Interreg
Interreg is the European Union's primary programme for fostering territorial cooperation, comprising a series of funding initiatives that support collaborative projects among regions within and beyond the EU to address shared challenges, reduce territorial disparities, and promote economic, social, and environmental cohesion.[1][2] Launched in 1990 as Interreg I with an initial focus on cross-border initiatives, the programme has evolved through successive phases aligned with EU Cohesion Policy periods, transitioning from a community initiative to a core objective by 2000 and incorporating transnational and interregional strands.[3][1] Funded primarily by the European Regional Development Fund, Interreg allocates resources—approximately €10 billion for the 2021–2027 period—to projects emphasizing green and digital transitions, sustainable development, public health, and institutional capacity-building across categories such as cross-border (Interreg A), transnational (Interreg B), and interregional (Interreg C) cooperation.[4][5] By enabling partnerships between public authorities, NGOs, and private entities in over 30 countries, Interreg has facilitated thousands of initiatives that enhance regional resilience, innovation sharing, and governance, though its effectiveness has been debated in terms of measurable long-term impact versus administrative overhead in EU funding mechanisms.[6][7]Objectives and Framework
Primary Aims and Principles
The Interreg programme, formally known as European Territorial Cooperation, seeks to reinforce economic, social, and territorial cohesion across the European Union by enabling regions to cooperate on shared challenges and opportunities, thereby reducing disparities and promoting balanced development.[8] This aim aligns with the broader objectives of EU cohesion policy, emphasizing that internal borders should not hinder integrated territorial strategies or impede the free movement of persons, goods, and services.[9] Established in 1990, Interreg's foundational goal has been to foster cross-border initiatives that address practical obstacles arising from national frontiers, such as administrative barriers and infrastructure gaps, while extending cooperation to transnational, interregional, and external dimensions in subsequent periods.[10] In the 2021–2027 programming period, governed by Regulation (EU) 2021/1059, Interreg programmes target seven specific objectives to operationalize EU-wide priorities through territorial cooperation: enhancing institutional capacity in public administrations; resolving legal and administrative obstacles in border areas; promoting public service cooperation; building communities and networks in border regions; supporting transnational actions for regional development and macro-regional or sea-basin strategies; facilitating interregional exchange and networking on policy implementation; and addressing urban and rural challenges via community-led local development. Two additional Interreg-specific objectives focus on improving cooperation governance—through institutional strengthening and administrative alignment—and enabling locally driven initiatives to tackle demographic, environmental, and economic issues.[11] These objectives are funded primarily by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), with allocations emphasizing greener, smarter, and more connected territories, while integrating external financing for neighbourhood partnerships.[9] Guiding principles include the partnership approach, which mandates broad stakeholder involvement from public authorities, economic and social partners, and civil society to ensure multi-level governance and ownership of cooperation outcomes.[12] Programmes must also embed sustainability, equality, and non-discrimination, aligning actions with EU horizontal priorities such as climate adaptation and gender balance, without compromising evidence-based territorial needs.[13] This framework prioritizes results-oriented interventions, measurable impacts on cohesion, and avoidance of duplication with national policies, underscoring Interreg's role in evidence-driven, cross-jurisdictional problem-solving.[9]Legal Basis and Evolution of Objectives
The legal basis for Interreg is rooted in Articles 174 to 178 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), which mandate actions to promote economic, social, and territorial cohesion by reducing disparities between regions.[14] These treaty provisions enable the allocation of European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) resources to territorial cooperation, with Interreg serving as the primary instrument. For the 2021-2027 period, specific rules are outlined in Regulation (EU) 2021/1059 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 June 2021, which establishes provisions for the European territorial cooperation goal (Interreg), including programme preparation, operation selection, and financial management supported by ERDF and external instruments. Earlier periods relied on structural fund frameworks, such as Council Regulation (EEC) No 2052/88 for the initial launch, transitioning to integrated cohesion policy regulations like (EC) No 1083/2006 for 2007-2013.[15] Interreg originated in 1990 as a Community Initiative under the structural funds to address the isolation of border regions through cross-border cooperation, with objectives centered on infrastructure development, economic integration, and joint actions in peripheral areas, supported by a €1 billion budget across 31 programmes.[9] By Interreg II (1995-1999), objectives expanded slightly to emphasize sustainable development and networking, while Interreg III (2000-2006) introduced transnational and interregional strands, broadening aims to include policy learning and macro-regional strategies beyond mere border infrastructure.659340_EN.pdf) From Interreg IV (2007-2013), Interreg shifted from a standalone initiative to a dedicated objective within mainstream EU cohesion policy under Regulation (EC) No 1083/2006, aligning objectives with thematic concentrations like innovation, environment, and transport to enhance overall policy effectiveness.[9] This integration continued in Interreg V (2014-2020) via Regulation (EU) No 1301/2013, which tied objectives to 11 EU-wide priorities such as smarter growth and resource efficiency. In the current 2021-2027 framework, objectives have further evolved to support seven thematic areas— including a smarter Europe via innovation, greener Europe via sustainability, and connected Europe via transport—reflecting strategic EU goals like the green and digital transitions, while maintaining a focus on reducing territorial disparities through evidence-based cooperation.[16] This progression underscores a causal shift from ad-hoc border fixes to systemic contributions to Union-wide cohesion, evidenced by increasing budgets—from €1 billion in 1990-1993 to over €10 billion for 2021-2027—and expanded geographic scope.[9]Cooperation Strands
