Plan S
Plan S is an initiative for the immediate open access publication of peer-reviewed scholarly research funded by public grants and certain private sources, launched in September 2018 by cOAlition S, an international consortium of research funders including the European Commission, Wellcome Trust, and national agencies from over 20 countries.[1][2] The core principle mandates that, starting no later than 2021, all such publications must be deposited in compliant open access journals or platforms without embargo periods, with funders covering article processing charges (APCs) where applicable and authors retaining copyright via standardized licenses like Creative Commons.[3][4] Plan S rejects hybrid subscription-open access models as transitional, emphasizing full open access to accelerate scientific progress by removing paywalls that restrict access to knowledge.[5][6] While proponents argue it addresses longstanding barriers to dissemination in science, where taxpayer-funded research remains locked behind subscriptions, implementation has faced criticism for curtailing researchers' choice of publication venues—potentially excluding over 80% of existing journals initially—and imposing uniform requirements ill-suited to diverse fields, such as physics with established preprint cultures.[7][8][9] Concerns also include risks to academic freedom, financial burdens on smaller funders or institutions in low-resource settings, and ethical questions over mandating specific publishing models without broader consensus.[10][11] By 2024, despite endorsements from over two dozen funders managing billions in annual research budgets, progress toward full compliance has been uneven, with annual reviews noting slower-than-expected transitions in transformative journals and ongoing reliance on offsets and agreements rather than wholesale open access shifts, prompting adjustments like extended timelines for some signatories.[12][13][14]Origins and Historical Context
Precursors and Early Open Access Movements
The Budapest Open Access Initiative, convened on February 14, 2002, by the Open Society Institute in Budapest, Hungary, marked a pivotal early articulation of open access principles, defining it as the free, unrestricted online availability of peer-reviewed scholarly journal literature to permit reading, downloading, copying, distributing, printing, searching, or linking without financial, legal, or technical barriers beyond internet access itself.[15] It proposed two complementary strategies: self-archiving of preprints or postprints in open repositories (green open access) and the creation of new, author-funded journals that provide immediate open access upon publication (gold open access).[15] Building directly on this, the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities, issued on October 22, 2003, by the Max Planck Society, urged research organizations and funders worldwide to endorse open digital access to original scientific and scholarly research results, emphasizing machine-readable formats and the removal of barriers to reuse beyond copyright restrictions.[16] Over 600 institutions eventually signed the declaration, amplifying calls for policy changes to prioritize open dissemination over traditional subscription models.[16] In the mid-2000s, these declarations spurred the proliferation of institutional repositories, enabling green open access through self-archiving; notable software platforms included EPrints, released in 2000 for hosting scholarly articles, and DSpace, launched in 2002 for broader digital preservation.[17] This growth coincided with escalating critiques of the subscription-based publishing model, rooted in the "serials crisis" where journal prices rose 200-400% from the 1980s to early 2000s, far outpacing library budgets and academic inflation, largely due to market consolidation by commercial publishers offering bundled "big deals" that locked institutions into escalating costs without proportional value.[18] Proponents argued that digital technologies rendered paywalls obsolete, as copying and distribution costs approached zero, yet publishers retained monopoly pricing power over peer-reviewed content despite minimal production expenses post-digitization.[18] Funder mandates emerged incrementally to enforce access, with the Wellcome Trust requiring in 2005 that its grantees deposit articles in PubMed Central within six months of publication, focusing on biomedical research to accelerate public availability.[19] The U.S. National Institutes of Health formalized its Public Access Policy in April 2008, mandating submission of final peer-reviewed manuscripts from funded research to PubMed Central no later than 12 months after acceptance, covering grants exceeding $500,000 annually and aiming to disseminate taxpayer-supported results.[20] Similarly, Research Councils UK (RCUK) issued guidance in 2005 requiring deposit of peer-reviewed journal articles in open repositories "at the earliest opportunity" post-acceptance, with most councils adopting self-archiving policies by 2006.[21] However, these policies faced enforcement challenges, including voluntary compliance rates below 50% initially for NIH's prior requests, persistent embargoes delaying access, and limited scope excluding books or non-peer-reviewed outputs, revealing the need for stronger, immediate-access requirements.[19][20]Launch in 2018 and Initial Momentum
