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HQ Copenhagen, Denmark
Est. 1990
Staff ~220
About EEA

About EEA

The European Environment Agency (EEA) is the EU's specialist agency on environmental data, analysis, and policy support. Founded in 1990 by Regulation (EEC) 1210/90 and operational from 1994, the EEA is based in Copenhagen, Denmark, and runs the European environment information and observation network (Eionet) of national environment agencies across the EU and 6 non-EU member countries. The EEA produces the State of the Environment Report, biennial European environment indicators, and supports the European Green Deal with monitoring and reporting frameworks.

Working at EEA

Working at the EEA means producing comparative environmental data, indicators, and assessments across the EU, supporting national environment agencies, monitoring progress against EU climate and biodiversity targets, and running shared environmental information systems. The EEA recruits environmental scientists (biologists, ecologists, atmospheric scientists), economists, statisticians, IT and data specialists, GIS analysts, and corporate-services staff. English is the working language. Copenhagen has a duty-station correction coefficient of 131.0, the highest in the EU.

How to Apply

The EEA recruits directly through its careers page. Most positions are temporary agent or contract agent roles, with a smaller share of seconded national experts. Applications include a CV and motivation letter; shortlisted candidates take a written test (often an environmental data or policy case study) and a competency-based interview.

The European Environment Agency (EEA) is the EU's specialist environmental information agency. From its Copenhagen headquarters it produces the data, indicators, and assessments that underpin EU environmental policy and the European Green Deal. Founded by Regulation (EEC) 1210/90 in 1990 and operational from 1994, the EEA runs Eionet (the European environment information and observation network) linking environment agencies across the 27 EU member states and six EEA member countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, Turkey, and recent partnerships across the Western Balkans). Its flagship outputs include the State of the Environment Report (published every five years), the European environment and health atlas, the EU greenhouse gas inventory, and the structured climate, air-quality, water, biodiversity, and waste indicators that feed into European Green Deal monitoring. For job-seekers the EEA offers a scientifically rigorous EU career path in a Copenhagen duty station with the EU's highest correction coefficient and a strongly research-led institutional culture.

Mission and mandate

The EEA was established by Council Regulation (EEC) 1210/90 of 7 May 1990 and became operational in 1994 in its Copenhagen headquarters. Its current legal basis is the EEA Regulation (consolidated as Regulation (EC) 401/2009) and a growing body of sectoral EU environment legislation that assigns specific monitoring and reporting tasks to the Agency.

The EEA's mandate has four pillars. First, environmental information and data: the Agency collects, analyses, and publishes comparable environmental data from across the EU and EEA partner countries. The Eionet network (national environmental agencies, statistical offices, and competent authorities linked under formal cooperation arrangements) is the operational backbone of this work. The EEA hosts the central European environment database and a growing portfolio of shared environmental information systems (SEIS, INSPIRE, WISE for water, BISE for biodiversity, ETC/CME for climate mitigation).

Second, environmental indicators and assessments: the Agency produces the European Environment indicators framework (around 100 core indicators covering climate, air quality, biodiversity, water, soil, waste, resource use, and environmental health), the State of the Environment Report (SOER) every five years, and the European climate and energy union indicators that monitor progress against EU climate and energy targets.

Third, sectoral monitoring and reporting: the Agency runs the EU greenhouse gas inventory under the Climate Monitoring Mechanism Regulation, the EU air-quality monitoring framework under the ambient air quality directives, the European waste statistics, the European water-quality and biodiversity reporting under the relevant directives, and the European industrial emissions register. These monitoring frameworks underpin EU compliance with international environmental commitments (Paris Agreement, Convention on Biological Diversity, Aarhus Convention).

Fourth, support to EU policy-making: the Agency provides scientific and analytical support to the European Commission, the European Parliament, the Council, and the Committee of the Regions on environmental policy. It does not draft policy itself; that is the role of the Commission's DG ENV and DG CLIMA. The Agency's work feeds into the European Green Deal, the Fit for 55 package, the Nature Restoration Law, the Zero Pollution Action Plan, and the Circular Economy Action Plan.

Structure and operational divisions

The EEA is led by an Executive Director appointed by the Management Board for a renewable five-year term. The Management Board is composed of one representative per EU member state, two Commission representatives, and two scientific representatives appointed by the European Parliament. The Scientific Committee (composed of independent scientists) provides scientific peer review of EEA outputs.