Cross-Border Cooperation
Cross-border cooperation, designated as Interreg A within the European Territorial Cooperation (ETC) framework, enables adjacent regions across internal or external EU borders to collaborate on shared economic, social, and environmental challenges. This strand prioritizes NUTS level 3 regions located directly on or near borders, requiring partnerships involving at least two countries, typically comprising public authorities, non-governmental organizations, and private entities.[1][17] By funding joint projects, it addresses border-induced obstacles such as fragmented labor markets, inadequate transport links, and environmental risks, promoting integrated territorial development.[9] In the 2021-2027 period (Interreg VI), Interreg A supports the EU's five cohesion policy objectives: fostering innovation and digitalization for a smarter Europe; advancing climate adaptation, resource efficiency, and low-carbon strategies for a greener Europe; enhancing transport, energy, and ICT connectivity; bolstering employment, social inclusion, and skills development; and strengthening institutional capacity and cross-border governance for a Europe closer to citizens. Programmes emphasize measurable outcomes, such as improved cross-border mobility and reduced disparities, with co-financing rates up to 75-85% from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).[18][1] The strand allocates approximately €6.7 billion in ERDF funding across 73 programmes, accounting for over 70% of total Interreg resources and underscoring its central role in ETC. This budget supports initiatives like infrastructure enhancements (e.g., shared transport corridors), environmental protection (e.g., transboundary river basin management), health and education services (e.g., joint emergency response systems), and business development (e.g., SME internationalization). External border programmes extend cooperation to non-EU neighbors under instruments like the European Neighbourhood Instrument.[1][9] Notable examples include the Interreg VI-A Greece-Bulgaria programme, budgeted at €243 million, which funds projects on disaster resilience, green tourism, and digital connectivity between the two countries.[19] Similarly, the Deutschland-Nederland programme provides €454 million for Dutch-German border innovation in renewable energy, labor mobility, and cultural heritage preservation. These efforts have historically generated over 100,000 jobs and leveraged €2-3 in private investment per €1 of EU funding in prior periods, demonstrating efficiency in resource use.[20][2]Transnational Cooperation
Transnational cooperation, designated as Interreg Strand B, facilitates collaboration among national, regional, and local partners across expansive territories, including sea basins and macro-regions, to address shared challenges that transcend national borders. Unlike cross-border initiatives focused on adjacent areas, transnational efforts encompass larger geographical scopes, such as entire river basins or maritime zones, enabling coordinated strategies on issues like environmental protection, transport connectivity, and economic innovation. This strand emphasizes joint development of solutions to reduce territorial disparities and align with broader European Union policy goals, including sustainable growth and resilience-building.[21] In the 2021-2027 programming period (Interreg VI), transnational cooperation programmes prioritize policy objectives such as a smarter Europe through innovation, a greener Europe via low-carbon strategies, a more connected Europe through transport networks, and a Europe closer to citizens via social inclusion. These programmes support projects that integrate EU macro-regional strategies, like the EU Strategy for the Danube Region or the Baltic Sea Region Strategy, fostering synergies across multiple member states and occasionally partner countries. Funding for these initiatives draws primarily from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), with potential supplements from instruments like the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance (IPA) or Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument (NDICI), totaling approximately €1.5 billion for Strand B overall.[9][22] The 2021-2027 period features 13 dedicated transnational programmes, each tailored to specific macro-regions:| Programme Name | Key Coverage Areas | ERDF Allocation (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Interreg Baltic Sea Region | Northern Europe, including Baltic states, Nordic countries, Germany, Poland | €250 million |
| Interreg North Sea Region | North Sea coastal states (UK, Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, etc.) | €210 million |
| Interreg North West Europe | Benelux, France, Ireland, UK, Germany | €210 million |
| Interreg Danube Region | Danube basin countries (Germany to Black Sea) | €200 million |
| Interreg Central Europe | Central European states (Austria, Poland, Hungary, etc.) | €225 million |
| Interreg Alpine Space | Alpine arc (Italy, Austria, Switzerland, France, Germany, Slovenia) | €160 million |
| Interreg Mediterranean | Southern Europe and Mediterranean partners | €200 million |
Interregional Cooperation
Interregional cooperation, designated as the Interreg C strand, enables collaboration among regions separated by national borders or significant distances within the European Union and partner countries, distinguishing it from geographically proximate strands like cross-border or transnational efforts. This component emphasizes the dissemination of knowledge, identification of effective practices, and joint strategic development to address shared territorial challenges, thereby enhancing the overall efficacy of EU cohesion policy.[9][29] The core aims involve promoting the exchange of experiences, adoption of innovative governance models, and capacity reinforcement for regional and local authorities to refine policies aligned with EU priorities such as sustainable development and economic resilience. Projects under this strand typically assemble partners from diverse regions to analyze policy instruments, conduct interregional learning activities, and implement targeted improvements, fostering transferable solutions without requiring physical adjacency.