Plan S was publicly announced on September 4, 2018, by cOAlition S, a consortium formed by national research funding organizations with support from the European Commission and the European Research Council.[2] The initiative was spearheaded by Robert-Jan Smits, the European Commission's Special Adviser on Open Access and former head of its Open Access unit, who outlined the plan's core requirement that, from January 1, 2021, all peer-reviewed scientific publications resulting from research funded by public grants must be published in compliant open access journals, platforms, or deposited in open repositories with zero embargo periods.[22] [4] The initial cOAlition S comprised 11 European research funders, including the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), the French National Research Agency (ANR), the Dutch Research Council (NWO), the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet), and the Italian National Institute of Health (ISS), alongside endorsements from the European Commission and European Research Council. These founding members committed to enforcing immediate open access without financial support for non-compliant subscription-based or hybrid journals after 2020, aiming to accelerate the shift away from paywalled publishing models for taxpayer-funded research.[1] Following the launch, cOAlition S issued preliminary implementation guidance in November 2018, specifying routes to compliance such as gold open access publishing and rights retention policies, while emphasizing CC BY licensing for maximum reuse.[6] This document set the foundation for technical criteria, prompting early stakeholder engagement. In early 2019, cOAlition S conducted public consultations on the guidance, gathering feedback from publishers, researchers, and libraries to refine requirements, which culminated in revised principles released on May 31, 2019, maintaining the zero-embargo mandate but allowing limited flexibility for society-owned journals.[23] [24]Core Principles and Mandates
The Ten Principles of Plan S
Plan S establishes ten foundational principles to mandate immediate and full open access (OA) for scholarly publications resulting from research funded by cOAlition S members, effective from 2021 for grants awarded after that date.[3] These principles derive from the rationale that publicly funded research outputs should be accessible without delay or financial barriers to readers, thereby maximizing societal benefit and reuse while shifting economic burdens from subscription models—where publishers collect fees from libraries despite receiving funded content—to upfront article processing charges (APCs) covered by funders, eliminating practices like double-dipping where publishers charge both authors and subscribers.[3] The principles prioritize rights retention by authors to prevent enclosure of publicly funded knowledge and emphasize quality assurance through defined criteria rather than traditional metrics.[25] The principles are enumerated as follows, with each requiring compliance for funded outputs:- With effect from 2021, all scholarly publications on the results from research funded by public or private grants provided by national, regional and international research councils and funding bodies, must be published in Open Access Journals, on Open Access Platforms, or made immediately available through Open Access Repositories without embargo. This core mandate rejects embargoes, which delay access, to ensure causal immediacy in knowledge dissemination, as delays undermine the public good of timely research availability.[3]
- Authors (or their institutions or funders) retain copyright to their publications. Retention prevents publishers from imposing restrictive licenses that lock content behind paywalls, aligning with first-principles ownership where creators (or their funders) control reuse rights.[3]
- All publications must be published under an open licence, preferably the Creative Commons Attribution licence (CC BY). Open licenses enable broad reuse without permission barriers, fulfilling Berlin Declaration standards for OA by treating knowledge as a public good rather than a proprietary asset.[3]
- The Funders will develop robust criteria and requirements for the services that high-quality Open Access journals, platforms, and repositories must provide. This ensures that compliant venues maintain peer review and preservation standards, countering risks of low-quality outlets proliferating under APC models.[3]
- In cases where high-quality Open Access journals or platforms do not yet exist, the Funders will provide incentives to establish and support them, and support Open Access infrastructures where necessary. Incentives address market gaps, fostering a sustainable OA ecosystem without relying on legacy subscription publishers.[3]
- Where applicable, Open Access publication fees are covered by the Funders or research institutions, not by individual researchers. By centralizing fee payment, this principle removes personal financial disincentives, ensuring access depends on institutional support rather than researcher wealth.[3]
- The Funders support the diversity of business models for Open Access journals and platforms. Fees, when applied, must be commensurate with services and transparent. Transparency prevents opaque pricing that could inflate costs, while diversity avoids mandating a single APC model that might disadvantage non-commercial or diamond OA outlets.[3]
- The Funders encourage governments, universities, research organisations, libraries, academies, and learned societies to align their strategies, policies, and practices, notably to ensure transparency. Broader alignment amplifies the shift, pressuring subscription holdouts through coordinated policy leverage.[3]
- The above principles apply to all scholarly publications, but the timeline for monographs and book chapters will be longer and requires a separate process. Universal scope targets the entire scholarly record, with phased implementation for books to account for their distinct economics.[3]
- The Funders do not support the ‘hybrid’ model of publishing, except as a transitional pathway within transformative arrangements and a defined timeframe. Rejection of hybrid models—where journals charge APCs for individual OA articles alongside subscriptions—targets double-dipping, forcing a full transition to eliminate redundant revenue streams.[3]
Definitions of Compliant Open Access Publications
