The European Commission has long supported the idea of open access to research results. In the Horizon 2020 (H2020) programme the EU introduced the rules regarding providing open access to publications and research data. In the Horizon Europe (HE) programme these rules have been specified even further. Important factor in the evaluation process of the projects of European programmes is the openess of publications, not the impact factor indicator.
Similar rules are starting to be taken over by Czech grant agencies. The first of them is the Technology Agency of the Czech Republic, which requires Open Access and Open Science principles in the Kappa programme.
Rationale for Open Science: visibility and findability of the results of publicly funded projects as well as providing transparent evaluation of the impact of individual programmes on science, technology and societal development.
Summary of Open Science requirments:
- Deposit the publication in a repository and provide open access to it.
- Provide access to the publication and to the metadata under a public license (CC or equivalent).
- Publish research data in accordance with the FAIR principles - 'as open as possible, as closed as necessary' - i.e. publish all data that can be made public.
- Develop and regularly update a Data Management Plan (DMP).
- Provide access to research data under a public licence (CC or equivalent) where possible. Provide acces to the metadata also under a public licence.
All requirements are described below in detail for each programme. Details may vary!
Open Science in EC research projects - legislation and administration
The terms of the programmes mandate to provide open access to peer-reviewed journal articles funded by Horizon programmes through research repositories. This regulation was piloted already under the FP7 programme. At the CTU, these conditions can be met, for example, by uploading the text to the CTU Digital Library. The Horizon Europe programme further introduced the obligation to provide open access to research data produced within the project.
The obligation is recorded in the basic EU documents for Horizon programmes:
- EU Regulation 2021/695 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 28 April 2021 establishing the Horizon Europe Framework Programme for Research and Innovation and laying down the rules for participation and propagation of results and repealing EU Regulation No. 1290/2013 and No. 1291/2013 - Article 14
- EU Regulation No 1290/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013 laying down the rules for participation and propagation of the results of the programme Horizon 2020 - The Framework Programme for Research and Innovation (2014-2020) - Article 43
- EU Regulation No 1291/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2013 establishing the Horizon 2020 programme - Framework Programme for Research and Innovation (2014-2020) - Article 18
Administration of Horizon programmes at the CTU
- CTU Rector’s Office - Science and Research Department (Czech only)
Open Science in Horizon 2020
Publications
Types of documents concerned:
- Journal articles: obligatory,
- Other types of documents (monographs, proceedings, conference publications, etc..): recommended.
Summary of requirements:
- The article metadata and full text must be deposited in the repository at latest on the date of publication.
- The rules require depositing the final peer-reviewed version of the manuscript (postprint) or the publisher’s version, i.e. the final version of the text after incorporating all comments from peer-review process. Saving a preprint (i.e. author submitted manuscript) of a publication is not acceptable. What version of the text may be stored in the repository can be found in the license agreement with a publisher, possibly on the Sherpa Romeo server.
- Access to the full text in the repository may be delayed according to the conditions of the publisher (see below), no later than six months from the date of publishing in case of STM disciplines or twelve months in case of social sciences and humanities.
- All co-authors must agree with publishing the text and with its saving in the repository.
- Publications shall be deposited into an institutional or subject-based repository. For CTU authors these conditions are met by the CTU Digital Library.
- In case there is no other possibility, author may save the publication in the Zenodo repository.
Publisher policy:
- Get informed about the publisher self-archiving policy before submitting your manuscript. Possibly, you can try to negotiate individual copyright conditions for meeting the Horizon 2020 requirements. If the publisher provides no exception, you may try to negotiate an exception with the funder before publishing the article.
- If self-archiving is not allowed by the publisher, or the embargo period is too long, it is not possible to break the publisher policy. The publisher policy is superior to the Horizon 2020 requirements. However, most publishers allow to meet the funders Open Access criteria, sometimes it might require paying Open Access fees. Information on the journal Open Access policy can be found on the journal website or in the model copyright agreement. Notification - the publisher may apply different conditions to individual journals – we recommend to follow the conditions of the particular journal.
