George Freemanās dash to Brussels for what he called a ālast round of talksā injected a note of drama into the long-stalled negotiations over the UKās association to Horizon Europe. But the science ministerās Eurostar trip was, for many, more a public relations gambit than a genuine opportunity to resolve the 18-month impasse over membership of the European Unionās flagship research scheme.
āHeās doing his best to keep us in Horizon but the main barrier ā the Northern Ireland protocol ā is clearly well above his pay grade,ā one gloomy Brussels-based official toldĀ Times Higher Education.
Indeed, theĀ lack of scheduled meetingsĀ with any senior EU representatives during the trip only highlighted how unlikely the UKās association has become, despite the passionate desire of scientists and politicians on all sides to stay in the scheme. That prospect seems more distant than ever with the UK government set to reignite a row with Brussels by proposing new legislation on border issues with Northern Ireland.
Attention has now turned to theĀ ābold, global alternative to HorizonāĀ that Mr Freeman said was āready to launchā.
Āé¶¹
āWe canāt have this stalled position any longer ā having neither Horizon nor a known alternative is the worst position as weāre about to lose significant funding,ā said Carsten Welsch, head of the University of Liverpoolās department of physics, who was forced toĀ step asideĀ last month as the leader of a ā¬2.6 million (Ā£2.2 million) EU-funded doctoral network that would have brought some of Europeās leading PhD researchers to the north-west of England to work on novel plasma accelerators.
āIf we donāt have Horizon, the UK science community needs an alternative way to spend the money that has been promised,ā he added.
Āé¶¹
With the June deadline for finding an EU-based institution to use research funding now passed, many more UK-based researchersĀ Ā about regretfully giving up hard-won grants. UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) has vowed to cover any funding lost by Horizon Europe grant winners but a much larger sum remains available and unspent as the UK-EU deadlock drags on; about Ā£2.5 billion, including Ā£1.3 billion rolled over from 2021-22, was made available to spend this year in last NovemberāsĀ , roughly the same as theĀ Ā of the UKās seven main grant-awarding research councils in 2022-23.
āThe pressure to spend the money made available in the spending review is growing,ā said Graeme Reid, chair of science and research policy at UCL, who, with Royal Society president Adrian Smith, was asked in 2019 to draw upĀ a āPlan Bā funding modelĀ in case Horizon Europe membership did not materialise.
āThe money from 2021-22 has already been reprofiled,ā he explained on the decision to roll it into the current financial year. āBut it will be incredibly difficult to hang on to it if it is not spent this year,ā said Professor Reid on the āuse it or lose itā quandary that may explain why ministers are ready to move forward with a Horizon Europe alternative.
Under the blueprint recommended by Professor Reid, the Plan B package would include three separate pillars ā a āstabilisation fundā to help EU-supported research teams, a new series of fellowships to attract top international researchers, postdocs and PhD students, and grants to support industry collaboration. That model seems broadly to be what Mr Freeman is trailing, though the last element is said to have been strengthened in line with his more industry-aligned āInnovation Nationā ambitions for UK science. A consultation on what lies ahead is likely to take place in the autumn,Ā THEĢż³Ü²Ō»å±š°ł²õ³Ł²¹²Ō»å²õ.
For Professor Reid, the stabilisation fund involving block grants based on previous Horizon Europe funding levels was the most pressing concern. āThat fund will protect established research teams so they can keep going and could be made fairly easily with a formulaic allocation,ā he explained.
āWe know quite a lot of research funding is hand to mouth, so if we donāt provide something in a transition period, we could see research capabilities begin to disperse before new funding arrangements are established.ā
Creating a series of fellowships to replace those run by Horizon Europe should not be too difficult given the UKās history in running similar schemes, added Professor Reid. āPeople get misty-eyed about the ERC and what it does but it hasnāt been around for that long,ā he said of the agency, which was created in 2007.