Compliant open access publications under Plan S consist of peer-reviewed scholarly articles made immediately available without embargo as either the version of record (VoR) or the author's accepted manuscript (AAM) in venues meeting defined quality and transparency standards.[6] These venues encompass fully open access journals, where all research articles are openly accessible upon publication, and open access platforms designated for the original publication of research outputs, such as overlay journals or preprint-based models like Wellcome Open Research.[6][26] To qualify as compliant, journals and platforms must undergo peer review adhering to standards involving at least two independent expert reviewers without conflicts of interest, in line with Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) guidelines.[27][28] They are required to publish transparent editorial policies, decision-making processes, and annual performance metrics, including submission volumes, review numbers, acceptance rates, and time to publication.[28] Compliance verification typically involves indexing in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) or equivalent assessment through the Journal Comparison Service for transparency on fees, waivers, and business models.[6][29] Platforms must support original content dissemination, excluding those aggregating republished or non-original material.[26] Subscription-based or hybrid journals, which maintain paywalls for most content while offering optional open access, are excluded from compliance unless participating in transformative arrangements.[6] Transformative status applies to arrangements such as transformative agreements—contracts between consortia or institutions and publishers that redirect subscription funds to cover open access publishing fees while committing to full open access transition by December 31, 2024—or transformative journals that progressively increase the proportion of open access articles toward 100% and eliminate hybrid models.[30][31] These arrangements serve as interim pathways, requiring demonstrable progress in open access uptake and structural shifts away from subscription dependencies.[6]Implementation Guidelines
Timeline and Transition Extensions
Plan S was initially announced in September 2018 with an intended implementation date of 1 January 2020 for grants awarded under affected funding calls.[1] In May 2019, cOAlition S revised the timeline, extending the minimum implementation to calls published or with application deadlines after 1 January 2021, to allow additional time for adaptation by researchers, publishers, and funders.[24] This adjustment applied as a baseline across member organizations, though individual funders could adopt earlier dates if prepared, resulting in varied rollout schedules.[6] From its launch, cOAlition S established ongoing monitoring of Plan S effects, including publication costs, uptake of open access routes, and compliance levels, with data collection beginning in 2018 to inform adjustments.[1] Post-2021, enforcement of compliance became the responsibility of individual funders, who were required to align grant agreements, track adherence, and apply sanctions such as withholding funds for non-compliant publications.[6] This decentralized approach led to differences in enforcement timing and stringency among members, with some applying full mandates immediately after their policy effective dates while others phased in requirements gradually.[32] To facilitate transition, cOAlition S permitted continued funding support for transformative arrangements—temporary hybrid models shifting toward full open access—until 31 December 2024, as outlined in the 2019 revisions and reaffirmed in subsequent guidance.[31] In January 2023, cOAlition S confirmed that financial support under these arrangements would cease after 2024, requiring a formal assessment by year's end to evaluate progress toward non-hybrid compliance pathways.[33] These extensions addressed logistical challenges in transforming subscription-based systems but were not explicitly tied to the COVID-19 pandemic, despite the latter highlighting delays in scholarly publishing workflows.[34]Routes to Compliance: Gold, Hybrid, and Green OA
Plan S outlines three primary routes to ensure full and immediate open access for publications arising from funded research: gold open access via subscription-free journals or platforms, hybrid open access through approved transformative arrangements, and green open access via self-archiving in compliant repositories.[6] These pathways prioritize the version of record (VoR) where possible to minimize discrepancies between preprint versions and final published outputs, as empirical evidence indicates that accepted manuscripts often differ from the VoR in formatting, corrections, and supplementary materials.[6] Gold open access requires publication directly in fully open access journals or platforms, where the VoR is made freely available immediately upon publication without any embargo period.[6] Such venues must adhere to technical standards, including rights retention by authors and machine-readable metadata, but exclude subscription-based models.[6] This route is emphasized as the preferred mechanism for compliance, as it delivers the authoritative VoR openly from the outset, reducing reliance on secondary archiving and potential version inconsistencies.[6] Hybrid open access is permitted exclusively through transformative arrangements, which are transitional agreements with subscription or hybrid journals designed to phase out hybrid models entirely.[6] Under these arrangements, individual articles must be made open access immediately, either as the VoR or author's accepted manuscript (AAM), with no embargo allowed.[6] Transformative status requires journals to demonstrate progress toward full open access, such as increasing the proportion of open access content, ensuring this route serves only as a temporary bridge rather than a permanent option.[6] Green open access involves depositing the VoR or AAM in a compliant open repository immediately upon acceptance, enforcing a zero-embargo policy to achieve immediate accessibility.[6] Repositories must meet criteria for interoperability, preservation, and metadata standards, but this route is positioned as secondary to gold open access, as self-archived AAMs may lack the final editorial enhancements of the VoR, potentially complicating verification and citation.[6] Funders encourage green deposition as a supplementary practice even for gold publications to enhance discoverability.[6]Licensing Requirements and Rights Retention
