This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Programme LIFE+
The LIFE+ programme finances projects that contribute to the development and implementation of environmental policy and legislation. In particular, this programme facilitates the integration of environmental issues into other policies, and, more generally, it contributes to sustainable development. The LIFE+ programme replaces a number of financial instruments used for environmental policy such as the LIFE programme which preceded it.
ACT
Regulation (EC) No 614/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 May 2007 concerning the Financial Instrument for the Environment (LIFE+).
SUMMARY
As its name suggests the LIFE+ programme succeeds the LIFE programme launched in 1992. Like its predecessor LIFE+ co-finances environmental projects in the European Union (EU) and in certain third countries (EU candidate counties, EFTA countries that are members of the European Environmental Agency, and the Western Balkan countries that are part of the Stabilisation and Association Process). Either private or public bodies and institutions may submit projects for funding.
The three thematic components
The LIFE+ programme is divided into three thematic components:
The multi-annual strategic programme set out in Annex II to this Regulation details the priority areas of action.
Duration and budgetary resources
The financial framework for LIFE+ is 2 143 409 000 for the period from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2013.
Project selection
Each year, the Commission issues a call for proposals, taking into account the multi-annual strategic programme set out in Annex II and any national priorities it is aware of. The Commission decides which out of the submitted projects qualify for financial support under LIFE+ and regularly publishes the list of these projects.
Eligibility criteria
To qualify for funding, projects must:
Types of intervention
Community financing may take a number of forms:
Programming
At least 78 % of LIFE+ resources are used to fund action grants for projects. The maximum rate of co-financing of action grants is 50 % of eligible costs. However, for projects concerning the protection of priority habitats or priority species, LIFE+ may finance up to 75 % of eligible costs. At least 50 % of the funds allocated to action grants for projects are reserved for nature conservation and biodiversity. In addition, at least 15 % of the funds allocated to action grants for projects are reserved for cross-border projects.
Co-financed projects must be distributed proportionately by the Commission. The Commission establishes indicative annual allocations for the periods 2007-2010 and 2010-2013 based on the total population and population density of each Member State, and the area of sites of Community importance in each Member State and the proportion of a Member State's territory covered by sites of Community importance. Additional funding may be allocated to land-locked Member States.
Complementarity between financial instruments
LIFE+ does not finance measures meeting the criteria for other Community financial instruments or that receive support from them, whether from the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the Cohesion Fund, the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development, the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme, the European Fisheries Fund or the Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration activities.
Monitoring and audits
The Commission carries out audits of funding, monitors project implementation, recovers any sums improperly received, and implements the activities funded.
The Commission will carry out a mid-term review of LIFE+ by 30 September 2010 at the latest.
Background
LIFE+ replaces existing financial programmes (the LIFE programme, the cooperation programme to promote sustainable urban development, the Programme promoting non-governmental organisations and Forest Focus), grouping them under a single set of rules and decision-making procedures and allowing for more consistent targeting, thereby making the Community's work more effective. Funding committed under these programmes before the entry into force of LIFE+ will remain subject to the same rules until completion.
References
Act |
Entry into force - Date of expiry |
Deadline for transposition in the Member States |
Official Journal |
Regulation (EC) No 614/2007 |
12.6.2007 -31.12.2013 |
- |
OJ L 149, 9.6.2007 |
RELATED ACTS
Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council of 30 September 2010 - Mid-term review of the LIFE+ Regulation [COM(2010) 516 final – Not published in the Official Journal].
Last updated: 07.12.2010