Advanced Digital Skills: 3 grant agreements under the Digital Europe Programme signed
EU's structured investment in public-sector AI skills signals the scale of workforce capability effort comparable jurisdictions are pursuing — a benchmark, not an action item.
Key points
- EU's HaDEA signs three Digital Europe Programme grants totalling €25.4 million for AI, quantum, and virtual worlds skills.
- The AI Skills Academy (AISHA) receives €6.94 million to develop accredited GenAI training for public and private sectors.
- EU-focused workforce initiative with no direct Australian parallel - limited immediate relevance for APS practitioners.
Implications for Australian agencies
- Monitor APS capability uplift teams may want to monitor AISHA's accredited GenAI training model as a potential reference point for structured public-sector AI skills frameworks.
Implications are AI-generated. Starting points, not advice — see methodology for how they're framed.
View original source
Copied.
"Advanced Digital Skills: 3 grant agreements under the Digital Europe Programme signed"
Source: EU Digital Strategy – News
Published: 9 June 2026
URL: https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/news/advanced-digital-skills-3-grant-agreements-under-digital-europe-programme-signed
The European Health and Digital Executive Agency (HaDEA) has signed three grant agreements under the Digital Europe Programme's Advanced Digital Skills call, committing €25.4 million across AI, quantum, and virtual worlds training initiatives. The AI Skills Academy project (AISHA) will develop accredited GenAI education programmes and apprenticeships targeting responsible AI adoption across European public and private sectors. The broader Digital Europe Programme carries an €8.1 billion budget aimed at building the EU's strategic digital capacities across AI, cybersecurity, high-performance computing, and interoperability.
Implications for Australian agencies:
- [Monitor] APS capability uplift teams may want to monitor AISHA's accredited GenAI training model as a potential reference point for structured public-sector AI skills frameworks.
Retrieved from SIMS, 18 July 2026.