Plan S requires that peer-reviewed scholarly publications arising from funded research be made available under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 license or an equivalent open license, granting the public a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive, irrevocable right to share, adapt, and use the work for any purpose, including commercial exploitation.[35] This mandate, outlined in the implementation guidance, prioritizes CC BY to facilitate extensive reuse of taxpayer-funded outputs, such as through text and data mining or creation of derivative resources, thereby enhancing scientific progress and societal impact.[6] Acceptable secondary options include the CC BY-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 license or the CC0 public domain waiver, which similarly support broad dissemination without additional restrictions.[35] The CC BY-NoDerivatives (CC BY-ND) 4.0 license is permitted only as a narrow exception, requiring authors to explicitly request it from their funder with justification—typically for concerns over unauthorized adaptations—and obtain approval, ensuring it does not undermine the default emphasis on maximal reuse.[35] Such exceptions address discipline-specific sensitivities, for instance in humanities and social sciences where derivative uses might risk cultural misrepresentation or ethical issues, though funders retain discretion to deny requests in favor of unrestricted access.[35][36] Complementing these licensing rules, the Rights Retention Strategy (RRS), adopted by cOAlition S organizations, enables authors to maintain control over their intellectual property while achieving compliance.[37] Authors retain copyright in their accepted manuscripts (AAMs) but must incorporate a standardized statement in submission materials, declaring that funders have reserved rights to distribute the work under CC BY upon acceptance.[37] This preemptively applies the CC BY license to the AAM, permitting immediate deposit and open access in compliant repositories without embargoes, even in subscription or hybrid journals with incompatible terms.[37] The RRS shifts leverage from publisher agreements to funder grant conditions, asserting that publicly funded research cannot be locked behind paywalls or restrictive licenses post-acceptance.[37] By applying to AAMs (or versions of record where possible), it ensures zero-embargo open access, with authors notified to share licensed copies publicly regardless of publisher objections.[37] This approach, formalized in 2020, supports author choice in venues while enforcing Plan S mandates, though it relies on funder enforcement and author diligence in applying the retention statement.[37]Criteria for Journals, Platforms, and Repositories
Journals and platforms seeking Plan S compliance must adhere to mandatory technical and operational standards that prioritize peer review quality, transparency in processes and costs, and robust digital infrastructure. These include conducting high-quality peer review aligned with Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) principles, with detailed descriptions of editorial policies and annual publication statistics—such as submission volumes, review numbers, acceptance rates, and time to publication—publicly available on their websites.[28] Authors must retain copyright, enabling immediate open access publication under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) or compatible license without embargoes, supported by persistent identifiers like DOIs, long-term preservation via services such as CLOCKSS, and machine-readable metadata in CC0 format including open access status, licensing, and funder information.[6] Journals and platforms are required to register with the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) or be in the process of doing so, prohibit "mirror" subscription models that duplicate content behind paywalls, and disclose article processing charge (APC) structures transparently while offering waivers for authors from low- and middle-income economies.[28] Recommended practices for journals and platforms further enhance compliance through adoption of persistent identifiers for authors and funders (e.g., ORCID), Journal Article Tag Suite (JATS) XML for full-text markup, OpenAIRE compliance for metadata interoperability, and open citations indexed by the Initiative for Open Citations (I4OC).[28] Examples of compliant platforms include overlay journals and preprint-based models like those used by SciELO or Wellcome Open Research, provided they meet these standards as primary publication venues rather than mere aggregators.[6] Repositories compliant with Plan S must ensure public, permanent accessibility of deposited versions, either the final published version or author's accepted manuscript, with immediate open access under an open license. Mandatory criteria encompass registration with the Directory of Open Access Repositories (OpenDOAR) or ongoing application, assignment of persistent identifiers to deposited items, CC0 metadata exposing funding and funder details alongside machine-readable open access and licensing information, at least 99.7% uptime for continuous availability, and a helpdesk responding to queries within one business day.[28] Recommended repository features include submission systems for manuscripts, JATS XML full-text support, author and funder persistent identifiers, OpenAIRE-compliant metadata, open application programming interfaces (APIs) for data access, and I4OC-aligned citation data to facilitate discoverability and reuse.[28] Compliance status for journals is verifiable through the cOAlition S Journal Checker Tool, a web-based resource launched in 2020 that assesses publication options against funder policies by cross-referencing journal details with DOAJ listings, licensing, and embargo practices.[38] This tool enables researchers to confirm venue suitability prior to submission, supporting ongoing monitoring without guaranteeing future adherence.[39]cOAlition S Structure
