UK steps in with 11th-hour extra £250m to stay in EU research scheme

Government commitment to Horizon Europe fund averts immediate threat to science, say universities

The government has stepped in at the 11th hour with an additional £250m in funding to help pay for the UK’s association with Horizon Europe, the European Union’s funding programme for research and innovation.

Universities welcomed the move as “a significant affirmation of the government’s belief in research” which would avert the immediate threat to UK science.

A statement from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, announcing the additional funding, said: “This investment reinforces the government’s commitment to putting research and development at the heart of plans to build back better from the pandemic.

“It will support vital and pioneering research while enabling the UK’s brilliant scientists, researchers and businesses to access and benefit from the world’s largest collaborative research programme, Horizon Europe – worth about €95bn (£80bn) over the next decade.”

The UK retained participation in Horizon Europe as part of its trade deal with the EU, but university leaders feared the government would not contribute the cost of taking part and would instead seek to fund it from existing research budgets. The cost of participation was previously part of the UK’s EU membership fees.

University leaders warned such a move would amount to an effective cut in excess of £1bn, equivalent to cutting more than 18,000 full-time academic research posts and weakening the UK’s appeal as a destination for talented researchers and private and foreign investment.

Welcoming the additional funding, Prof Julia Buckingham, president of Universities UK which represents university leaders, said: “We are very pleased that the government has averted threats to UK science and research by allocating additional funding to support the UK’s association to Horizon Europe and welcome their commitment to increase investment in R&D to 2.4% of GDP by 2027.

“Given current pressures on public finances, this is a significant affirmation of the government’s belief in research, recognising the pivotal role it plays in the UK’s current and future prosperity, and ensuring UK universities will remain at the forefront of efforts to address the most pressing global challenges.”

Dr Tim Bradshaw, CEO of the Russell Group of universities, said: “Providing additional funding for Horizon Europe to protect core R&D budgets is a good move by government and underlines its determination to establish Britain as a global science superpower.

“Scientists and researchers have been a vital part in the emergency response to Covid-19 and this continued investment in UK science will pay dividends as we work to deliver our joint ambitions for the country – high-value jobs and growth and a greener, healthier economy.”

Contributor

Sally Weale Education correspondent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Why panning for gold may be detrimental to open access research

The gold model for open access, supported by the UK government, could lead to significant savings - but only if all the policy surrounding research are joined up, says Paul Ayris

Paul Ayris

23, Jul, 2012 @11:09 AM

Article image
Britain faces brain drain as cuts force top scientists to leave country

University heads warn proposed cuts to science budget threaten 'an insidious grinding down of UK research community'

Jeevan Vasagar, education editor, and Jessica Shepherd

30, Sep, 2010 @3:43 PM

Article image
Carlos Gias on research funding cuts

Carlos Gias, a stem-cell researcher at University College London, tells Jeevan Vasagar why he is considering moving away from the UK to further his career

Jeevan Vasagar

30, Sep, 2010 @4:45 PM

Article image
Brexit causes collapse in European research funding for Oxbridge
Oxford and Cambridge universities, once given more than £130m a year in total by European research programmes, are now getting £1m annually between them

Anna Fazackerley

04, Feb, 2023 @12:43 PM

Article image
Prof Brian Foster on cuts in research funding

We do more with less than anybody else in the world, says Professor Brian Foster of Oxford University's physics department

Jessica Shepherd

30, Sep, 2010 @5:02 PM

Article image
Spending review: the winners and losers
Schools and science are among the winners, while the Queen, commuters and women will lose out

Sam Jones

20, Oct, 2010 @7:19 PM

Article image
UK may soon abandon £80bn Horizon Europe network, universities warn
Institutes make last-ditch appeal to EU to help save membership, as ministers plan alternatives

Richard Adams Education editor

01, Jun, 2022 @12:01 PM

Article image
Welsh universities face 1,000 jobs being lost as EU research funding ends
University leaders urge ministers to provide bridging finance to keep projects running when EU support ends this year

Richard Adams Education editor

07, Feb, 2023 @5:57 PM

Article image
UK ranks above US for research quality in government report

BIS study finds UK producing less academic research in science, mathematics and engineering than a decade ago

Claire Shaw

06, Dec, 2013 @6:54 PM

Article image
Are research sandpits a good way to allocate public funding to research?

Millions in public funds are allocated to research at residential workshops, says Judy Robertson – if you can attend them

Judy Robertson

18, Dec, 2013 @2:52 PM