[9][6] Prominent programmes include Interreg Europe, which coordinates policy learning across 36 countries to mitigate regional disparities through thematic exchanges on topics like research innovation, digitalization, and environmental sustainability. Complementary initiatives such as URBACT focus on urban policy networks, ESPON on evidence-based territorial analysis, and INTERACT on technical assistance for programme management, collectively supporting over 4 interregional frameworks in prior periods with adaptations for ongoing phases.[6][30] In the 2021-2027 period, Interreg Europe allocates a total budget of €474 million, including €379 million from the European Regional Development Fund, with nearly 90% directed toward interregional projects involving 3 to 12 partners per initiative for activities like stakeholder dialogues and pilot implementations. The broader Interreg C envelope approximates €552 million, enabling outputs such as policy briefs and strategy enhancements that contribute to EU goals of smarter, greener, and more cohesive territories.[31][32][6] Funded projects exemplify practical applications, such as RESUREXION, which unites regions to build climate resilience against extreme weather via knowledge transfer on urban adaptation measures, demonstrating the strand's role in scalable, evidence-driven territorial advancements.[33]External and Outermost Regions Cooperation
The External and Outermost Regions Cooperation strand within Interreg facilitates collaboration between EU territories and non-EU neighboring countries or territories, addressing geographic isolation, shared environmental challenges, and economic interdependencies beyond continental Europe. This strand encompasses two primary components: cooperation involving the EU's outermost regions (Strand D) and broader external border initiatives under Interreg NEXT programmes, which integrate European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) resources with external financing instruments to promote cross-border actions in line with the EU's neighbourhood and enlargement policies.[34][5] Outermost regions cooperation, designated as Strand D in Interreg VI (2021-2027), enables the EU's nine outermost regions—French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte, and Réunion (France); Azores and Madeira (Portugal); and Canary Islands (Spain)—to partner with adjacent non-EU areas, mitigating challenges such as insularity, remoteness, and small market size as outlined in Article 349 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. These programmes prioritize joint strategies in areas like biodiversity conservation, sustainable fisheries, disaster risk management, and tourism development, given the regions' vulnerability to climate impacts and reliance on maritime trade routes. For the 2021-2027 period, five dedicated programmes operate across three main geographic zones (Amazonia, Caribbean/Atlantic, and Indian Ocean/Macaronesia), with a total ERDF allocation of €280 million, supporting projects that enhance connectivity and resilience in regions covering over 5 million EU citizens and interfacing with Latin American, African, and Indian Ocean partners.[34][35] Interreg NEXT programmes form the external cooperation pillar, targeting EU borders with non-member states to foster economic and social cohesion through collaborative governance, infrastructure improvements, and innovation in sectors like renewable energy and public health. Funded primarily by €1.1 billion from the ERDF, supplemented by the Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument (NDICI, successor to ENI) and the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance (IPA III), these initiatives span 14 approved programmes as of 2023, encompassing 184 regions across 33 countries from the Northern Periphery to the Mediterranean and Black Sea basins, affecting approximately 260 million people. Objectives align with EU priorities such as green and digital transitions, SME competitiveness, and secure borders, with examples including the Poland-Belarus-Ukraine programme focusing on flood prevention (€170 million total budget) and the Interreg NEXT MED programme addressing Mediterranean maritime safety and blue economy growth.[5][5] Both components emphasize measurable outcomes, such as reduced cross-border disparities and increased institutional capacity, with evaluations required under EU cohesion policy regulations to ensure additionality over national efforts; for instance, external programmes must demonstrate alignment with ENI/IPA strategic priorities to access blended funding, preventing duplication with bilateral aid.[5][35] This framework has evolved from earlier phases, where outermost cooperation budgets were smaller (e.g., €200 million in 2014-2020), reflecting growing recognition of these peripheries' role in EU global outreach.[34]Historical Development
Inception: Interreg I and II (1990-1999)
Interreg I was launched in 1990 as a Community initiative under the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), following the 1988 reform of the EU Structural Funds, to address the economic and social isolation of border regions by encouraging cross-border cooperation between adjacent areas in different member states.[36] The program operated from 1990 to 1993 with a budget of 1.1 billion ECU, funding 11 cross-border programs that benefited regions in 11 member states and focused on initiatives such as joint infrastructure projects, labor market integration, and environmental management to stimulate balanced development.[36] These efforts targeted Objective 1 and Objective 2 regions, emphasizing practical measures to overcome administrative and cultural barriers along internal EU borders.[36] Building on this foundation, Interreg II was introduced for the 1994-1999 programming period, marking the first time the initiative received its own dedicated EU regulation separate from broader Structural Fund guidelines.[36] Allocated a budget of 3.8 billion ECU, it expanded beyond purely cross-border activities to include three strands: IIA for continued cross-border cooperation (mirroring Interreg I's focus but with enhanced scope), IIB for transnational cooperation aimed at completing selected infrastructure projects in maritime, island, and remote areas, and IIIC for interregional networking to exchange best practices across non-adjacent regions.[36][37] Initially supporting 15 programs across 15 member states, the initiative grew to 25 programs as the EU prepared for enlargement, prioritizing economic integration, transport links, and sustainable development in peripheral territories.[36] The inception phase established Interreg as a tool for territorial cohesion, with evaluations noting its role in fostering over 1,000 partnerships that directly addressed disparities in border areas, though implementation challenges included varying national administrative capacities and limited private sector involvement.[36] By 1999, the program's evolution reflected the EU's broader shift toward multilevel governance, laying groundwork for future expansions while demonstrating measurable impacts like improved connectivity in regions such as the Alpine arc and Nordic borders.[36]Expansion: Interreg III (2000-2006)