Founding and Member Organizations
cOAlition S was established on September 4, 2018, by an initial group of national research funding organizations, primarily from Europe, coordinated through Science Europe and supported by the European Commission and the European Research Council.[2] Founding members included the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), the French National Research Agency (ANR), and Swedish research councils such as the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare (FORTE) and Formas.[5] These organizations committed to implementing Plan S principles, requiring that from 2021 onward, peer-reviewed publications from their funded research be published in compliant open access venues.[6] Membership expanded rapidly, incorporating philanthropic and international entities shortly after launch, such as the Wellcome Trust and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in November 2018.[40] By 2023, cOAlition S encompassed 28 funders, reflecting growth from its original dozen European-centric signatories.[41] Current members are categorized into national funders, charitable and international funders, and European funders, totaling around 29 organizations as listed on the official site.[42] National funders form the largest group (approximately 20), dominated by European bodies like UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), and the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), but extending to non-European entities including the National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia), Fonds de recherche du Québec (Canada), South African Medical Research Council, National Science and Technology Council (Zambia), and Higher Council for Science and Technology (Jordan).[42] Charitable and international funders include the Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, World Health Organization, and Templeton World Charity Foundation.[42] These members, representing public grant-awarding agencies and private philanthropies, pledge to allocate their research budgets exclusively to open access-compliant publications, enforcing Plan S mandates on grantees.[43]| Category | Examples | Geographic Focus |
|---|---|---|
| National Funders | UKRI, SNSF, NHMRC (Australia), SAMRC (South Africa) | Predominantly Europe (18), with representation from Oceania, Africa, Middle East, North America |
| Charitable/International Funders | Wellcome Trust, Gates Foundation, WHO | Global, including US-based philanthropies |
| European Funders | EU-funded projects | Europe-wide initiatives |
Leadership Changes and Operations
Johan Rooryck has served as Executive Director of cOAlition S since 2019, overseeing the organization's growth and implementation of Plan S principles.[44] In this role, he coordinated strategic execution, external communications, and liaison with member funders.[45] Rooryck announced his departure effective July 3, 2025, after six years marked by expansion of membership and development of compliance tools.[1] No successor has been named as of the announcement.[46] The cOAlition S secretariat, established in January 2020 and hosted by the European Science Foundation in Strasbourg, provides operational support distinct from individual member policies.[47] Its functions include executing the organization's strategy and timeline, managing resources, and facilitating tools such as the Journal Checker Tool and Journal Comparison Service to aid compliance assessment.[47] The secretariat also conducts annual reviews of Plan S progress and commissions independent studies on its impacts.[12] In 2024, secretariat operations emphasized monitoring Plan S adherence through data collection and infrastructure support, with a budget of 1,108,186 EUR funding 3 full-time equivalent staff.[47] This included releasing the Annual Review 2024, which evaluated open access publication trends among funded research, and an independent impact study assessing effects on scholarly communication.[12][48] Coordination of transformative agreements continued until their scheduled phase-out at year-end, aligning with the shift to rights retention strategies.[33]Withdrawals, Declines, and Non-Participants
The European Research Council (ERC), a founding supporter of Plan S, withdrew its endorsement in July 2020. The ERC Scientific Council cited the need for closer scrutiny of Plan S's implementation details, including provisions on journal flipping thresholds, version-of-record embargoes, and potential restrictions on researcher publishing options, which it deemed previously underestimated.[49] This decision followed cOAlition S's May 2020 revisions raising the open access content threshold for transformative journals from 50% to 75%, prompting concerns over accelerated transitions that could disrupt established publishing workflows.[50] Major U.S. research funders, including the National Science Foundation (NSF) and National Institutes of Health (NIH), opted not to participate in cOAlition S. The NSF implemented its Public Access Policy in 2016, requiring deposition of peer-reviewed articles and supporting data in designated repositories no later than 12 months after publication, explicitly differing from Plan S's mandate for immediate open access without embargoes.[51] This stance reflects preferences for retaining policy autonomy, mitigating risks to subscription-funded journals, and addressing infrastructure unreadiness for zero-embargo requirements, as U.S. agencies prioritized phased approaches over binding international commitments.[14] Non-participation extended to other non-European national funders, such as those in Germany and Switzerland, which pursued independent open access strategies rather than aligning with Plan S's timelines and compliance routes. Empirical data on cOAlition S membership—limited to around 25 organizations as of 2021, predominantly European—underscores constrained global adoption, with withdrawals like the ERC's contributing to a net membership stagnation despite some expansions.[52] Reasons frequently invoked included fiscal burdens from article processing charges, threats to small-scale publishing, and insufficient readiness of repositories and licensing frameworks.[53]Reactions from Stakeholders
