Two Latvian companies receive a one million euro grant in the European Innovation Council competition

May 15, 2026

entrepreneurship innovation science

The European Commission has selected 70 companies within the framework of the European Innovation Council pre-acceleration call, with the aim of supporting the capacity of early-stage deep tech companies.

Noformējums bez nosaukuma.png
Illustrative image; source: Pexels

Support has also been granted to two Latvian startups – “P-Agro Minerals” and “PrintyMed”. Each will receive 500,000 euros for further development of technology, strengthening capacity in Europe, and the development of a globally competitive science-based solution.

“P-Agro Minerals” is developing a filter capable of collecting phosphorus from wastewater, which could later be used as fertilizer in agriculture in accordance with the principles of the circular economy.

“Most of the funding will be allocated to the development of the “P-Agro Minerals” technology – strengthening the team and testing the letonite filter pilot system in real wastewater treatment conditions in industry, as well as protecting intellectual property and increasing production capacity. At the same time, a significant part of the investment is intended for the company’s commercialization, including the development of international partnerships, market validation and attracting investors, in order to ensure successful entry into the European market,” says the company’s co-founder Annija Emersone.

“We applied to the programme because this is a rare opportunity to attract the necessary funding for technology development without giving up company shares to investors, thereby allowing the founders to retain a majority stake in the company for as long as possible and to overcome the so-called startup “valley of death”, when the company is too early to attract private investment and generate profit, but still requires research and development resources before it is able to offer its technology to the market.”

The second Latvian startup that will receive a 500,000 euro grant is “PrintyMed”. It has developed artificial spider silk in a biomimetic way from a technology created at the Latvian Institute of Organic Synthesis, imitating the process as it occurs in nature.

“Within the attracted funding, we will optimize and validate the functionality of the spider silk membrane for a specific application, as well as integrate this membrane into a selected organ-on-a-chip model. By the end of the project, we will have succeeded in raising the technology readiness level from level 4 to level 6. This means that we will already be able to apply for participation in the European Innovation Council Accelerator programme, where correspondingly larger funding is also available. There we could complete the membrane development and start sales,” outlines the startup’s plans, says “PrintyMed” co-founder Jekaterina Romanova.

The aim of the European Innovation Council pre-acceleration programme is to strengthen the capacity of small and medium-sized enterprises and startups, which would then help them attract private investment and access national or regional support programmes. In total, companies selected in this call will receive approximately 32.5 million euros in funding. The budget for the next European Innovation Council pre-acceleration programme call is planned at 40 million euros. The funding per company will be increased to 1 million euros. Applications will be open until November 2027.

“The requirements for receiving funding from the European Investment Council are very high. Depending on the programme, only 2–7% of applications are approved. Therefore, competition is very strong, and all applicants must pass several strict evaluation stages. Both supported Latvian startups have originated from research institutions. And we are very proud that the startup “P-Agro Minerals” graduated from our acceleration programme in 2023,” emphasizes Andris Baumanis, head of the Latvian university accelerator “UniLab”.

Recommended articles

innovation

How modern technologies are transforming football and how Latvia is contributing to the development of global sports innovation

Football is currently undergoing the fastest technological transformation in its history. Sensors in the ball, microchips, semi-automated offside detection, artificial intelligence, high-precision camera systems and video refereeing technologies are significantly changing the fairness and dynamics …

Raidījums "Digitālās brokastis", jauns.lv

June 29, 2026

natural sciences innovation

Food or waste? Researchers develop a sensor for determining seafood freshness

Does the expiry date indicated on the packaging really tell us everything about the freshness of the product? In the programme “Latvia in Science”, Artis Kinēns, a leading researcher at the University of Latvia, introduces the “FreshWave” project, which aims to develop a sensor for detecting fresh …

Latvian Council of Science

June 27, 2026

innovation science

Riga Technical University establishes a unique laboratory for entrepreneurial and societal hyper-performance

On 18 June at 14.00, the “HyperLab” high-performance laboratory will be opened at the Faculty of Engineering Economics and Management of Riga Technical University (RTU), 6 Kalnciema Street. Its research equipment will enable advanced studies of human behaviour, attention, emotions, cognitive load a…

Rīgas Tehniskā universitāte

June 19, 2026

innovation achievements research

Riga Technical University Professor Kristaps Kļaviņš receives the prestigious “Deep Tech Pioneer” status at an international deep-tech summit

Kristaps Kļaviņš, Professor at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Technology of Riga Technical University (RTU), under whose leadership the non-invasive diagnostic platform “SwyCard” is being developed, has gained significant international recognition at the deep-tech summit “Hello Tomorrow Global…

Rīgas Tehniskā universitāte

June 18, 2026