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Organization

EUROLCDS SIA

Latvian SME specializing in nanomaterial production for printed electronics, expanding into circular economy solutions for automotive components.

Technology SMEmanufacturingLVSMEThin data (2/5)
H2020 projects
3
As coordinator
0
Total EC funding
€584K
Unique partners
30
What they do

Their core work

EuroLCDs is a Latvian SME specializing in display and printed electronics technologies, with core capabilities in nanomaterial-based conductive inks and coatings for printed devices. Their work spans industrial-scale production of nanomaterials — including nanocopper, silver nanowires, and graphene — used in functional printing applications. More recently, they have expanded into circular economy solutions for the automotive electronics sector, focusing on end-of-life vehicle component recovery and circular design approaches.

Core expertise

What they specialise in

Nanomaterial synthesis for printed electronicsprimary
1 project

INSPIRED project (2015-2018) focused on industrial-scale production of nanocopper, silver nanowires, and graphene for printed devices.

Circular economy for automotive electronicsemerging
1 project

TREASURE project (2021-2024) targets circular business models and circular design for end-of-life vehicles and car electronics.

Augmented reality / 3D visualizationsecondary
1 project

NGEAR 3D project (2020-2022) involved next-generation AR glasses for medical applications, where EuroLCDs participated as a third party.

Evolution & trajectory

How they've shifted over time

Early focus
Nanomaterial production for printing
Recent focus
Circular automotive electronics

EuroLCDs began in H2020 with a clear focus on advanced nanomaterial production for printed electronics (2015-2018), working on scalable manufacturing of conductive nanomaterials like nanocopper and graphene. By 2020-2024, their involvement shifted toward circular economy and sustainability in the automotive sector, alongside a brief engagement in AR display technology. This trajectory suggests a company moving from pure materials manufacturing toward applying their display/electronics expertise to sustainability challenges.

EuroLCDs appears to be pivoting from nanomaterial manufacturing toward sustainability and circularity applications for electronics, which could make them a relevant partner for projects combining materials science with circular economy goals.

Collaboration profile

How they like to work

Role: specialist_contributorReach: European11 countries collaborated

EuroLCDs has never coordinated an H2020 project, consistently joining as a participant or third party — indicating they contribute specialized technical expertise rather than leading consortia. With 30 unique partners across 11 countries from just 3 projects, they have worked in relatively large, diverse consortia. This profile suggests a flexible specialist that integrates well into larger teams without demanding a leadership role.

Despite only three projects, EuroLCDs has built connections with 30 partners across 11 countries, indicating participation in large multi-national consortia. Their network reach is broad for an SME of their size, spanning multiple European regions.

Why partner with them

What sets them apart

EuroLCDs occupies a niche at the intersection of nanomaterial manufacturing and display/printed electronics — a combination uncommon among Latvian SMEs. Their recent move into circular electronics for the automotive sector adds a sustainability dimension that few display-technology companies offer. For consortium builders, they bring hands-on manufacturing capability for functional nanomaterials, not just research expertise.

Notable projects

Highlights from their portfolio

  • INSPIRED
    Their largest project (EUR 499K), focused on scaling up nanomaterial production from lab to industrial level — directly tied to their core business.
  • TREASURE
    Marks a strategic pivot into circular economy for automotive electronics, signaling a new direction for the company beyond traditional nanomaterial production.
Cross-sector capabilities
environmenttransportdigitalhealth
Analysis note: Profile is based on only 3 projects, one of which was a third-party role with no funding data or keywords. The company has no website listed, limiting verification of current activities. The pivot from nanomaterials to circular economy is visible in the data but should be confirmed — it may reflect opportunistic project participation rather than a genuine strategic shift.
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