- Journals self-archiving policy can be checked in the journal/publisher license agreement, or in the Sherpa Romeo portal. Sherpa Romeo provides a comprehensive overview on each publisher and journal self-archiving conditions. Besides Sherpa Romeo, the How Can I Share It search engine can also be a good help. Authors can use the article DOI to find the rules that apply directly to their article (unless there are individual changes to their copyright agreement).
Providing Open Access after an embargo period has expired:
- In case the publisher has imposed an embargo period on the publication, the Horizon 2020 requirements allow an embargo period no longer than 6 months (12 months for publications in social sciences and humanities) from the date of publication.
- In the CTU Digital Library the embargo period can be set when uploading an article into the repository through V3S. The article will become accessible automatically after the given date.
Gold Open Access publications:
- To achieve higher accessibility of the publication, EC recommends to publish in Gold Open Access under Creative Commons licenses (in particular under CC BY). At the same time as an author you keep copyright to your work and you are free to reuse your article as you wish.
- Potential publication fees (APCs) are an eligible cost within the H2020 projects within the duration of the project.
- Gold Open Access articles should be deposited in the repository the same way as non-Gold OA articles.
Metadata requirements:
The article metadata in a repository must include:
- Funding programme identification ["European Union (EU)" and "Horizon 2020"] ["Euratom" and Euratom research and training programme 2014-2018"]
- The title of the project call, project acronym and number
- Date of publishing, eventually end of embargo period
- Permanent identifier (DOI, Handle).
Research data
Since 2017, all new H2020 projects have an obligation to provide evidence of reseach data management (RDM) and if possible, provide access to their research data.
Which data are subject to the requirements:
- The requirements apply to all underlying data for publications created within the project.
- It is optional to include all data generated within the project.
Exceptions and opt-out options:
You can opt-out from the RDM requirements anytime and at any extent. You may opt-out in the project application, and both before and after grant agreement subscription, even any time during the ongoing project. In this case the opting-out applies to all project activities retrospectively.
Opting-out is possible fully or partially. If you wish to opt-out partially, you can define files, which will be part of the RDM requirement and which will not.
Reasons to opt-out:
- Project generates no data
- The data will be a subject of a patent or other form of industrial property protection
- The data will be of a confidential or of secret nature and they cannot be published for security reasons
- The project will work with personal data
- Publishing the data will disable to achieve the goals of the project
- The data cannot be published for any other legitimate reason (these reasons shall be stated in the project application).
For publishing the research data, a principle ‘as open as possible, as closed as necessary’ is recommended to follow, i.e. to publish such data, which can be published.
Data Management Plan (DMP):
- The DMP is a detailed description of what data the project generates (if any) and how it is handled during and after the project. The DMP does not have to be created in case of full opt-out from the RDM requirements.
- The DPM describes the following aspects:
- What types and what data formats will be created within the project.
- What standards will be applied for the data identification and findability (metadata, permanent identifiers).
- Where and how the data will be stored and accessible.
- Whether and under what conditions the data will be available for re-use (data licensing).
- The DMP is a mandatory project output – the first version must be submitted within six months from launching the project. The DPM shall be updated continuously for the duration of the project.
Metadata requirements:
The data shall be stored in a repository that supports appropriate data formats, metadata standards, and licensing. It is obliged to link the data with the publication which is based on the data.
Any repository can be used that meets these requirements such as institutional, subject repository or any other repository. The list of data repositories is available in the Registry of Research Data Repositories .
License:
- Research data - if published, they shall be available open access under the CC BY or CC 0 license or equivalent if possible.
- Metadata must be publicly available under a CC 0 license or equivalent to the extent that legitimate interests or restrictions are protected and in accordance with the FAIR principles.
Related costs:
Any costs related to RDM are eligible project costs.