The Agency's internal organisation is grouped into five operational programmes plus corporate services. The Climate and Sustainability Programme is the largest and runs the EU greenhouse gas inventory, the European Climate and Health Atlas, climate-change adaptation indicators, and the climate mitigation policy assessment. This is a major hiring stream.

The Air and Climate Programme covers air-quality monitoring, the European air-quality index, the European Pollutant Release and Transfer Register (E-PRTR), and the European industrial emissions monitoring framework. Air-quality scientists and atmospheric modellers are recruited at AD5 to AD9 grades.

The Water and Biodiversity Programme covers the EU water-quality reporting under the Water Framework Directive and Marine Strategy Framework Directive, the European biodiversity information system (BISE), Natura 2000 monitoring support, and the Nature Restoration Law indicators. This programme has grown materially since the Nature Restoration Law adoption.

The Sustainability Transitions Programme covers the circular economy indicators, waste statistics, resource use and environmental footprints, and the cross-cutting sustainability assessments. This programme overlaps substantially with the European Topic Centre on Circular Economy and Resource Use.

The Information and Knowledge Programme runs the Agency's IT infrastructure, the Eionet data-exchange platforms, the shared environmental information systems, and the dissemination function (Agency website, geographic visualisations, public-data downloads).

Hiring landscape over the last 12 months

EEA hiring is steady-state and concentrated at AD5 and AD7 grades across the five operational programmes, with periodic AD9 senior scientist and AD12 head-of-section notices. Typical annual hiring is 20 to 35 vacancy notices.

In the last 12 months the EEA has run notices for: greenhouse gas inventory experts, climate-adaptation indicators specialists, air-quality scientists, water-quality assessors, biodiversity and Nature Restoration Law analysts, circular economy indicators specialists, and GIS/geospatial analysts. The Nature Restoration Law and the Fit for 55 monitoring framework have generated additional hiring pressure on the Climate and Biodiversity programmes.

Contract-agent hiring at FG III and FG IV is concentrated in IT, data engineering, geospatial analysis, communications, and corporate services. The EEA's geospatial analysis function (Copernicus Land Monitoring Service support, INSPIRE data infrastructure) is a substantial FG IV channel.

Seconded national experts from national environment agencies, environment ministries, and national statistical offices are a continuous channel, typically 15 to 25 SNE postings active at any given time. The Eionet network provides a deep talent pool from which the Agency can recruit on a structured basis. The candidate pool for EEA scientific posts is large: environmental scientists, atmospheric scientists, ecologists, environmental economists, and policy analysts from academic institutions, national environment agencies, and EU-funded research consortia form the typical pool.

Salary realism by grade and the Copenhagen coefficient

EEA staff are paid under the EU Staff Regulations and the Copenhagen duty-station correction coefficient is 131.0, the highest in the EU. An AD5 step 1 in Copenhagen grosses €6,153 × 1.310 = €8,060 monthly basic; AD7 step 1 €7,876 × 1.310 = €10,318; AD9 step 1 €10,083 × 1.310 = €13,209; AD12 step 1 €13,830 × 1.310 = €18,117. With expatriation (16%) and household allowance for a married hire with one child the on-paper figure for an AD7 typically lands around €13,000 to €14,000 gross monthly and an AD9 around €16,000 to €18,000.

The Copenhagen coefficient compensates for materially higher cost of living than Brussels. Two-bedroom rents in central Copenhagen run €2,000 to €3,000 monthly; suburbs (Frederiksberg, Vesterbro, Østerbro, Nørrebro) are typically 20% cheaper. Cost of groceries, transport, eating out, and services is high, Denmark consistently ranks among the EU's most expensive countries. The education allowance covers most international-school fees and Copenhagen has a developed international-school landscape.

Net purchasing power for an EEA AD7 in Copenhagen is broadly comparable to an AD7 in Brussels for an unmarried hire and somewhat above for a married hire with school-age children given the strength of the Danish welfare-state infrastructure and the high educational and health quality. The Copenhagen quality-of-life dimension (urban planning, cycling infrastructure, work-life balance) is a major retention factor for the Agency.

Languages, security clearance, and competition profile

English is the working language of the EEA in practice, all scientific assessment, internal communication, and Eionet network coordination are conducted in English. Knowledge of Danish is useful for daily life but not required for the work itself. The regulatory second-language minimum applies under the Staff Regulations.

