A Brexit-related shortage of applications for junior research posts聽from the European Union is likely to harm the UK鈥檚 ability to win grants from Horizon Europe, senior scientists have warned.
While UK universities have been聽urged聽by the country鈥檚 main funder, UK Research and Innovation, to apply for grants from the EU鈥檚 flagship research scheme, worth at least 鈧95.5 billion (拢82 billion) over the next seven years, some research leaders have expressed concerns that dwindling numbers of postdoctoral researchers arriving from the Continent may damage UK laboratories and harm their ability to win funds.
Peter Coveney, director of the Centre for Computational Science at UCL, whose laboratories have led EU-funded projects worth more than聽聽over the past five years, told聽探花视频聽that his recent efforts to recruit postdocs had produced not a single application from an EU scientist.
鈥淎t least half of applications typically used to come from the EU, but people have shown a lot less interest in recent years 鈥 and, in the past two years, it seems the game is up,鈥 said Professor Coveney on the lack of EU applicants.
探花视频
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e not getting any applicants from the EU it is serious because these countries have education systems that rival our own so we鈥檙e missing out on a huge number of very well-educated people,鈥 he said, adding that he had been forced to readvertise some positions on multiple occasions because the right candidate could not always be found.
鈥淚f you get a pool of candidates that don鈥檛 cut the mustard, you have to try again, which means I鈥檓 constantly having to think about this process,鈥 said Professor Coveney, who said that the absence of top-notch junior EU researchers may make it harder to maintain the quality required to win EU grants.
探花视频
鈥淓veryone in academia is striving to attract the right people for these positions 鈥 without them it鈥檚 much harder to bring visibility to your work and get the best groups to collaborate with you,鈥 he said, adding that the Horizon system was 鈥渄esigned to bring together teams from different countries and if people are disillusioned with the UK, it鈥檚 harder to get them to participate with you鈥.
Thibaut Jombart, a biometrician at Imperial College London and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that he had also witnessed a dramatic fall in postdoc applications from the EU.
鈥淚鈥檝e sat on a few selection panels in recent years and it was mostly UK candidates, with a lot fewer applying from Europe, which means the average level of applicant is not as good,鈥 said Dr Jombart, who himself arrived in the UK as a postdoc just over a decade ago.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not certain that I would be appointed now because employers are having to cover various fees for EU postdocs that they previously didn鈥檛,鈥 he said, adding that new bureaucratic hurdles and red tape, including visa fees and additional checks regarding accommodation, might have put him off from applying in the first place.
探花视频
鈥淚 did not go to the US because I would have had to face similar things there,鈥 he said.
Historically, young EU scientists had sought postdoc positions in the UK or US ahead of other countries given their scientific strengths but Brexit and uncertainty over travel caused by the pandemic, which had left many UK-based EU scientists unable to see family for months, was making them consider options closer to home, said Dr Jombart.
鈥淎nything that takes away from that sense that Britain is the best place to do a postdoc is detrimental for UK academia,鈥 he said.
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