Related documents:
- European Commission Documents:
Open Science in Horizon Europe
Publications
Recipients must provide open access to the peer-reviewed scientific publications related to their projects.:
- No later than the day of publication, a copy of the published version or the final peer-reviewed manuscript accepted for publication (postprint) must be stored in a trusted repository. Saving a preprint of a publication is not eligible.
- A reliable repository is any repository of your choice (including the institutional one) that meets the required metadata standards and offers interoperability. For CTU authors the EC requirements are met by the CTU Digital Library.
- In case there is no institutional or suitable subject repository available, authors may store their publications in any general/multidisciplinary repository such as Zenodo.
- Immediate open access via the repository must be provided – no embargo period is allowed.
Publisher policy:
- Get informed about the publisher self-archiving policy before submitting your manuscript. Possibly, you can try to negotiate individual copyright conditions for meeting the Horizon Europe requirements. If the publisher provides no exception, you may try to negotiate an exception with the funder before publishing the article.
- If self-archiving is not allowed by the publisher, or the embargo period is too long, it is not possible to break the publisher policy. The publisher policy is superior to the Horizon 2020 requirements. However, most publishers allow to meet the funders Open Access criteria, sometimes it might require paying Open Access fees. Information on the journal Open Access policy can be found on the journal website or in the model copyright agreement. Notification - the publisher may apply different conditions to individual journals – we recommend to follow the conditions of the particular journal.
- Journals self-archiving policy can be checked in the journal/publisher license agreement, or in the Sherpa Romeo portal. Sherpa Romeo provides a comprehensive overview on each publisher and journal self-archiving conditions. Besides Sherpa Romeo, the How Can I Share It search engine can also be a good help. Authors can use the article DOI to find the rules that apply directly to their article (unless there are individual changes to their copyright agreement).
Gold Open Access publications:
- To achieve higher accessibility of the publication EC recommends to publish in the Gold Open Access mode under the Creative Commons licenses (in particular under CC BY). At the same time as an author you keep copyright to your work and you are free to reuse your article as you wish.
- Potential publication fees (APCs) are an eligible cost within the H2020 projects within the duration of the project.
- Gold Open Access articles should be deposited in the repository the same way as non-Gold OA articles.
Metadata requirements:
License:
- Research article: must be accessible under the public CC BY license or equivalent.
- Monographs and other publications can be published under more restrictive licenses such as CC BY-NC, CC BY-ND, CC BY-NC-ND (see more on CC licenses here).
- Metadata must be publicly available under a CC 0 license or equivalent to the extent that legitimate interests or restrictions are protected and in accordance with the FAIR principles.
Metadata must contain:
- Description of the publication (author, title, date of publication, place of publication),
- Information on financing from Horizon Europe programme or Euratom,
- Project title, acronym and project number,
- Persistent identifiers
- Link (via persistent identifier – DOI, Handle) to any related research outputs – e.g. underlying research data stored in the repository elsewhere.
Related financial costs:
- Open Access publishing costs (Article Processing Charges, APCs) – are eligible costs, yet only for the duration of the project.
- Publishing in hybrid journals is not an eligible cost in the project.
Research data
Which data are subject to the requirements:
- The requirements apply to all underlying data for publications created within the project.
- It is optional to include all data generated within the project.
Recipients must handle the research data generated by the project in accordance with the FAIR principles and accept the following:
- To create and regularly update a Data Management Plan (DMP):
- A document informing about each dataset - what data formats are being used, metadata and permanent identifiers, where it is stored, how it will be shared, etc.
- The first version of DMP must be submitted within the first six months of the project duration.
- The DMP must to be continuously supplemented and updated throughout the project.
- Provide open access to stored data through a trusted repository as soon as possible and within the deadlines set out in the DMP, unless otherwise specified.
- The dataset description in the repository provides information on all related research outputs and on tools and aids needed to reuse or verify the data
- The obligation to publish research data can be opted-out under the conditions set out below.