Interreg III, implemented from January 1, 2000, to December 31, 2006, represented a significant expansion of the European Union's territorial cooperation initiative under the 2000-2006 structural funds programming period. With a total budget of €4.875 billion drawn exclusively from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)—an increase from €3.604 billion in Interreg II—this phase shifted to single-fund financing, eliminating the multi-fund approach of prior periods to streamline administration and emphasize genuine cross-border and transnational projects with joint management structures.[38][39] The program's scope broadened to address EU enlargement, incorporating new member states and supporting 62 cross-border cooperation programs, including Malta, while prioritizing harmonious economic, social, and territorial development to mitigate barriers in border regions such as institutional divides and peripherality.[39] A key innovation was the formalization of three distinct strands, allocating funds as follows: Strand A at a minimum of 50%, Strand B at 14-44%, and Strand C at 6% of the total budget. Strand A focused on cross-border cooperation to foster integrated regional development among neighboring regions, incorporating measures for environmental protection, equal opportunities, and urban-rural linkages, with expanded eligibility for island and remote regions.[38] Strand B emphasized transnational cooperation over larger territories, promoting spatial planning, transport networks, and environmental management to enhance territorial integration. Strand C targeted interregional cooperation, facilitating networking and exchange of best practices among non-adjacent regions to improve policy effectiveness. This tripartite structure built on Interreg II's primarily cross-border focus—augmented late by a transnational strand (IIC)—by institutionalizing broader cooperation and introducing Europe-wide interregional programs such as INTERREG III C, ESPON (spatial observation), INTERACT (technical assistance), and URBACT (urban development).[38][39] Implementation stressed multi-level governance, direct engagement with regional and local authorities, and coordination with external aid programs like PHARE and TACIS for cooperation with candidate and non-EU countries. Projects were required to demonstrate added value through sustainable development, innovation, and measurable outcomes, with technical assistance funding supporting program management across all strands. This expansion not only increased financial resources but also refined eligibility to prioritize projects with tangible cross-border impacts, setting the stage for more strategic territorial cohesion in subsequent phases.[38][39]Consolidation: Interreg IV (2007-2013)
Interreg IV (2007–2013) consolidated territorial cooperation by embedding it as the European Territorial Cooperation (ETC) objective within the EU Cohesion Policy, distinct from its status as a Community Initiative under Interreg III. This integration, enacted through Regulation (EC) No 1083/2006, prioritized joint strategies to address common challenges like economic disparities and environmental risks, aligning with the Lisbon Strategy's focus on growth, jobs, and sustainable development.[40] The programme emphasized measurable outputs over inputs, introducing streamlined management tools and performance indicators to build on lessons from prior phases, such as enhanced project selection criteria and monitoring frameworks that professionalized implementation processes.[41] Funding from the ERDF supported three main strands: cross-border (IVA) for adjacent regions, transnational (IVB) for broader macro-regions, and interregional (IVC) for policy learning across the EU. For example, Interreg IVC, with an ERDF allocation of €96.3 million, funded over 200 projects to exchange best practices in innovation, knowledge economy, and risk prevention, involving partners from all member states.[30] Cross-border programmes, numbering around 60, targeted local integration, such as the Italy-Austria IVA with €60 million ERDF for economic and environmental initiatives across 37,939 km².[42] Overall, the ETC objective received substantial ERDF resources, enabling thousands of partnerships but representing a small fraction (about 2.5%) of total Cohesion Policy expenditure, which limited its scale relative to convergence funding. Ex-post evaluations highlighted achievements in capacity building and policy transfer, with projects like those in IVB North Sea Region engaging over 7,750 organizations in 70 initiatives on sustainable development and innovation.[43] However, causal impacts on GDP growth or job creation remained modest and hard to isolate, as cooperation effects often manifested indirectly through networks rather than direct investments, with some analyses noting inefficiencies in administrative burdens and uneven regional uptake.[44] The phase solidified Interreg's role in fostering enduring cross-border governance, paving the way for future expansions, though critics pointed to overemphasis on process-oriented metrics at the expense of verifiable economic outcomes.[45]Modernization: Interreg V (2014-2020)
