
In cases of public emergency, if requested by the granting authority, immediate open access should be provided.Data underpinning a scientific publication should be deposited at the latest at the time of publication, and in line with standard community practices.There are, however, some additional requirements: In Horizon Europe, data should be deposited as soon as possible after its generation and, at the latest, by the end of the project. For calls with a condition relating to the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC), data must be deposited in repositories that are EOSC-federated (discoverable via the EOSC Portal).
#IN ACCORDANCE SYNONYMS HOW TO#
#IN ACCORDANCE SYNONYMS FULL#
To help you draft both your Horizon Europe proposal and full DMP, use the online planning tool Argos, OpenAIRE’s open source service for writing and publishing DMPs. The use of this template is recommended but not mandatory. To prepare the DMP of your project, Horizon Europe makes a DMP template available. In addition, the DMP can be made available as part of the deliverables on the EU CORDIS website.


For example, many European projects from H2020 made their DMPs available via the Zenodo repository. Whenever possible, beneficiaries are encouraged to make their DMPs non-restricted, public deliverables, under open access and a CC BY license to allow a broad re-use. A final version of the DMP that describes how the data is managed and shared has to be delivered at the end of the project.For projects longer than 12 months, an updated version of the DMP has to be submitted as a deliverable. The DMP is considered ‘ a living document’ and has to be regularly updated to reflect changes that may arise or decisions that are implemented.Note: by exception, in cases of a public emergency and if the work programme requires so, you should submit a full DMP already with submission of proposals or at the latest by the signature of the grant agreement.A full, initial version of the DMP is required as deliverable normally by month 6.

