At 18.1%, the success rate of Austrian companies was well above aver- age (EU average: 14.2%), with Austrian companies
even leading the country comparison.
Besides companies, however, the universities/
higher education institutions and non-university re-
search institutions were the most significant con-
tributors to Austria’s successes in Horizon 2020.
The universities acquired €518.0 million in funding
(predominantly in the Excellent Science pillar,
followed by Societal Challenges), while the non-
university research institutions were allocated
€358.1 million (chiefly for the Societal Challenges
pillar). The
success rates for participation in Horizon 2020
are also above the relevant Europe- an averages both for universities/higher educa- tion institutions and for non-university research institutions. The universities/higher education in-
stitutions enjoyed a success rate of 14.4% (com-
pared with the corresponding EU average of 13.6%)
and the non-university research institutions one of
20.0% (as against 18.8%).
Key players in research funding and non- university research When the
Research Funding Act (FoFinaG) is passed , it will fundamentally change the
circum- stances surrounding the central research and re- search funding institutions . As well as providing
planning security for three years, the amendment
and the subsequent Research Funding Act are in-
tended to strengthen the strategic steering and
monitoring responsibility of the federal ministries
involved while giving the research and research
funding institutions more flexibility in their day-to-
day activities. For this reason, for the first time the
Austrian Research and Technology Report 2020 is
presenting the ten key players in research funding
and non-university research in a monitoring sec-
tion. The ten players are:
• Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH (AIT)
• Institute of Science and Technology Austria (IST
Austria)
• Austrian Academy of Sciences (OeAW)
• Silicon Austria Labs GmbH (SAL)
• Austria Wirtschaftsservice GmbH (aws)
• Christian Doppler Research Association (CDG)
• Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
• OeAD-GmbH (OeAD)
• Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG)
• Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft (LBG).
They are each showcased with a general profile and
selected indicators devised in collaboration with
the competent federal ministries. The report also
looks ahead to future developments.