Interreg V (2014-2020) introduced reforms to enhance efficiency and alignment with broader EU cohesion policy goals, including greater thematic concentration, procedural simplification, and a shift toward results-based management. Programmes were required to focus funding on a limited set of priorities derived from the 11 thematic objectives of the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), with at least 80% allocated to four core areas: strengthening research and innovation; enhancing competitiveness of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs); supporting the shift toward a low-carbon economy; and promoting resource efficiency and environmental protection.[46] This concentration aimed to maximize impact on Europe 2020 targets for smart, sustainable, and inclusive growth, reducing dispersion seen in prior periods.[46] The total ERDF budget for Interreg V reached €10.1 billion, financing over 100 programmes across cross-border (Interreg V-A), transnational (V-B), and interregional (V-C) strands, plus cooperation involving outermost regions and neighbourhood partners.[46] Simplification measures included a common strategic framework for programme design, standardized eligibility rules, and reduced administrative burdens through electronic monitoring systems, building on lessons from Interreg IV to streamline project approval and implementation.[37] A results-oriented approach was enforced via common output indicators, performance frameworks, and mandatory ex-ante conditionality, such as ensuring alignment with national smart specialization strategies before funding release.[46] Key innovations included dedicated support for macro-regional and sea-basin strategies, integrating Interreg funding into initiatives like the EU Strategy for the Danube Region (adopted 2011) and Baltic Sea Region Strategy (2009), to address transnational challenges such as waterway management and pollution.[46] In cross-border programmes, several introduced small grants funds—typically €50,000-€200,000 per project—to foster grassroots initiatives, contrasting with the larger-scale focus of previous periods and enabling quicker responses to local needs like tourism or health cooperation.[47] Interregional cooperation expanded via the Interreg Europe programme, emphasizing policy learning and exchange among 2000+ organizations to improve regional development policies, with €359 million ERDF allocation supporting 258 projects.[48] These changes reflected empirical evaluations of prior inefficiencies, prioritizing measurable outcomes over input-based spending.[49]Current Phase: Interreg VI (2021-2027)
Interreg VI operates under Regulation (EU) 2021/1059, which establishes the framework for European Territorial Cooperation as one of the goals of the EU's cohesion policy for the 2021-2027 period.[8] The regulation emphasizes joint actions to tackle shared territorial challenges, including policy learning, capacity building, and pilot projects that enhance cross-border integration and sustainable development.[8] Approved in June 2021, it aligns Interreg with broader EU priorities such as the European Green Deal, digital transformation, and post-COVID recovery, while introducing flexibilities like simplified funding rules and integrated territorial investments.[5] The programme maintains the four cooperation strands—cross-border, transnational, interregional, and cooperation involving outermost regions or third countries (via Interreg NEXT)—but expands eligibility to include all EU Member States, EFTA countries, and select neighbouring states, with over 100 programmes covering diverse geographies from the Arctic to the Mediterranean.[2] Cross-border programmes, the largest strand, receive about 70% of resources to support daily functional cooperation in contiguous areas, such as infrastructure and health services.[5] Transnational efforts target macro-regional strategies, like the Danube or Baltic Sea regions, focusing on large-scale environmental and connectivity issues, while interregional initiatives promote exchange of best practices across non-adjacent regions.[16] Interreg NEXT allocates €1.1 billion specifically for external cooperation with accession, neighbourhood, and pre-accession countries, emphasizing stability and green transitions.[5] Funding totals approximately €10 billion, primarily from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), with additional contributions from instruments like the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance (IPA III) and Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument (NDICI).[4] Of this, around €8 billion is earmarked for project implementation across 86 core programmes, enabling co-financing rates up to 80-85% for less developed regions.[50] At least 20% of budgets must address climate change mitigation and adaptation, and 10% supports small-scale projects under €500,000 to foster grassroots innovation.[16] Interreg VI introduces seven thematic objectives derived from the ERDF regulation: (1) a smarter Europe through innovation and digitalization; (2) a greener, low-carbon Europe; (3) a more connected Europe via transport and networks; (4) a more social Europe with inclusive growth; (5) Europe closer to citizens through community-led development; (6) efficient governance; and (7) secure Europe addressing borders and migration.[16] Programmes select priorities accordingly, with mandatory focus on policy impact over mere infrastructure, requiring evidence-based exchanges and measurable outcomes like improved regional strategies.[51] Implementation began with programme approvals in 2021-2022, delayed in some cases by COVID-19 and geopolitical events, leading to first project calls in 2022-2023; by mid-2025, hundreds of projects are active, though absorption rates vary due to administrative hurdles.[52] Governance emphasizes multi-level involvement, with managing authorities in Member States overseeing selection and monitoring, supported by EU technical assistance via tools like Interact.[5] Evaluations mandate mid-term reviews by 2024-2025 to assess coherence with EU goals, prioritizing data-driven adjustments over expansion.[51]Governance and Implementation
Organisational Structure
The organisational structure of Interreg programmes follows the shared management model outlined in EU cohesion policy regulations, whereby the European Commission provides overarching strategic guidance while delegating operational implementation to participating Member States and partner countries. The Directorate-General for Regional and Urban Policy (DG REGIO) within the Commission coordinates the framework, approves cooperation programmes, and ensures compliance with EU priorities such as those in the Common Provisions Regulation (EU) 2021/1060.[1] At the programme level, a Managing Authority—typically a public body designated by the partner countries, such as a national ministry or regional agency—holds primary responsibility for day-to-day operations, including preparing programme documents, launching calls for proposals, selecting projects based on defined criteria, monitoring implementation, and reporting to the Commission. For instance, in the Interreg Europe programme (2021-2027), the Managing Authority ensures efficient internal controls and project reporting.