The vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford has warned that a UK domestic rival to the European Research Council, which could be set up after Brexit, would be a poor substitute.
Writing in 探花视频, Louise Richardson says that 鈥no national replacement scheme could ever have the status鈥 of the European Union鈥檚 research framework programmes.
The UK is unlikely to be able to access the EU鈥檚 funding schemes, including the highly prestigious ERC, if it leaves the bloc without a deal. Even if it does strike an agreement, lengthy negotiations on UK association to the next programme, Horizon Europe, could leave the country on the outside when it launches in January 2021.
The Westminster government had tasked Sir Adrian Smith, the former vice-chancellor of the University of London, with investigating whether the UK could establish a domestic alternative to the ERC, open to British-based and international researchers.
探花视频
THE understands that Sir Adrian鈥檚 report was submitted to ministers in July and was due to be published this month, although the political crisis in Westminster might delay this.
In her THE article, Professor Richardson says that the UK 鈥渕ust ensure that we can continue to participate in European research post-Brexit鈥.
探花视频
EU research funding is worth 拢1 billion annually to UK universities, while ERC grant holders are among the world鈥檚 best scientists. The UK is the most successful country in securing competitive European funding, winning 21 per cent of all ERC grants.
鈥淓uropean research funding has been central to the success of UK universities,鈥 Professor Richardson writes. 鈥淚f access to the ERC were lost, no national replacement scheme could ever have the status, the breadth of vision or the lengthy time horizons of the multilateral system carefully developed over decades by the EU.鈥
Some politicians have presented Brexit as an opportunity for UK universities to build stronger links with institutions outside the bloc, but Professor Richardson says that these 鈥渃an only supplement, and never supplant, the dense network of research partnerships Oxford has across the EU鈥.
Professor Richardson also criticises Labour鈥檚 plans to abolish tuition fees in England 鈥渨ithout a hint of where the 拢12.2 billion cost of maintaining the current unit of resource would come from鈥.
探花视频
鈥淲e face ever-escalating costs of pensions, salaries and responding to regulatory requirements,鈥 Professor Richardson writes. 鈥淲e simply cannot sustain our position if our funding declines as our costs increase.鈥
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