Australia Joins Horizon Europe: What Changes for Finnish and EU Research Consortia
Australia Horizon News
NEWS
Samuel Savolainen
6/11/20263 min read
Horizon Europe just got meaningfully larger. On 9 June 2026, the European Commission and Australia formally concluded negotiations on Australia's association to the EU's flagship €93.5 billion research and innovation programme. From January 2027, Australian entities will participate on equal terms with EU Member States under Horizon Europe's Pillar II.
This is not just a diplomatic formality. It changes the practical options available to research consortia, particularly in sectors where Australian expertise is genuinely world-class.
What changes from January 2027
Until now, Australian organisations could participate in Horizon Europe projects, but as third-country entities they typically had to self-fund their participation or rely on narrow exceptions. They could not lead project consortia. The association agreement removes both of those constraints.
From January 2027, under a transitional arrangement, Australian entities will be treated as eligible partners on equal terms with EU Member States under Pillar II. They can receive direct EU funding, lead project consortia, and be full co-applicants rather than unfunded participants. For a consortium coordinator building a team, this is a meaningful practical difference.
What Pillar II covers
The association is scoped to Pillar II of Horizon Europe, which funds collaborative research on major societal challenges across three cluster areas: digital, industry and space; climate, energy and mobility; and food, bioeconomy and natural resources, agriculture and the environment.
For Finnish and EU companies working in clean energy, space technology, bioeconomy, or advanced manufacturing, these are exactly the sectors where international consortia are most competitive and Australian institutions are genuinely strong.
Australia's track record in the programme already reflects this. To date, Australian organisations have participated in 239 Horizon Europe projects, and individual applications from Australia have achieved a 24.39% success rate. Nearly one in four applications selected. That compares favourably with typical EU-wide success rates and signals that when Australian researchers pursue these calls, they tend to be competitive.
The broader picture: Horizon Europe is globalising rapidly
What makes the Australia news particularly notable is the speed at which this international expansion is happening. Japan concluded negotiations with the EU in December 2025, with Japanese entities able to participate under transitional arrangements from January 2026. Australia's agreement follows six months later. The EU has now also concluded exploratory talks with India.
Within the span of roughly a year, three of the world's most significant research economies in the Asia-Pacific region have moved into or toward formal association. The EU is deliberately transforming Horizon Europe from a primarily European and near-neighbour programme into a global science platform.
For EU-based consortium coordinators, this carries a practical implication that is easy to overlook: the list of entities that can be fully funded partners in a Horizon Europe project is getting longer. Building a consortium that spans Helsinki, Sydney and Tokyo is no longer a workaround exercise in managing third-country participation rules. From 2027 onward, it is a straightforward option.
A Finnish angle that is already taking shape
Finland-Australia research collaboration in the relevant Pillar II sectors is not a hypothetical. VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, are already collaborating on quantum computing through VTT's Quantum Leap initiative, with CSIRO contributing expertise on translating quantum research into industrial applications in energy and biotechnology. That kind of partnership has, until now, required Australian participation to be funded separately or through bilateral research agreements. From January 2027, CSIRO can be a co-funded partner in the same Horizon Europe proposal.
Similar logic applies to Finnish and EU companies working in clean energy, space, or marine bioeconomy, where Australian institutions have significant research depth.
What to do now
The formal association agreement still needs to be signed before entering into force, but negotiations are concluded and the timeline is clear: January 2027. That means calls currently open in 2026 are not yet affected, but 2027 calls and multi-year projects being planned today can already factor in Australian partners in fully funded roles.
For organisations currently building research consortia in Pillar II sectors, it is worth mapping whether there is an Australian institution that strengthens the scientific case. The 239 projects that have already included Australian entities are a reasonable starting point for identifying which Australian universities and research organisations are active in which topics.
Source: [The European Union and Australia successfully conclude Horizon Europe negotiations](https://research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu/news/all-research-and-innovation-news/european-union-and-australia-successfully-conclude-horizon-europe-negotiations-2026-06-09_en), European Commission, 9 June 2026