[53][13] Supervision is provided by a Monitoring Committee, composed of representatives from all participating countries (including national, regional, and local authorities), with non-voting observers from the European Commission and, where applicable, partner countries outside the EU. This committee approves selection criteria, work programmes, and annual reports, and assesses progress towards objectives; it meets regularly, such as quarterly in programmes like Interreg Central Europe.[54][55] Administrative support is delivered through a Joint Technical Secretariat (JTS), staffed by experts and funded by the programme, which assists the Managing Authority with tasks like project application guidance, partnership facilitation, and event organisation, often operating from multiple locations across partner territories.[54] Financial and audit functions are separated for accountability: the Certifying Authority verifies declarations of expenditure and submits payment requests to the Commission, while the independent Audit Authority conducts systemic audits and verifies at least 20% of operations' expenditure, in line with EU requirements for risk-based sampling. First-level controls occur nationally, with controllers in each partner country verifying individual project costs before reimbursement.[56][53] Programme-specific variations exist, such as regional steering committees in cross-border initiatives like Interreg Deutschland-Nederland, which align decisions with sub-national priorities, but all adhere to the core EU-mandated framework to mitigate risks of irregularity and ensure sound financial management.[57][58]Funding Mechanisms and Budget Allocation
The Interreg programmes are funded predominantly through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) within the European Union's Cohesion Policy framework, which supports territorial cooperation objectives across member states and partner countries.[59] Funding is disbursed as grants to approved projects, covering eligible expenditures such as personnel, travel, equipment, and implementation activities, with allocations determined through competitive calls for proposals managed by programme authorities.[9] For external cooperation strands like Interreg NEXT, additional contributions come from instruments such as the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance (IPA) and the European Neighbourhood Instrument (ENI), enabling partnerships with non-EU countries.[5] Co-financing mechanisms require beneficiaries to match EU contributions from national, regional public budgets, or private sources, ensuring shared responsibility and alignment with local priorities. ERDF co-financing rates vary by programme, partner eligibility, and regional classification: typically 60-85% for EU partners, with higher rates (up to 85%) for less developed regions or specific external partners, and lower rates (e.g., 50%) for certain non-EU contributors like Norway.[60] [61] Public or equivalent bodies often receive up to 80% ERDF coverage in interregional programmes, while private non-profits may access 70%, with the remainder funded domestically to mitigate over-reliance on EU resources.[62] These rates promote fiscal discipline, as programmes must demonstrate national co-financing commitments during approval, and underperformance can trigger suspensions or reallocations by the European Commission.[9] Budget allocation follows the EU's multiannual financial framework, with indicative envelopes assigned to cooperation programmes based on strategic priorities, population coverage, and cross-border needs, subject to mid-term reviews for performance adjustments. For the 2021-2027 period (Interreg VI), the total ERDF budget for European Territorial Cooperation reaches approximately €10.1 billion across 86 programmes, emphasizing greener, digital, and resilient growth objectives. Cross-border (Strand A) programmes receive about 72% of funds, transnational (Strand B) 18%, interregional (Strand C) a smaller share focused on policy learning, and external (NEXT) €1.1 billion. Earlier periods illustrate scaling: Interreg 2014-2020 allocated €10.1 billion ERDF, while the 1990 inception provided €1 billion solely for cross-border efforts.[9] [18] [63]| Programming Period | Total ERDF Budget (€ billion) | Key Allocation Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1990-1999 (Interreg I/II) | 1.0 (initial cross-border focus) | Limited to border regions; expanded to include transnational elements by 1995.[9] |
| 2014-2020 (Interreg V) | 10.1 | Covered over 100 programmes; integrated thematic concentrations like innovation.[63] |
| 2021-2027 (Interreg VI) | 10.1 | Strand A: ~72%; includes €1.1B for NEXT external cooperation.[9] [18] |
Project Management and Examples
Project management in Interreg programs follows a structured process overseen by the Managing Authority (MA) for each specific cooperation program, typically a national or regional public body designated by member states. Projects are initiated through open calls for proposals, where applicants submit detailed applications assessed against predefined criteria including alignment with program priorities, partnership quality, expected outputs, budget soundness, and contribution to EU cohesion policy objectives. Selection involves an evaluation committee reviewing proposals for eligibility, strategic relevance, and feasibility, often using a scoring system to rank applications, with final approval by a Monitoring Committee comprising stakeholders from participating regions.[64] For Interreg VI (2021-2027), this process emphasizes streamlined procedures to reduce administrative burden, incorporating self-assessment tools and digital platforms for submissions. Upon selection, projects enter the implementation phase, where a lead partner coordinates the partnership, establishes internal management structures such as steering committees and work packages, and signs a subsidy contract with the MA. Day-to-day management includes activity execution, financial tracking via certified expenditures and audits, progress reporting (typically annual or semi-annual), and communication to disseminate results.[65] Monitoring relies on output indicators (e.g., number of joint strategies developed) and result indicators (e.g., improved cross-border mobility), with data reported to the European Commission via the shared management system. Projects must adhere to EU financial regulations, including co-financing rates up to 85% from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), and undergo closure audits to verify deliverables and financial closure.[39] Challenges in management include ensuring balanced partnership contributions and timely reporting, addressed through program manuals and INTERACT technical support.