Universities and Science Minister Jo Johnson confirmed that the British government is investing £100 million to attract highly skilled researchers to the UK through its new Ernest Rutherford Fund. The Fund will provide fellowships for early-career and senior researchers, from the developed world and from emerging research powerhouses such as India, China, Brazil and Mexico, helping to maintain the UK’s position as a world-leader in science and research.
Speaking at the launch event in London, Jo Johnson said research and innovation is at the heart of the government’s Industrial Strategy, adding that at the 2016 Autumn Statement, the government announced a significant increase in public research and development spending, totaling £4.7 billion.
In her vision for the UK as the go-to place for scientists, innovators and tech investors, the Prime Minister Theresa May has made clear she wants us to be a country that attracts the brightest and best minds.
To that end, I am pleased to announce that we are investing £100 million in a Global Talent Research Fund that will be used to attract highly skilled researchers to the UK.
It will be named after Ernest Rutherford. He is one of our most distinguished scientists, the father of nuclear physics, a Nobel Laureate, holder of chairs at the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge, and, crucially, an immigrant – who came to the UK at the age of 24 from New Zealand.
Rutherford and his immense contributions to science exemplify our vision of a Britain that is open to the best minds and ideas in the world, and stands at the forefront of global collective endeavors to understand, and to improve, the world in which we live.
We look forward to welcoming these talented Rutherford research fellows to the UK. The Rutherford Fund will send a strong signal that, even as we leave the European Union, we are open to the world and will reinforce our ambition of making the UK the go-to country for innovation and discovery.
Research and innovation is at the heart of the UK's government’s Industrial Strategy. At the 2016 Autumn Statement, the government announced a significant increase in public research and development spending, totaling £4.7 billion. This will provide an additional £2 billion a year by 2020 to 2021 – an increase of around 20% to total government spending, and more than any increase in any Parliament since 1979.
In April 2017 the Business Secretary Greg Clark announced the creation of the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund (ISCF) with £1 billion of support over the next 4 years. To support delivery of the ISCF, the government announced at the Spring Budget it will invest £250 million over the next 4 years to continue to build the pipeline of high-skilled research talent.
The ISCF was created to ensure research and innovation takes centre stage in the government’s Industrial Strategy, with investment earmarked for technologies where the UK can build on its world-leading strengths and help innovative businesses to tap into large and growing global markets, as well as the industries of the future.
The fund is being administered by Innovate UK and the Research Councils until the new body UK Research and Investment (UKRI) is formed in 2018. UKRI, under the leadership of its recently appointed Chief Executive Sir Mark Walport, will play a key role in strengthening the UK’s competitiveness through the Industrial Strategy.
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Disclaimer & comment rulesThe question is why is this piece appearing in Mercopenguin, a propaganda organ supposedly devoted to America, South America and the South Atlantic?
Jul 08th, 2017 - 12:22 am -1Commenting for this story is now closed.
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