The European Commission has approved under EU State aid rules an Important Project of Common European interest (“IPCEI”) jointly notified by Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Sweden to support research and innovation in the common European priority area of batteries. The seven Member States will provide in the coming years up to approximately 3.2 billion euro in funding for this project, which is expected to unlock an additional 5 billion euro in private investments. The completion of the overall project is planned for 2031. The project will involve 17 direct participants, mostly industrial actors, including small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), some of which with activities in more than one Member State.
Source : https://bit.ly/2F7xUOp
FUELED by the explosive growth of emerging markets like AI and electric vehicles, the semiconductor ...
read moreHitachi, Ltd. and Hitachi Building Systems, Co., Ltd. announced that they have newly developed a new...
read moreA partnership between PayPal’s blockchain research group, Energy Web and DMG Blockchain Soluti...
read moreIndia Smart Utility Week 2025 New Delhi, India 18th - 22th March, 2025 www.isuw.in
read moreThe London Climate Technology Show is the most sought-after conference & tradeshow focused on th...
read moreThe Future Power Expo is a groundbreaking event that showcases the latest advancements in energy tec...
read more