Key Points

The EU and India are investing €41 million in joint research to combat marine pollution and develop waste-to-hydrogen technology. The initiatives, funded under the EU-India Trade and Technology Council, aim to create scalable solutions for global environmental challenges. Researchers, startups, and industries from both regions will collaborate on projects targeting microplastics and clean hydrogen production. This partnership strengthens the EU-India climate commitment while advancing sustainable innovation.

Key Points: EU and India Invest €41M in Marine Cleanup and Green Hydrogen Research

  • €41M investment for marine pollution and green hydrogen research
  • Focus on scalable solutions for microplastics and waste-to-hydrogen tech
  • Supports UN Ocean Decade and EU-India climate goals
  • Open to startups, researchers, and industries from both regions
4 min read

EU-India to jointly find solutions to marine pollution, waste to green hydrogen

EU and India launch €41M joint initiatives to tackle marine pollution and develop waste-to-hydrogen tech, reinforcing climate commitments.

"These initiatives will drive collaborative solutions to pressing environmental challenges and foster cutting-edge technological advancements. – European Union"

New Delhi, May 16

The European Union (EU) and India launched two research and innovation initiatives under the EU-India Trade and Technology Council (TTC), with a total investment of 41 million Euros (Rs 394 crore), a statement by the European Union said.

These initiatives will drive collaborative solutions to pressing environmental challenges and foster cutting-edge technological advancements, the statement said.

Coordinated under the EU's Horizon Europe programme and co-funded by Indian ministries (MoES and MNRE), the two research calls will bring together researchers, startups, and industries from the EU and India to develop sustainable, scalable solutions with global impact.

By strengthening the EU-India partnership, these initiatives operationalize the TTC's goals and reinforce the commitment to joint innovation.

As per the statement, the first call focuses on combating marine pollution, particularly the pervasive issue of marine plastic litter.

Co-funded by the EU (12 million Euro, which is approximately Rs 110 crore) and Indian Ministry of Earth Sciences (Rs 90 crore, or 9.3 million Euro), this call seeks innovative solutions to monitor, assess, and mitigate the cumulative impacts of various pollutants, including microplastics, heavy metals, and persistent organic pollutants, the statement said.

The resulting research will contribute to global efforts, including the support international commitments such as the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and contribute to the objectives of the EU's Zero Pollution Action Plan and India's National Marine Litter Policy.

By driving collaborative research and innovation, this initiative aims to protect marine ecosystems and promote sustainable development, as per the statement.

This call builds on earlier momentum, including a workshop on e-vehicle charging standards held in February and a successful matchmaking initiative that connected Indian and EU start-ups with potential partners and investors.

The second call focuses the development of waste-to-renewable hydrogen technologies.

Hydrogen has emerged as a key area of collaboration between the EU and India, given its strategic role in driving the clean energy transition, enhancing energy security, and meeting long-term climate objectives.

This call, co-funded by the EU (10 million Euros, or Rs 97 Crore) and the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (Rs 90 crore, or 9.3 million Euros), aims to develop efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally friendly methods for hydrogen production, as per the statement.

Both calls are open to European and Indian organisations, including companies, SMEs, startups, research institutions, universities, non-governmental organisations (NGO), and individual researchers.

The submission deadlines are September 2 for the hydrogen call and September 17 for the marine pollution call, the statement said.

Additional joint research calls are envisaged for 2026, including on recycling of batteries for electric vehicles and potential cooperation on wastewater treatment. Together, all these initiatives represent a joint investment of around 60 million Euros under the TTC framework.

EU-India Trade and Technology Council (TTC) The EU-India Trade and Technology Council (TTC) is a high-level strategic coordination platform aimed at strengthening the bilateral partnership on trade, technology, and innovation.

The decision to establish the TTC was jointly announced by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in April 2022. The Council was formally launched in February 2023, and its first ministerial meeting took place in May 2023.

As the EU's second TTC (after the EU-US TTC), this mechanism reflects the growing geopolitical and economic alignment between the EU and India. It aims to promote secure, sustainable, and inclusive economic development while safeguarding shared democratic values.

The EU-India Research and Innovation (R&I) Cooperation is a longstanding and strategic partnership, anchored in the 2001 Agreement on Scientific and Technological Cooperation and renewed recently in 2020. An EU India Joint Steering Committee oversees the partnership which supports joint research in key areas such as health, energy, digital and green technologies, water, and climate.

It also promotes researcher mobility, startup networking, and innovation. With over 200 joint projects to date, this growing cooperation is evolving toward mission-driven, co-funded initiatives delivering tangible global impact.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is exactly the kind of international cooperation India needs! Our coastline is precious and marine pollution affects fishermen's livelihoods. Hope this research leads to practical solutions we can implement quickly. 🇮🇳🤝🇪🇺
P
Priya M.
Waste to hydrogen sounds revolutionary! But will these technologies be affordable for Indian municipalities? We need solutions that work for our local conditions, not just fancy lab experiments. Hope Indian researchers get equal say in this partnership.
A
Arjun S.
Good initiative but implementation is key. Remember the Ganga cleanup funds? Hope this doesn't become another paperwork exercise. We need visible results - maybe start with cleaning Mumbai beaches first?
S
Sunita R.
As someone from Chennai, I've seen plastic waste ruin our beautiful Marina Beach. Glad to see India taking lead in this with EU support. Maybe they can learn from our traditional zero-waste practices too? 🪔
V
Vikram J.
Hydrogen tech could be game-changer for energy independence! But ₹394 crore seems small compared to scale of problems. Hope this is just seed funding. India should negotiate tech transfer rights too - can't always depend on foreign partners.
N
Neha T.
Excellent step! But research alone won't help - need strict plastic ban enforcement. Our rivers carry so much waste to oceans. Maybe EU can share their waste management models while we share our traditional wisdom. Jai Hind! 🙏

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