Grants are a financial contribution awarded to a person or a body (= the beneficiary) engaged in activities that serve EU policy objectives.
What activities and which organisations are eligible?
The EUAA may award grants to support the implementation of its mandate and tasks outlined in Article 2 of the EUAA Regulation. Generally, a wide range of organisations established in any country may be eligible for these grants. However, each call for proposals will specify the objectives, activities, and desired outcomes. Furthermore, only those type of organisations best suited to meet the specific goals of a call may be eligible to apply.
EUAA at a glance
Types of grants
Grants can be divided into two major types:
- Action grants that finance projects intended to help to achieve an objective under the EUAA's mandate and related tasks. They can be multi-annual.
- Operating grants that finance the work programme of a body (its running costs) pursuing an aim of general EUAA interest or an objective that forms part of an EUAA policy.
Methods of funding - forms of grants
The grant may be given based on eligible costs actually incurred - actual cost grant, or based on simplified forms such as lump sums, unit costs, flat rates or financing not linked to costs. Also, there is a possibility of having a mixed form which is a combination of any of the five forms listed above.
Co-financing may be provided up to a maximum of 99 % of the total eligible costs.
Alternatively, grants using ‘financing not linked to costs’ may cover the whole project and may even result in profit.
Type of grant agreement
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Direct Grant Agreement
The agreement, when signed between the EUAA and the beneficiary, provides the exact deliverables and timing.
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Framework Partnership Agreement (FPA)
The FPA has a binding effect on the parties but does not have a budgetary impact. It provides framework conditions to beneficiaries, but the exact deliverables and timing are not known. The strategic framework is then implemented through specific grant agreements.
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Specific Grant Agreement (SGA)
This agreement is an implementing arm of Framework Partnership Agreements. It sets the exact deliverables and timing. There is no SGA without FPA.
Who owns grant deliverables?
Beneficiaries are the owners of grant results and deliverables. The beneficiaries have a general obligation to promote the project through communication and dissemination activities. The EUAA may use any non-sensitive information for policy, information, communication, dissemination, and publicity purposes (during the project or afterwords).