The CERNET project has successfully completed its first year of implementation (M1–M12), consolidating progress and coordination across the consortium, marking a key milestone in the consolidation of its technical and organisational foundations.
The CERNET project has successfully completed its first year of implementation (M1–M12), consolidating progress and coordination across the consortium, marking a key milestone in the consolidation of its technical and organisational foundations.
The CERNET project has recently formalised an amendment to its Grant Agreement, reinforcing the consortium through the integration of new partners and an updated implementation approach. This adjustment strengthens the project’s technical capacity while ensuring continuity, efficiency, and alignment with its original objectives.
The EU-funded CERNET project has published its public deliverable D2.3, KPIs and Monitoring Framework, setting out how it will measure the conversion of industrial emissions into useful products. The framework gives the project a consistent way to track progress across its carbon-conversion technologies.
How do you turn an industrial waste gas into an amino acid, a biodegradable plastic, or an ingredient for a face cream? That question sits at the heart of CERNET's newly published deliverable, D2.4 – Feedstock management for CERNET demo sites, and the answer it offers is one of the more concrete contributions yet to Europe's push toward a circular bioeconomy.
Across Europe, industry is under pressure to cut emissions, lower dependence on fossil energy and use renewable resources more intelligently. Within that context, the EU-funded CERNET project is exploring how biogenic CO2 and methane can be converted into high-value bio-based ingredients and materials.
The CERNET project marks another important milestone with a new scientific publication highlighting its contribution to advancing sustainable solutions.
The climate challenge cannot be solved by one country, one industry or one type of expertise alone. That is why the CERNET project brings together a unique European partnership of 21 organisations from 10 EU countries and is supported by Horizon Europe through the Circular Bio-based Europe Joint Undertaking (CBE JU).
How do we turn CO₂ emissions into valuable resources – and scale the solutions fast enough to make a real impact? This was one of the key questions addressed at the “Greenhouse Gas: From Emission to Value” conference in Odense.
The climate challenge cannot be solved by one country, one industry or one type of expertise alone. That is why the CERNET project brings together a unique European partnership of 21 organisations from 10 EU countries and is supported by Horizon Europe through the Circular Bio-based Europe Joint Undertaking (CBE JU).
The CERNET project is pleased to announce the launch of its official website cernetproject.eu. The site will serve as the central hub for sharing knowledge, updates and results as the project explores how biogenic CO₂ and CH₄ emissions can be transformed into high-value chemicals and ingredients.
On June 25–26, 2025 the EU-funded CERNET project was officially launched in Zaragoza, Spain. The kick-off brought together 21 partners from 10 European countries, all committed to transforming biogenic CO₂ emissions into high-value products.