- In case open access is not provided to some (or all) data, this must be justified in the DMP.
- For publishing the research data, a principle ‘as open as possible, as closed as necessary’ is recommended to follow, i.e. to publish such data, which can be published.
- In case there is no institutional or suitable subject repository available, authors may store their publications in any general/multidisciplinary repository such as Zenodo.
- The list of data repositories is available in the Registry of Research Data Repositories .
Research data cannot be made available in the casethey are:
- contrary to the legitimate interests of the recipient including those related to commercial use, or
- contrary to any other restrictions - data protection rules, privacy, confidentiality, trade secrets, EU competitive interests, security rules, intellectual property rights, etc., or
- contrary to other obligations resulting from a grant agreement.
Metadata requirements:
License:
- Research data - if published, shall be available open access under the CC BY or CC 0 license or equivalent if possible.
- Metadata must be publicly available under a CC 0 license or equivalent to the extent that legitimate interests or restrictions are protected and in accordance with the FAIR principles.
Metadata must contain:
- Description of the dataset (description, date of publication, author(s), place of publication, information on an embargo),
- Information on financing from Horizon Europe programme or Euratom,
- Project title, acronym and project number,
- Persistent identifiers of the dataset
- Link (via persistent identifier – DOI, Handle) to any related research outputs – e.g. related articles or other research outputs stored in the repository elsewhere.
Additional information to Open Science
In the case other Open Science obligations are imposed, the recipients must comply with them.
In some cases, conditions may be laid down for further verification of scientific publications. In such a case, the recipient must provide access to the data or other results that will lead to the verification.
Where certain research outputs can help in the event of a general threat, recipients must make all research outputs available without delay, if necessary on the basis of the obligations imposed.
For more information: General Model Grant Agreement - HE MGA (Article 17, Annex 5)
Project application
The project proposal requires to describe Open Science and FAIR data principles in two different parts of the proposal and will be evaluated under two criteria:
- Excellence criterion requires:
- max. of 1 page description of the implementation of Open Access practices
- max. of 1 page describing Research Data Management (RDM), and how FAIR principles will be processed during the project.
- Efficiency criterion:
- The impact of the research output will be evaluated based on the openess criteria and on a peer-review process by referees. Journal impact factor will not be taken into consideration.
Open Access - important criteria for writing a project application in Horizon Europe:
Open Science is an approach promoted by the European Commission to share scientific knowledge and facilitate collaboration through digital technologies. Open Access is an integral part of it and aims to provide immediate, free and long-term access to research results.
The project application to the Horizon Europe grant programme requires a statement on the practical implementation of Open Access in the research project and this information has an impact on the evaluation of the application. In general, the European Commission lists mandatory and voluntary principles for Open Access, from which it is recommended to implement as much as possible. Insufficient explanation of the implementation of the mandatory part will result in a lower final evaluation of the application. A clear explanation of the implementation of the recommended principles will, on the other hand, earn the applicant a higher score. In order to meet this condition, it is important to be aware of the requirements placed on the applicant in the context of Open Access publishing. The overall description of the Open Science implementation should not exceed one page. Also, the length of a similar text for the research data management (FAIR data principles) is expected to be no more than one page.
Proposers should describe how open science practices (mandatory and recommended, as appropriate) are implemented and show how the implementation is adapted to the nature of their work.
Mandatory criteria
Open Access publishing is subject to the terms and conditions of the grant agreement (Grant Agreement, Article 17 including Annex 5). It is the responsibility of the author to choose a trustworthy publisher and to avoid suspicious and predatory publishers. Immediately after publication, authors shall place a copy of the postprint or publisher's version of the publication under a CC BY license (CC BY-NC or CC BY-ND licenses are also allowed for books) in a trusted repository. If the original publication is not Gold OA, authors need to ensure to retain sufficient IPRs (intellectual property rights), so that the text can be reused and deposited in the repository under specified conditions. Retaining copyright to the publications is preferred by the EC’s Open Access criteria.