Most EEA staff do not require security clearance. Selected posts working on industrial-emissions enforcement data or specific monitoring frameworks with confidentiality components may require EU Confidential. Clearance is granted by the home member state.

The EEA is not recruited via EPSO. All vacancies are advertised on the EEA careers page and shared on the EU Careers platform. Selection processes are run in-house. The competition profile is highly specialist scientific: well-prepared candidates with environmental-science, atmospheric-science, ecology, environmental-economics, or environmental-statistics backgrounds and relevant publications or policy-analysis track record progress well. Generalist public-policy candidates face a steep bar at the written test and interview stages. Internal mobility is significant; many AD5 hires progress to AD7 within five-to-seven years and to AD9 within ten-to-fifteen.

Application paths

Three main routes. Temporary agent: the dominant route for environmental scientists, statisticians, economists, and senior policy analysts. Apply directly to the published vacancy notice on the EEA careers page; expect a CV and motivation letter screening, a written test (frequently an environmental data or policy assessment case study), and a structured competency-based interview. Reserve lists are typically valid for 12 to 36 months.

Contract agent: a substantial share of hiring, concentrated in IT, data engineering, geospatial analysis, communications, and corporate services. Candidates register on CAST Permanent in the relevant function group and respond to EEA notices that draw from the CAST pool, or apply directly to EEA CA notices. The geospatial-analysis function in support of Copernicus Land Monitoring is a particularly accessible FG IV channel.

Seconded national expert: serving scientists and analysts from national environment agencies, environment ministries, and national statistical offices apply through their national point of contact. SNE postings are typically two to four years and are an important channel for thematic expertise in specific monitoring frameworks (greenhouse gas inventory, water-quality reporting, biodiversity reporting, industrial emissions).

A practical note: the EEA is one of the most scientifically cohesive EU agencies and the Eionet network provides a structured talent pipeline. Career staff often progress from PhD-level scientific posts through senior scientist roles to head-of-section positions over a 15 to 20-year career. Lateral mobility into the Commission's DG ENV, DG CLIMA, the European Topic Centres (the Agency's network of subcontracted research consortia), national environment agencies, and academic institutions is well-established.

Frequently asked questions

What is Eionet?
Eionet is the European environment information and observation network, a partnership of the EEA, the 27 EU member states, and six non-EU EEA member countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, Turkey) plus cooperating Western Balkans countries. Each country designates a National Focal Point and national reference centres for specific thematic areas. Eionet is the operational backbone of EEA data collection and analysis.
What is the State of the Environment Report?
The SOER is the EEA's flagship five-yearly assessment of the European environment. It synthesises trends, drivers, and policy responses across the full environmental domain, climate, air, water, biodiversity, soil, waste, resource use. SOER 2025 was the most recent edition (published October 2025); SOER 2030 is in preparation. The report is one of the most-cited environmental policy documents in the EU.
Is Copenhagen a good duty station?
On a coefficient-adjusted basis, yes, the 131.0 coefficient is the EU's highest. Cost of living is high (Denmark is one of the EU's most expensive countries) but is matched by the coefficient. Quality of life is exceptional: strong urban planning, excellent cycling infrastructure, work-life balance norms, and proximity to Swedish southern coast and other Scandinavian destinations. International schooling is well-developed.
Do I need a PhD to work at the EEA?
Not strictly. The Agency hires AD5 entry-grade scientific officers with a master's degree plus relevant research or policy experience. For AD7 and AD9 senior scientist posts a doctorate is common but not universally required if equivalent professional experience is demonstrated. Publications in the relevant environmental science field, monitoring-framework expertise, or policy-impact track record are weighed heavily.
How does the EEA differ from the JRC?
The Joint Research Centre (JRC) is the European Commission's in-house science service, embedded within the Commission. The EEA is a separate EU agency under the EEA Regulation. The two cooperate closely on environmental modelling, indicators, and assessments, but have different governance and mandates: JRC supports Commission policy across the full policy spectrum; EEA focuses specifically on environment, with a coordination mandate over Eionet.
Can I work at the EEA if I'm from a non-EU EEA member state?
Yes. Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland are member countries of the EEA agency under specific arrangements (Switzerland under a separate agreement). Candidates from these countries can apply to most EEA statutory positions. Turkey also participates in Eionet under specific arrangements.

6 positions found

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