Discover how Europe is turning research into real-world impact
20 mai 2026 | Lecture de 3 min
Europe’s strength in science is not just scale. It’s the ability to translate research into policy, industry and strategic technologies. It’s a shift that reframes how research impact should be measured.
Elsevier’s report EU as a Science Innovator shows how strong research environments help make that possible, but also indicates that institutions must show why their work matters in public terms.
Impact is not just about citations – it’s about policy and commercial use
The report shows that research excellence is broader than scholarly visibility alone. It looks at policy use and commercial relevance as well as output and citations.
The EU holds 22% of global article share, behind China at 28% and ahead of the US at 17%.
6.8% of EU27 scholarly output is cited in policy documents, well above the world average of 4.6%.
3.6% of EU27 output is cited in patents — level with the world average, below China at 5.8% and the US at 5.0%.
Journal prestige and citation counts are no longer enough on their own. Policy influence, industry linkage and societal use all need to sit inside the same impact narrative.
Read: The 4th Generation University: What if universities could turn local challenges into global change?
International collaboration helps research travel
European research is heavily networked, and the report presents that as a core part of the region’s model.
43% of EU27 publications involve international co-authorship.
68% of EU publications involve cooperation between at least two institutions once national multi-institution work is included.
Intra-EU collaboration rose from 33% to 37% of internationally co-authored EU publications between 2000 and 2024. Over the same period, the US share fell from 33% to 24%, while China’s rose from 2% to 12%.
The point is simple: impact is often produced through networks, not after the fact.
Read: How to strengthen collaboration and partnerships across your research programs
Translation from research to industry matters
The report also gives a clearer read on how research connects to industry.
The EU outperforms China and India in the volume and impact of academic-corporate co-authored publications.
78% of EU corporate research publications include academic partners.
Belgium and Germany stand out on research cited in patents, while Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands show strong policy relevance.
That is useful because it widens the proof set. Research value is not only about citation strength. It is also about policy uptake, academic-industry links and translational reach.
Read: 10 + 1 rules for improving academia- industry collaboration
Strategic fields make the case clearer
The report also points to areas where Europe has scale in strategically important research.
The EU accounts for 25% of global research output in biotechnology.
It holds 27% in photonics.
It holds 24% in robotics and 24% in space technology.
Europe does not lead every metric. But EU as a Science Innovator suggests the impact case is strongest when output, collaboration and application are read together.
The next step is strengthening pathways to impact
If Europe’s strength is translation, the next step is to reinforce it. The report points to three priorities:
Strengthening knowledge transfer between academia and industry
Supporting collaboration across the European Research Area
Connecting high-performing systems with emerging ones
This is not about producing more research, but about ensuring research moves further.