In case of Gold OA publications, the same obligation to deposit a copy of the publication in the repository applies, but it is assumed that the author has retained the necessary IPRs. There is an obligation to inform all co-authors of the uploading of data to the repository, and to give at least 15 days' notice, unless otherwise agreed beforehand. The grant provider should be informed of any major media presentations. In the event of an emergency, the author must deposit any research data in a repository at the grantor's request and, as with regular research data storage, ensure interoperability.
When depositing a publication in the repository (so-called self-archiving), authors need to choose a trusted repository. A trusted repository is defined as one that meets the basic requirements, i.e. it demonstrably ensures the long-term data protection, preservation and free accessibility. A trusted repository also uses persistent identifiers primarily to identify the publication, and may also use author identifiers. The identifier provides a long-term link to the stored publication. The most common are the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) and Handle, while ORCID serves as a unique author identifier. The selected repository should be able to link the publication to specific sub-outputs of the same project by persistent identifiers (e.g. link to underlying research data, or any other related output). The repository must use a standard metadata structure and provide data interoperability, i.e. enable data harvesting and discoverability through aggregators (e.g. OpenAIRE portal). These conditions are mostly met by university repositories, e.g. the CTU Digital Library. Among non-university repositories, e.g. Zenodo can be mentioned.
Gold Open Access publishing is not possible in hybrid journals. Publications in hybrid journals are not eligible for financial support in Horizon Europe projects.
Future metadata description of publications should be specified in the text. Metadata must be freely available. Where possible, they should include persistent identifiers, i.e. long-lasting references to related research results and publications (if any) such as research data, models, calculations or research reports that may have been published elsewhere or stored anywhere in repositories. At a minimum, however, it must include author names, publication title, date and publisher. Information on Horizon Europe support, project title, acronym and project number, licence terms, permanent identifiers, contact details of the author. Contact details of the institution under which the author publishes and the link to grant website are recommended.
Recommended criteria
The recommended section leaves sufficient space for any additional information on Open Access deemed relevant by the authors. In addition to the mandatory self-archiving of peer-reviewed journal articles, access to copies of other related publications may be archived as well. This may include preprints, research plan (hypotheses, schemes, or assumptions of future research results and their possible interpretation), data, software, models, calculations, research reports, etc.
Authors may include a description of how the ongoing sharing of workflows, measurement results and research results in the research team will be implemented. It is further recommended to publish with publishers who provide Open Peer Review.
Another principle of Open Science is Citizen Science, i.e. public involvement in the research process. This could include involving public in workshops, participation in discussions, lectures, measurements and experiments, or in the use of specific applications.
The repository needs to ensure accessibility and interoperability. It is also highly recommended that it should allow automatic harvesting of stored data by European infrastructures such as the OpenAIRE portal. Any use of alternative evaluation metrics (Altmetrics) by repositories or publishers could also be mentioned.
If the nature of the project does not allow the application of Open Science principles, this should be fully justified. If the evaluators consider the reasons relevant, the application of Open Science principles will not be taken into account in the evaluation.
Related documents:
- Published European Commission documents:
- AGA - Annotated Model Grant Agreement (Article 17, Annex 5)
- HE Proposal Templates (CSA, RIA/IA, ERC)
- HE Programme Guide (Open Science is described at pages 38 - 54)
- Provisional timetable of ERC calls
- Work programmes:
- Documents are available directly on the Funding and tender opportunities portal FTOP.
- Work programmes to the individual areas of the Horizon Europe programme are also available in the relevant sections of theTechnology centre CAS HE websites.
