Celebrating 30 years of CORDIS online
This November, CORDIS is marking the 30th anniversary since the launch of its website.
Since its creation, CORDIS has been a vital source of information about EU-funded research and innovation. It provides access to detailed descriptions and key results of more than 150 000 projects which have the potential to change the world and our lives for the better.
Set up in 1994 when the internet was at its very beginnings, CORDIS is the European Commission’s longest-running website. With roughly 7 million visits per year, the website offers a wide range of resources in various multimedia formats, including videos and podcasts.
Thank you for being part of this journey!
Stay connected – check out the
CORDIS Newsletter and
subscribe for the latest updates.
Thematic Packs
Keep up with the latest breakthroughs enabled by EU funding with our multilingual collections of the articles focusing on a specific theme
Evolution of Copernicus services to meet global environmental, emergency and security challenges
4 December 2024
Videos
Connect with EU science thanks to our short explanatory videos focusing on the scientific content and exploitation aspects of EU research projects
How did silver mint Europe’s first democracies?
14 November 2024
Podcasts
Dive into some of the key scientific solutions being developed by EU-funded researchers to address the major societal challenges that we all face today
Hidden interactions
13 December 2024
Results in Brief
Read general public summaries of the main outcomes at the end of each project, explaining the achievements and highlighting the next steps
13 December 2024
News
Discover ongoing projects with our news articles based on media reports or project announcements
16 December 2024
HORIZON dashboard
Learn key facts & figures on Horizon proposals, projects and participants with an interactive tool with filter options by theme, geography, organisation profile, and more
Browse by domain of application
CORDIS articles are classified by high-level domains that reflect where the research results could be applied, independently of their field of science