āI would say a Royal Society professorship stands shoulder to shoulder with an ERC-run scheme at the very least ā weāre not short of these prestigious models, which have been running long before the ERC was created.ā
Āé¶¹
Others were not so confident that replicating modelsĀ such as the Marie SkÅodowska-Curie doctoral networksĀ wouldĀ be easy, particularly if European fundersĀ were not keen on co-funding a UK-led scheme. āIs there an appetite to re-channel funding into a UK replacement for Horizon? Iām not so sure,ā said Liverpoolās Professor Welsch, who added that the UK may need to be content with third-country status that allows it to participate for a price but not lead any projects.
Directing the money into existing UKRI doctoral training networks was an option, particularly if they were asked to work more internationally, he added. āThe advantage of the European training model is that researchers will get exposure for their work in five or six countries ā anything that is national, however well run, will fall short,ā said Professor Welsch.
Āé¶¹
Some were less gloomy about Britainās post-Horizon projects. Without the straitjacket of Horizon, the UK could bolster its partnerships with world-class universities outside the EU, with Mr Freeman talking up the prospect of deeper cooperation with Israel, Switzerland, Singapore, Australia and the US in recent months.
āHorizon Europe has many virtues but itās not the research paradise that some people pretend,ā one academic who has advised UKRI on Plan B toldĀ THEĀ anonymously. āThereās a lot of politics involved in grant applications ā you often have to find someone in Albania or Bulgaria to work with because it looks good, even if there are stronger partners available,ā he said, adding: āYou really want to be working with places like Yale or Harvard.ā
However, those apparent drawbacks of Horizon should not be overplayed, said John Womersley, visiting professor of physics at the University of Oxford, who ran the European Spallation Source facility in Sweden until last year.
āThere has always been an element of ālevelling upā when it comes to European research funding, but politically savvy scientists have seen there is some benefit of bringing those from the EUās eastward expansion into the fold,ā said Professor Womersley, a former executive chair of the Science and Technology Facilities Council.
But reorientating research collaboration towards the US and Canada would be the āmost obvious stepā under any Plan B āas they are big enough and open enoughā to such partnerships, though it would pose significant organisational challenges, added Professor Womersley.
āThe US has a very decentralised research system ā there is not really anyone you can ring up and say: āWe want to deal with US universities,āā he observed, adding that there would be difficulties with dealing with other smaller but outstanding research nations.
āIn research, Israel is often fetishised by politicians because it has such a strong record on innovation and a booming tech sector, but its research often has a very military and defence angle to it, so it might not offer the range of opportunities that we need.ā
The logistical challenge of working with countries outside Europe should also not be underestimated, added Professor Welsch. āMy department has links with universities across the world ā in the US, Africa, Asia ā but most collaboration happens in Europe,ā he explained.
āThatās not just because the best infrastructure is on the continent but because a researcher could travel to Switzerland for two or three days without much hassle, particularly if they travelled back at the weekend. If you are travelling to Japan or South Korea for a short visit, it has a huge impact on what you can do in a week ā even a Zoom call is difficult because some colleagues will be talking in the middle of the night due to time zone differences.ā
One further sticking point may be the extent to which Plan B research grants can be spent outside the UK; Professor Womersley said up to half of spending should be allowed to go abroad on UK-run projects but the idea of millions of taxpayersā money being spent on facilities and staff working in overseas universities may be politically contentious.
Professor Reid was optimistic that any future scheme would be flexible enough to allow the academic mobility needed to foster successful collaborations across the globe. āIf someone gets a fellowship and wants to disappear to a US university for two years, then we might need to have a debate about this and there should be a national interest test,ā he said.
However, substantial sums are already invested overseas at Cern in Switzerland, the Square Kilometre Array telescope project based in South Africa and Australia, and the British Antarctic Survey, he noted.
Āé¶¹
āI donāt have a problem at all with spending research money internationally as long as it serves British interests,ā Professor Reid said.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±į·”ās university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