More information and guidelines:
- Technology centre CAS website on Horizon Europe programme
- Webinar: How to prepare a successful proposal in Horizon Europe (24 March 2021) (europa.eu)
- Open Science at 00:53:00
- Q&A (incl. Open Science topics) at 1:09:00
- Webinar: A successful proposal for Horizon Europe: Scientific-technical excellence is key, but don’t forget the other aspects (Open Science overview at 1:08 - 1:43)
Open Science in TA CR KAPPA programme (by the Technology Agency of the Czech Republic)
Programme of the Technology Agency of the Czech Republic for the development of knowledge and research by international cooperation between entities from the Czech Republic and partners from Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland.
Publications
Grant recipients in the Kappa programme are obliged to:
Provide open access to all peer-reviewed articles and to all underlying research data related to these publications.
Providing open access to research articles means to:
- Post a copy of your article to a repository - no later than on the day of publication of the article, the recipient must save the final peer-reviewed manuscript (postprint) or the published version of the article in a repository. Along with the article, the underlying research data should be stored in a data repository as well.
- Provide open access to the article:
- by providing open access to the article in the repository (Green Open Access) - Provide open access to the archived copy of the article in a repository no later than 6 months (12 months in the case of social sciences and humanities) from the date of publication.
- by Open Access publishing (Gold Open Access) - Immediate open access by publishing the article in an Open Access journal. Even Gold Open Access articles must be posted to the repository to provide long-term archiving and access.
Metadata requirements:
License:
- TA CR recommends publishing the results under the public CC-BY license.
- Metadata must be made public.
The article metadata must contain:
- Information on the grant provider, programme and project,
- Date of publication,
- Duration of an embargo period (if any),
- Persistent identifier (e.g. DOI).
Related financial costs:
Any costs related to providing open access, in particular Open Access publishing costs (Article Processing Charges, APCs) are eligible costs, yet only for the duration of the project.
Research data
Recipients must handle the research data generated by the project in accordance with the FAIR principles and accept the following:
- To create a Data Management Plan (DMP). The first version of DMP must be submitted within six months of the project duration.
- The DPM describes the following aspects:
- What types and what data formats will be created, collected and processed within the project.
- Any methods and principles used for data management - e.g. what standards will be applied for the data identification and findability (metadata, permanent identifiers).
- Where and how the data will be stored, shared and published.
- How and where the data will be stored during the ongoing project and after the end of the project.
- The DMP must to be continuously supplemented and updated throughout the project.
- The DPM describes the following aspects:
Metadata requirements:
License:
Store data in an open format in trusted repositories as soon as possible.
Metadata:
Provide concise and standardized metadata description.
Further information:
- Otevřený přístup v programu KAPPA, Technology Agency of the Czech Republic (text available in Czech only)
Open Research Europe (ORE)
ORE is an Open Access publishing platform founded by the European Commission and intended mainly for publishing the results of research funded by Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe. The platform requires the payment of APC fees, for the publications within H2020 and HE the publishing is free of charge.
ORE features:
- It is a publishing platform, not a repository.
- It is a platform for publishing original research articles, in particular from research funded by the EC through Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe programmes.
- Provides immediate open access, with content licensed for re-use.
- Works are published under the CC BY license.
- Provides Open Peer-review (i.e. reviewer identities are published, reviewer comments are published, comments or discussion by the research community is available).
- Each article has a dedicated metrics page, Altmetrics are used to measure the article impact.
- Uses publication standards, ensures interoperability - e.g. uses persistent identifiers, provides interoperability with repositories, guarantees long-time preservation of the content, is based on open data and software and on interoperable technologies, etc.
For authors:
- ORE is focused on gaining impact through openness, not by bibliometrics. As a new platform, it does not have an impact factor and is not indexed by citation databases (WoS, Scopus). In the Czech Republic it is not eligible form the R&D evaluation under the Methodology 2017+.
- Provides all transparent publishing standards in accordance with the principles of Open Access and Open Science, according to the requirements of H2020 and HE.
- Is supervised by an expert editorial board.
- Publishing is free of charge for H2020 and HE publications during and after the project duration.
- Fully in line with European Commission policy and principles
- ORE platform is not obligatory to use.