The NFDI consortium FAIRmat enables researchers worldwide to embrace a more digital way of working. For this achievement, it has been recognized by the European Commission.
As research becomes increasingly data-driven, it is more important than ever to organize scientific data in ways that allow researchers, software tools, and artificial intelligence systems to use them effectively. The FAIRmat consortium provides researchers with solutions for structuring, sharing, and reusing scientific data. At the end of June, FAIRmat received the European Digital Skills Award 2026 in the category “Digital Upskilling @ Work” from Henna Virkkunen, Executive Vice-President of the European Commission.
“We are delighted to receive this recognition from the European Commission,” says Prof. Dr. Claudia Draxl, spokesperson of FAIRmat and Professor of Physics at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. “Scientific progress increasingly depends on our ability to work effectively with data. FAIRmat develops infrastructure and data standards and brings them to the scientific community to help researchers transition toward data-driven science. This award recognizes the collective effort of our team and our partner institutions to make research data more accessible, reusable, and valuable for future discoveries.”
Digital skills and materials research
The European Digital Skills Awards honor initiatives that promote digital skills and support the European Union’s digital transformation across education, industry, public services, and research. The awards are presented as part of the European Union’s Digital Decade 2030 initiative.
FAIRmat was selected from more than 220 applications submitted by organizations across Europe. The award recognizes FAIRmat’s contribution to advancing a digital, data-driven way of working in scientific research.
At the heart of FAIRmat is NOMAD, the consortium’s research data management platform, where materials science data can be processed and stored. These data form the basis for their reuse in future research as well as artificial intelligence applications. NOMAD enables researchers in materials science to integrate data-driven methods into their research. Beyond the software itself, FAIRmat offers a comprehensive outreach program that supports researchers on their path toward a data-driven digital future.
Prof. Heiko B. Weber and Dr. Ahmed Mansour receive the European Digital Skills Award 2026 on behalf of the FAIRmat team.
About FAIRmat
FAIRmat is a consortium of the German National Research Data Infrastructure (NFDI), coordinated at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. The consortium is committed to the FAIR principles of Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability, and Reusability of digital data, to the principles of open-source software, and, more broadly, to building a research data infrastructure that promotes comprehensive, globally accessible open datasets.
Since the project began in 2021, FAIRmat has organized more than 100 training events and developed a broad portfolio of openly accessible educational resources. The consortium works closely with universities, graduate programs, research networks, and international partner institutions to strengthen digital skills and data literacy throughout the scientific community.
Further Information
- FAIRmat: http://www.fairmat-nfdi.eu
- NOMAD – research data management infrastructure for materials science: nomad-lab.eu
- European Digital Skills Awards 2026: https://digital-skills-jobs.europa.eu/en/latest/news/meet-winners-european-digital-skills-awards-2026
Other posts
Posts
Kickoff of the Section International Engagement
The new International Engagement Section was officially launched on March 31, 2026, and elected its spokespersons for the first time on that occasion.
Science Year 2026: Health Data at MS Wissenschaft 2026
NFDI4Health is participating in MS Wissenschaft 2026 with an interactive exhibit. In the Science Year 2026 – Medicine of the Future, everything on board the MS Wissenschaft will revolve around our health.
Love Data Week 2026: NFDI participates in the international action week on research data
From 9 to 13 February 2026, Love Data Week will take place once again—an international action week that brings together researchers, infrastructures, and data-interested communities worldwide. In 2026, the focus is once again on the conscious, responsible, and sustainable handling of research data.
Recent Comments