority areas of the LIFE programme. The 2015 Paris
Agreement is a historically significant landmark in the global fight against climate change; a success for
the world and a confirmation of the EU's path to a low-carbon and climate resilient economy. With the
support of LIFE, ambitious 2020 and 2030 targets
104
have been set up to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, improve energy efficiency and increase the share of renewable energy. Renewable energies
and energy efficiency play an increasingly important role in tackling climate change.
The EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) is a key tool for cutting greenhouse gas emissions from large-
scale facilities in the power and industry sectors, as well as the aviation sector.
The EU Strategy on Adaptation to Climate Change provides a framework and mechanisms to improve
the preparedness of the EU for current and future impacts of climate change, thus contributing to a more
climate-resilient society.
On
SDG 14
"Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable
development", the
7th Environment Action Programme sets the objective to protect the Union's natural
capital to, inter alia, reduce the impact of pressures on marine waters, in order to achieve or maintain
good environmental status.
The Birds and Habitats legislation complement the Marine Strategy Framework by protecting 5% of the
EU sea area through a network of Marine Protected Areas part of 'Natura 2000'.
Moreover, to tackle marine litter and pollution, LIFE supports a wide set of instruments, including
regulation on waste management and prevention, port reception facilities for ship generated waste and
cargo residues.
104
For the period up to 2020, the Europe 2020 Strategy aims at cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 20%, at
meeting 20% of the EU's energy demand with renewables, and at increasing energy efficiency by 20% by
2020. The 2030 Climate and Energy Policy Framework aims to achieve a greenhouse gas emissions reduction
of 40%, a renewables' share of at least 27% in the EU's energy mix, and an increase of energy efficiency by at
least 27% (with a view to 30%) for 2030.
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As regards as
SDG 15
"Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems,
sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt
biodiversity loss", the
environmental
acquis
provides a high level of protection in areas such as water
quality and nature conservation, though the development and implementation of the Birds and Habitats
Directives and of the Natura 2000 network.
The EU Forest Strategy has as one of its key principles global forest responsibility, promoting
sustainable production and consumption of forest products.
The circular economy offers an opportunity for modernising the economy, making it more green and
competitive. It also contributes to lower carbon dioxide emission levels and energy savings as well as
decreased air, soil and water pollution. It focuses on resource efficiency and minimising waste and has a
strong potential in terms of new jobs and growth and for stimulating sustainable consumption and
production patterns.
Finally, by supporting the compliance and enforcement of environmental and climate legislation and the
access to justice on environmental matters in Member States, LIFE is contributing to
SDG 17
" Promote
peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build
effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels".
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