Endorsements by Funders and Institutions
The European Commission integrated Plan S principles into the Horizon Europe programme, requiring immediate open access to peer-reviewed publications from funded research without embargo from 1 January 2021, thereby endorsing the initiative's core demand for full and immediate OA.[54] This policy alignment extended to all EU funding programmes by the end of 2023, supporting Plan S through projects like SOAR that promote compliance tools and funder adoption.[55] [56] SPARC Europe endorsed Plan S shortly after its September 2018 launch, hailing it as a decisive push against subscription-based models and issuing guidance in October 2018 on how libraries could aid implementation, including advocacy for transformative agreements and repository enhancements.[57] [58] The European University Association (EUA), representing over 800 European higher education institutions, expressed formal support for Plan S in a statement emphasizing its role in accelerating OA and building a sustainable scholarly system, while urging alignment with institutional policies.[59] OpenAIRE, the European open access infrastructure funded by the Commission, reaffirmed endorsement of Plan S principles in April 2019, providing constructive input on implementation guidelines to ensure repository interoperability and compliance for self-archiving routes.[60] Institutions operating under OpenAIRE subsequently expanded repository capabilities, adopting Plan S technical standards like machine-readable licensing metadata to support green OA deposits.[61]Researcher Perspectives: Support and Concerns
Many researchers endorse the core objective of Plan S to expedite open access, emphasizing benefits like improved visibility, faster knowledge dissemination, and potential citation advantages from freely available articles. General studies on open access prior to widespread Plan S implementation have found that OA papers receive approximately 18% more citations than subscription-based counterparts, bolstering arguments for immediate accessibility without embargoes.[62] In surveys of EU researchers, a notable portion express alignment with Plan S principles when funding support is assured, particularly in STEM fields where grant allocations often cover article processing charges (APCs).[63] Concerns predominate regarding implementation burdens, especially for unfunded or modestly funded researchers in humanities and social sciences (HSS), where APC coverage is scarce compared to STEM disciplines. For example, analyses highlight that few HSS scholars anticipate reliable financial support for APCs, potentially exacerbating inequities and deterring publication in compliant venues.[64] [65] Over 1,600 independent scholars signed an open letter in 2019 decrying Plan S as unethical and risky, arguing it restricts access to preferred journals and undermines academic freedom by mandating specific compliance routes.[66] [10] Empirical evidence on Plan S's effects remains mixed, with some post-implementation studies questioning the persistence of an OA citation premium after accounting for self-selection biases and database inclusivity. A 2022 survey of European physicists revealed 82% unawareness of Plan S, while the aware minority (18%) primarily worried about curtailed journal options, suggesting limited enthusiasm or comprehension among targeted researchers.[67] [68] These perspectives underscore a tension between aspirational OA goals and practical constraints on researcher autonomy and resources.Publisher and Journal Responses
Large commercial publishers initially criticized aspects of Plan S, particularly its exclusion of hybrid journals, but adapted by launching fully open access journals and offering "flip" models to transition subscription-based titles to full open access compliance. Elsevier, for instance, stated in November 2018 that while it supported open access goals, the original Plan S timeline and restrictions on hybrid publishing posed challenges to established workflows, prompting the publisher to expand its portfolio of compliant gold open access journals such as those under Cell Press and launch options for society partners to flip titles.[69] Similarly, publishers like Springer Nature introduced mechanisms for journals to become transformative or fully open access, enabling compliance without immediate full revenue model overhauls.[70] Society publishers, often reliant on subscription revenues to fund non-publishing activities, voiced strong concerns over potential financial shortfalls from the shift away from subscriptions. In December 2018, analyses highlighted that societies like the American Geophysical Union generated surpluses from publishing—approximately $45 million annually in one case—essential for broader mission support, warning that Plan S-driven cancellations could erode these funds and necessitate service reductions or journal sales to commercial entities.[71] By January 2019, leaders from organizations such as the Geological Society of America projected that global Plan S adoption would cause revenue losses forcing journal shutters or slashes to educational and outreach programs, disproportionately affecting smaller, mission-driven publishers unable to absorb APC model transitions.[72] Industry associations amplified these worries, emphasizing risks to sustainability in the APC ecosystem. The Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers (ALPSP), in 2019 discussions tied to its commissioned SPA-OPS study, noted that open access transitions could decrease revenues for society publishers, leading to unsustainable article processing charge (APC) hikes to offset subscription declines, with smaller entities facing the brunt due to limited scale.[73] The Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP), through its platforms in 2018-2019, echoed that abrupt mandates risked inflating APCs beyond affordability, potentially undermining long-term open access viability without gradual adaptation paths for diverse publisher types.[74]Controversies and Criticisms