[66] Notable examples illustrate effective management. The CREATURES project under Interreg IPA Adrion (2014-2020, extended impacts into VI) focused on coastal management in the Adriatic, involving partners from Italy, Croatia, and Greece to develop monitoring tools for marine habitats; it successfully transferred results into policy via dissemination strategies and high-quality outputs like joint databases.[67] In Interreg Europe, the U Renewables project (2016-2020) promoted geothermal energy policies across nine EU countries, managing a €1.8 million budget to influence regional strategies, resulting in 12 policy recommendations adopted by partners including Slovakia's Innovation and Energy Agency, which distributed €2.5 million in innovation vouchers.[68] For Interreg VI, the Italy-Croatia program's early projects, selected via 2024 calls, target sustainable tourism and blue economy, with management emphasizing strategic project selection to achieve €200+ million ERDF allocation by 2027. These cases demonstrate how rigorous selection and oversight yield tangible cross-border outcomes, though evaluations note variability in impact due to partnership dynamics.[69]Achievements and Impacts
Documented Successes
The Interreg programmes have delivered verifiable successes in enhancing cross-border cooperation, innovation, and regional development, as corroborated by independent and programme evaluations. In the 2014-2020 period, Interreg Europe supported 65 interregional cooperation projects that disbursed 88.3 million euros from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), generating a leverage multiplier of 5.1 euros in additional funding from local, regional, and national budgets per euro of EU investment.[68] This financial amplification enabled policy improvements across diverse sectors, with over 2,000 beneficiaries from the EU27, Norway, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom participating and covering approximately 90% of the programme area's regions.[68] [70] The 2023 ex-post evaluation of Interreg Europe confirmed robust performance, attributing achievements to effective knowledge exchange that influenced regional policies in areas such as sustainable tourism, circular economy practices, and SME competitiveness.[70] Similarly, the Interreg Central Europe 2014-2020 initiative funded 124 transnational projects with 246 million euros in ERDF co-financing, engaging more than 1,300 organizations to tackle shared challenges in transport connectivity, environmental protection, and cultural heritage preservation.[71] In the Interreg Atlantic Area 2014-2020 programme, 71 projects achieved a 99.9% execution rate of the 140 million euro ERDF allocation, yielding over 500 outputs—such as innovative tools, methodologies, and action plans—and more than 200 results that advanced blue economy sectors like marine renewable energy and aquaculture.[72] Notable project-specific impacts included the BLUE-GIFT initiative, which assisted 45 SMEs and forecasted the emergence of 15 new ocean energy technologies within 5-10 years; the AYCH project, which created 150 jobs in youth entrepreneurship; and AA-FLOODS, which spawned a 1.8 million euro spin-off for flood risk management pilots.[72] The AtlanticOnBike project, spanning five countries over 73 months with 3.95 million euros in ERDF support, established segments of the EuroVelo 1 cycling route, promoting sustainable tourism infrastructure.[72] Sustainability metrics reinforce these outcomes: 92.22% of Atlantic Area beneficiaries reported ongoing utilization of project deliverables beyond the funding period, while 73.33% of results demonstrated transferability to non-project regions, often informing national or sub-national policies.[72] Quadruple-helix partnerships—encompassing public authorities, private firms, research institutions, and civil society—underpinned 56.18% of projects with private sector involvement, fostering innovation resilience aligned with EU strategies like the Atlantic Maritime Strategy, to which 90% of projects contributed.[72] These documented results, drawn from programme monitoring and external assessments, illustrate Interreg's capacity to generate measurable economic, social, and environmental gains through structured transnational collaboration.[72][70]Empirical Evaluations of Outcomes
Empirical evaluations of Interreg programs, such as those for the 2014-2020 period, predominantly employ theory-based methods like contribution analysis and theories of change, which assess plausible causal links through mixed qualitative and quantitative data rather than rigorous counterfactuals, limiting definitive attribution of outcomes to the interventions.[73][74] These approaches reveal contributions to innovation networks, enterprise support, and environmental gains, but challenges in isolating program effects from external confounders—such as the COVID-19 pandemic, Brexit, and broader economic trends—persist, with evidence strength rated higher for short-term outputs than long-term impacts.[73][74] In the Interreg North-West Europe (NWE) programme (2014-2020), which allocated €396.6 million in ERDF funding and achieved 106.5% absorption, evaluations documented support for 3,957 enterprises, including 2,603 under specific objective 1 for social innovation, with 1,115 introducing new market products and 1,184 partnering with research institutions.[73] Job outcomes included approximately 1,140 new positions created and 1,648 maintained across sectors like agri-food and low-carbon technologies, alongside environmental benefits such as 115,795 tonnes of annual CO2e reductions from greenhouse gas mitigation efforts.[73] However, targets for R&D funding leverage were met at only 24% (€53.07 million versus €222 million planned), renewable energy capacity at 25%, and some specific objectives like SO4 showed zero direct job creation, underscoring uneven effectiveness and reliance on capitalisation projects for scaling.[73] Policy influences, such as contributions to EU hydrogen strategies via projects like H2Share, were noted but qualified by data gaps and external disruptions.[73] The Interreg Central Europe programme (2014-2020), funding 138 projects with €293 million in eligible expenditure (€242 million ERDF), exceeded output targets across priorities, supporting 20,547 enterprises (856% of target under SO1.1) and generating 3,722 outputs averaging 28 per project.[74] It created 1,904 jobs—falling short of secondary targets—and leveraged €990 million to €2.7 billion in additional funds, fostering 60 innovation networks and enhancing transnational trust among 1,408 partners, with 79.4% of stakeholders reporting improved cooperation.[74] Evaluations via surveys and case studies (e.g., RAINMAN for low-carbon tech) confirmed moderate contributions to economic development and policy tools applied by 1,448 institutions (151% of forecast), yet attribution remained contested due to institutional capacity limits and low transferability rates (e.g., 32.1% for some results to other territories).[74]| Programme | Key Outputs Exceeded | Jobs Created | Funds Leveraged | Limitations Noted |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NWE (2014-2020) | Enterprises supported: 3,957; New products/services: 244% target | ~1,140 new; 1,648 maintained | €456M additional | 24% R&D target; Attribution via contribution analysis only; External factors (e.g., COVID) |
