Nature and Biodiversity
Best-practice projects for nature restoration, Natura 2000 management, species protection and biodiversity recovery.
Beschreibung
Objective
To contribute to European Union objectives for the protection, maintenance and restoration of the Union's natural capital in its marine, freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems, through outcome-based implementation of the EU nature and biodiversity legislation and the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030.
Areas of intervention
Projects must target wild flora and fauna and natural or semi-natural habitats, and fall under at least one of two intervention areas:
- "Space for Nature" — area-based conservation or restoration measures. Typical projects: restoring or improving natural or semi-natural habitats, creating or improving protected areas, building ecological corridors and green infrastructure (including for the Trans-European Nature Network), testing new site-management approaches, or acting on pressures affecting EU-protected habitats both within and outside Natura 2000.
- "Safeguarding our species" — species-focused measures other than area-based conservation. Spans hard infrastructural works through to awareness-raising of stakeholders, depending on the threat profile of the targeted species.
First-level prioritisation gives priority to species and habitats listed by the Ornis Committee under the Birds Directive, to species and habitats in unfavourable and declining conservation status under the Habitats Directive (especially U2- status), to projects minimising conflict between humans and large carnivores, and to species in higher extinction-risk categories outside EU nature legislation.
What this means for cities and regions
The largest indicative per-project ceiling in LIFE 2026 — projects of €2 to €13 million over typically 5–8 years. For cities and regions this is the route to fund peri-urban habitat restoration, urban biodiversity corridors, river-basin and coastal ecosystem work, invasive-species control across municipal territories, or species-protection programmes tied to local Natura 2000 sites. Public bodies, regional authorities, and protected-area managers can lead alone or with partners. Standard EU co-financing is 60%, but projects targeting priority habitats listed under the Habitats Directive can access a higher rate (typically up to 75%) — material for adaptation-of-coastal-floodplain or peatland-restoration projects in many regions.
Eckdaten
Einreichfrist
22 September 2026, 17:00 (Brussels time)
Veröffentlicht
Öffnet
Programm
Übergeordneter Aufruf
Gesamtbudget
Pro Projekt
Erwartete Förderungen
Kofinanzierungsquote
Förderfähigkeit
Förderfähige Länder
Förderfähige NUTS-Regionen
—Förderfähige Organisationstypen
Mindestgröße Konsortium
—Mindestanzahl Partnerländer
—Hinweise zur Förderfähigkeit
Who can apply
- Legal entities, public or private — municipalities, regions, intermunicipal authorities, public utilities, public transport operators, regional development agencies, NGOs, SMEs and large enterprises all qualify.
- Established in EU-27 (including Overseas Countries and Territories), EEA countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway), or countries associated to LIFE 2021–2027.
- Single applicants are allowed; the coordinator must be established in an eligible country.
Restrictions and special cases
- Natural persons are not eligible, except sole traders.
- International organisations are eligible; the eligible-country rules do not apply to them.
- EU bodies cannot participate, except the Joint Research Centre.
- Financial support to third parties is not allowed.
- Co-financing rate: maximum 60% of eligible costs, with a higher rate (typically up to 75%) available for projects targeting priority habitats listed under the Habitats Directive.
EU restrictive measures (TEU Article 29 / TFEU Article 215) and EU conditionality measures (Regulation 2020/2092) apply. Currently this excludes Hungarian public-interest trusts established under Hungarian Act IX of 2021, or any entity they maintain (Council Implementing Decision (EU) 2022/2506, 16 December 2022).
Klassifizierung
Themenbereiche
Aktivitätsarten
Weltraumrelevanz
Stufe B — Weltraumdienste sind implizit notwendig, um die Ziele zu erreichen.
Weltraumdienste
Quellen
LIFE-2026-SAP-NAT-NATURE
Importiert 20. Mai 2026
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Biodiversity-policy governance, awareness and monitoring projects supporting EU nature legislation.
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