Challenges to Academic Freedom and Journal Choice
Critics of Plan S contend that its mandates restrict researchers' autonomy by limiting publication options to compliant open access venues, thereby infringing on the fundamental academic freedom to select journals based on factors such as peer review rigor, disciplinary fit, and career advancement potential.[75][76][77] This restriction arises primarily from Plan S's exclusion of non-compliant hybrid journals—those offering both subscription and open access options—unless covered by approved transformative agreements, forcing researchers to forgo established outlets that may better align with their strategic goals.[6] Such limitations on journal choice are argued to potentially stifle innovation by compelling researchers to prioritize compliance over optimal dissemination channels, where interdisciplinary or high-impact venues might not yet offer Plan S-compliant pathways. From a causal standpoint, these mandates shift decision-making authority from individual researchers—who are incentivized to maximize scientific impact and reputational gains—to funders enforcing systemic access priorities, which could dilute publication quality if compliant alternatives prove less selective or visible in certain fields.[78] Empirical evidence highlights acute challenges in non-STEM disciplines, particularly humanities and social sciences, where a majority of open access journals fail to meet Plan S criteria such as transparent peer review policies and rights retention by authors. A 2019 analysis found that only a small fraction of open access journals overall comply, with small publishers in these fields disproportionately non-compliant due to resource constraints in adapting to stringent requirements like immediate full open access and machine-readable licensing.[79][80] Researchers in these areas thus face fewer viable outlets, potentially disrupting established publication norms and hindering the pursuit of field-specific inquiries unbound by uniform policy dictates.[79]Economic Impacts on Small Publishers and Societies
The shift to open access mandated by Plan S has eroded subscription revenues for small publishers and learned societies, which historically depended on these streams to fund operations, peer review, and community activities. Without embargoes or hybrid options post-2024 for many funders, societies face immediate revenue losses as readers access content freely, compelling a pivot to APCs that smaller entities often cannot sustain due to low submission volumes and high fixed costs per article.[71][81] Empirical data from UK learned societies illustrates this strain: self-published society journals declined from 68 in 2015 to 44 in 2023, with five ceasing operations entirely, coinciding with intensified open access pressures including Plan S implementation.[82] Globally, 56% of society publishers reported journal revenue declines since 2019, with real-terms losses amplified by inflation (23-26% in the US and UK), particularly in medicine and life sciences where APC transitions hit hardest.[83] Smaller societies managing 1-5 journals fare worst, lacking diversification to offset losses, while outsourcing to commercial partners yields median revenue drops of 30% compared to self-publishing gains.[83] Plan S's technical and compliance demands—such as standardized metadata, DOIs, and annual reporting—further disadvantage independents, accelerating outsourcing to large publishers capable of handling transformative agreements (TAs). Post-2018 announcements, societies reported a surge in partnerships with firms like Elsevier and Wiley, as TAs prioritize high-volume portfolios and negotiation leverage unavailable to niche operators.[84][84] This has fostered consolidation, with an independent 2024 study commissioned by cOAlition S confirming Plan S inadvertently hastened industry concentration among dominant players, reducing diversity in scholarly publishing.[14][85] Societies warn that such trends threaten their non-profit missions, as profit-sharing deals erode control and surpluses traditionally reinvested in research grants and events.[86][84]Concerns Over Article Processing Charges and Equity
Critics of Plan S have highlighted the financial strain imposed by article processing charges (APCs), which fund gold open access publishing and are often required for compliance. Average APCs for open access articles ranged from approximately $1,400 to $2,800 across various fields in recent analyses, with medians reaching $2,000 or higher in medicine and internal disciplines, placing substantial burdens on researchers in low-income countries and early-career scholars lacking institutional waivers or dedicated funds.[87][88][89] These costs, which funders like cOAlition S members agree to cover for their grantees, nonetheless exclude unaffiliated or underfunded researchers, as Plan S principles shift fees away from individual authors but do not guarantee universal waivers, exacerbating inequities for those outside major funding streams.[90] The APC model has been linked to a proliferation of predatory journals, which charge fees—often $500 to $3,000—while providing minimal peer review or editorial oversight, undermining the quality controls intended by open access mandates. Studies from 2020 to 2023 document a sharp rise in such outlets, with predatory journal listings expanding to over 17,000 by 2024, driven by the incentive structure of upfront payments that prioritize volume over rigor, a dynamic amplified by Plan S's push toward immediate gold OA.