The importance of loving what you do
Meet Veronika Horkova, EMBO Postdoctoral Fellow at the Luxembourg Institute of Health
Facts and figures, life scientists in Luxembourg, EMBO opportunities
Meet Veronika Horkova, EMBO Postdoctoral Fellow at the Luxembourg Institute of Health
Chief Executive Officer of the Luxembourg Institute of Health, and EMBO Member
Meet Bora Tastan, researcher at the Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine at the University of Luxembourg, former Scientific Exchange Grantee and current EMBO Postdoctoral Fellow
Young group leaders can now apply for funding and support in an expanded number of countries
Luxembourg has been an EMBC Member State since 2007.
The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg is a small country of 2,586 km1 sitting between Belgium, France and Germany and just a few hours from each capital. Its border town of Schengen at the junction of three countries gave its name to the visa-free travel agreement covering much of Europe. Luxembourg is an important European centre and hosts institutions including the Court of Justice of the EU and the European Court of Auditors.
The University of Luxembourg was founded in 2003 and is the only public university in the country. It attracts 7,000 students from 130 different countries every year.2
Around 46% of the adult population have attained a tertiary education.3 In 2021, about 5,700 people in Luxembourg were employed in R&D work.4
The European Patent Office granted 195 patents with first patentees residing in Luxembourg in 2022.5
Gross expenditure on research and development (GERD) dropped from pre-COVID levels of 1.18% to 1.04% in 2021.6 The main sectors financing GERD were business enterprise providing 44%, and the national government (47%).7 Total R&D spending rose 34% between 2012 and 2021 to reach 753 million euros.8
The Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR) is the primary funder of research in Luxembourg and invests both public funds and private donations into research projects with an emphasis on core strategic areas including personalized healthcare. FNR also advises the Luxembourg government on research policy and strategy.9
Researchers are also eligible for funding through Horizon Europe projects, European Research Council grants, and Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions10 as well as EMBO.
Population: 672,05011
R&D spending: 1.04%2
People employed in R&D: 61,000
People employed in R&D: 5,7004
Universities: eight public universities, one private6
Patents (European Patent Office): 1955
Higher education institutions: 12
Higher education enrolment: 7,000 students enrolled2
Horizon 2020 funding12:
– 632 organizations including 127 SMEs involved in H2020 projects
Life scientists in Luxembourg are eligible for all of the EMBO Programmes. Find out about all EMBO funding schemes here.
All information as of June 2024.
Meet Veronika Horkova, EMBO Postdoctoral Fellow at the Luxembourg Institute of Health
Chief Executive Officer of the Luxembourg Institute of Health, and EMBO Member
Meet Bora Tastan, researcher at the Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine at the University of Luxembourg, former Scientific Exchange Grantee and current EMBO Postdoctoral Fellow
Young group leaders can now apply for funding and support in an expanded number of countries