| Central Europe (2014-2020) | Enterprises: 856% target; Outputs: 3,722 total | 1,904 (target unmet) | €990M–€2.7B | Qualitative-heavy outcomes; 32.1% transferability; No GDP quantification |
Criticisms and Challenges
Bureaucratic and Efficiency Issues
The Interreg programs face substantial bureaucratic challenges arising from their multinational framework, which demands alignment across disparate national legal, financial, and administrative regimes. This coordination imposes a disproportionately heavy administrative burden relative to the modest budgets involved, leading to protracted project development, regulatory incompatibilities, and elevated compliance costs that strain managing authorities and partners.[76] Historical mid-term evaluations underscore these issues, documenting delays in establishing joint technical secretariats, lengthy application forms, and cultural-administrative mismatches that slowed project starts and deterred smaller participants such as SMEs and NGOs in programs like Alpine Space IIIB and France-Spain IIIA. Financial efficiency suffered accordingly, with only about 10% of 2000-2006 programs meeting commitment and expenditure targets on time, risking decommitment under the n+2 rule due to immature monitoring and low spending rates.[77] In more recent assessments, the European Court of Auditors identified persistent implementation inefficiencies in Interreg V-A cross-border programs, where weaknesses in project selection—such as bottom-up approaches without merit-based scoring in 10 of 23 examined programs—and inadequate focus on complementary activities limited cross-border impacts, with half of audited projects exhibiting minimal genuine cooperation beyond funding acquisition.[78] Broader cohesion policy evaluations, encompassing Interreg's 3% share of funding, attribute low overall absorption—merely 5.1% disbursed by 2024—to regulatory complexity, national "gold-plating," and slow processing, which undermine economic value despite positive output effects in some regions.[79] Stakeholder feedback in post-2027 consultations reinforces demands for relief, citing high bureaucracy as a core shortcoming that hampers cooperation; proposed remedies include broader adoption of simplified cost options, annual reporting limited to essential data fields, and increased technical assistance rates to offset digitalization and audit demands without compromising accountability.[80]Effectiveness and Economic Value Critiques
Critiques of Interreg's effectiveness center on its failure to fully realize cross-border economic integration, as highlighted by the European Court of Auditors (ECA) in its 2021 special report examining 23 Interreg V-A programs (2014-2020 period). The ECA concluded that the program's potential to overcome border-related obstacles—such as regulatory differences and infrastructure gaps—remains underutilized, with cooperation initiatives often fragmented and lacking strategic prioritization, resulting in projects that deliver limited tangible economic benefits like enhanced labor mobility or joint business ventures.[81] For instance, despite €6.6 billion allocated to Interreg V-A cross-border cooperation, the report found insufficient targeting of high-impact interventions, with many programs supporting low-value activities that do not demonstrably reduce economic disparities between adjacent regions.[78] Economic value assessments reveal challenges in demonstrating additionality and return on investment (ROI). Independent evaluations, including those referenced in ECA findings, indicate that Interreg projects frequently exhibit low leverage of private or national funds, with co-financing ratios often skewed toward public sources, implying marginal net economic multipliers. In the 2014-2020 period, while over 2,000 projects were funded across strands, empirical data on attributable GDP growth or job creation remains sparse; for example, transnational programs showed distributional biases favoring core rather than peripheral regions, undermining claims of cohesive economic uplift.[28] Critics argue this reflects causal weaknesses: interventions like joint planning exercises may foster short-term networking but fail to generate sustained market-driven outcomes, as borders in the EU's single market already facilitate much baseline trade without such subsidies.[81] Stakeholder perceptions further underscore inefficiencies, particularly in sector-specific applications. In tourism-focused Interreg initiatives, participants view the funding as a valuable resource for peripheral development but criticize the rigid framework for hindering organic growth; cross-border partnerships often dissolve post-project due to mismatched priorities and insufficient follow-up mechanisms, yielding transient rather than enduring economic value.[82] Surveys of program users, such as the 2024 Interreg Europe post-2027 consultation, report administrative burdens consuming up to 20-30% of budgets in some cases, diverting resources from substantive activities and eroding overall cost-effectiveness. These issues compound in evaluations of efficiency, where output-oriented monitoring—tracking events or partnerships rather than monetized impacts—obscures true ROI, with error rates exceeding 2% in annual audits signaling systemic compliance and allocation flaws.[81]| Aspect | Key Critique | Supporting Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic Focus | Fragmented projects fail to address core border obstacles | ECA analysis of 23 programs showed inadequate prioritization of high-value interventions[81] |
| Additionality & ROI | Low private leverage; limited attributable economic gains | Transnational allocations favor cores over peripheries; sparse GDP/job data[28] |
| Administrative Efficiency | High bureaucracy reduces net value | User surveys cite 20-30% budget drain; audit errors >2% [81] |
| Long-term Sustainability | Transient partnerships, no lasting integration | Tourism cases show post-project dissolution; weak outcome monitoring[82] |