[91][92] This exploitation risks diverting research from reputable venues, particularly as APC-dependent predatory entities mimic compliant journals to attract submissions from resource-constrained authors seeking open access options.[93] Equity concerns extend to global disparities, where Plan S-compliant journals—predominantly hosted by Northern publishers with high APCs—underrepresent contributions from the Global South, despite the initiative's aim for universal access. Researchers from low- and middle-income countries face barriers due to limited funding for fees averaging thousands of dollars, leading to underparticipation in high-visibility OA platforms and perpetuating a cycle of Northern dominance in indexed literature.[94][95] This contradicts Plan S's equity rhetoric, as Southern institutions often lack the transformative agreements or subsidies available in Europe, resulting in de facto exclusion from compliant publishing ecosystems.[96]Policy Adaptations and Outcomes
Transformative Agreements and Publisher Shifts
Transformative agreements, often termed read-and-publish deals, enable institutions and consortia to negotiate contracts with publishers that combine traditional subscription-based reading access with coverage of article processing charges (APCs) for open access publishing. These arrangements redirect funds previously allocated to subscriptions toward supporting immediate open access outputs, particularly in hybrid journals where only select articles are made openly available. Under Plan S, such agreements qualify as compliant pathways during a transitional period, provided they demonstrate progress toward full open access by increasing the proportion of openly accessible content and capping hybrid elements.[30] Major publishers have adapted by offering these bundled models to retain institutional clients amid open access mandates. Springer Nature, for example, has secured transformative agreements with numerous universities and national consortia, such as the University of California system and Virginia's VIVA libraries, wherein participating authors receive full APC waivers or fixed-price coverage for open access publication in hybrid and fully open access journals. These deals typically include mechanisms for tracking publication volumes to adjust pricing and ensure scalability, blending hybrid journal access with incentives for gold open access transitions in select titles.[97][98][99] By August 2023, more than 400 transformative agreements were in effect globally, spanning over 12,500 hybrid journals and facilitating open access for articles funded by Plan S signatories. These negotiations have driven publishers to reconfigure portfolios, committing contractual milestones for reducing subscription revenues in favor of APC-based models while phasing out non-compliant hybrid structures.[100] cOAlition S maintains empirical oversight through the Hybrid Open Access Dashboard (HOAD), launched on August 17, 2023, which aggregates metadata from sources like Crossref and OpenAlex to quantify open access uptake rates within agreement-covered journals. HOAD's interactive tools reveal variances in transformation progress, such as the percentage of articles published openly under specific deals, aiding negotiators in evaluating publisher adherence to offset and openness targets.[100]Funder and Institutional Policy Evolutions
In response to implementation challenges following the initial 2021 compliance deadline, several cOAlition S funders extended transitional support for transformative arrangements, which permitted hybrid publishing models as a bridge to full open access, with financial backing committed until the end of 2024.[33] This flexibility allowed researchers funded by organizations such as the European Research Council and national agencies to offset costs for non-immediate open access outputs during the phased rollout, prioritizing adaptation over strict enforcement in early years.[33] [31] Institutions aligned their policies by establishing centralized offset programs to cover article processing charges (APCs), enabling compliance without direct burden on individual researchers. For instance, universities and research bodies created dedicated open access funds that reimbursed or prepaid APCs for Plan S-eligible publications, often integrating these with grant management systems to track and support funder mandates.[90] This internal mechanism facilitated broader adoption by mitigating financial barriers, particularly for early-career and non-STEM researchers facing variable APC structures.[101] Between 2022 and 2024, policy evolutions emphasized accommodations for long-form outputs in humanities and social sciences, where monographs and book chapters predominate over journal articles. cOAlition S issued a 2021 statement endorsing principles for open access book publishing, recognizing the distinct timelines and workflows required, and urging funders to develop tailored policies without imposing the article-centric 2021 deadline.[102] This included provisions for embargoes, version-of-record access, and alternative quality assurance models suited to books, with many funders committing to full implementation by the end of 2024 to accommodate slower market transitions in these fields.[3]Empirical Assessments of Adoption Rates
As of 2023, publications arising from research funded by cOAlition S members achieved an open access rate of 81%, up from 73% in 2021 and 79% in 2022, surpassing the global open access average of 60% for that year.[56] Compliance rates among specific funders varied, with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute reporting 90%, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation at 83%, UK Research and Innovation at 76%, and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research at 74%.[56]| Year | cOAlition S Funded OA Rate | Global OA Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 73% | Not reported |
| 2022 | 79% | 56% |
| 2023 | 81% | 60% |