Dozens of PhD training centres and hundreds of science studentships will be axed under research council plans likely to consolidate doctoral education in larger UK universities, as a major charitable funder also withdraws dedicated support for graduate programmes.
Under a  by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), the number of Centres for Doctoral Training (CDTs) it supports will fall from 75 to âabout 40â, having been cut from 115 four years ago. With the EPSRC funding 40 four-year PhDs at each CDT and requiring institutions to fund an additional 10 themselves, it will mean around 1,750 fewer studentships over the five-year period starting in 2024.
The cuts to EPSRCâs PhD funding â down from  to âup to ÂŁ324 millionâ â come amid growing pressure on UK doctoral education which, from this year, will lose tens of millions of pounds annually after the Wellcome Trust pulled  under its new research strategy focused on longer grants for early- and mid-career scientists.
In addition, UK research councils, which face  until at least 2025, are having to cover higher stipends this year after UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) agreed to a 10 per cent increase, worth an additional £1,600 annually.
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Sarah Spurgeon, head of UCLâs department of electronic and electrical engineering, said the lower funding for PhD training raised questions about Britainâs science superpower ambitions. âIn real terms, this is a huge cut,â said Professor Spurgeon, a past president of the Engineering Professorsâ Council.
âGiven the governmentâs ambitions for science, technology and innovation, there is just not enough money to do what we should be doing,â she warned, adding: âWe need to support the talent pipeline at all levels, including having a strong PhD community.â
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Under the EPSRC call, applicants are asked to demonstrate a âcritical mass of supervisors (around 20 to 40)âŠwith a track record of doctoral supervisionâ. Many midsized institutions are , while some Russell Group universities can submit as many as 21. Collectively, these rules are likely to concentrate doctoral training in larger research universities.
With mounting funding pressures, many UK universities have begun to strike deals with foreign governments and funders to educate more international doctoral students, one vice-chancellor told Times Higher Education. âThe problem with recruiting overseas PhD students is that it doesnât solve the talent pipeline issue for the UK economy,â he said.
âMost of these doctoral students will return to their home countries or go elsewhere after their PhD, so where are the highly trained scientists, engineers and other researchers that we need going to come from?â he said.
A UKRI spokesman said a ÂŁ70 million increase in training grants over the next three years would fund the stipend rise, meaning that âto date we have not had to substantially change the number of students supported with UKRI fundingâ.
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The proposed reduction in EPSRC CDTs was âbased on continuation of the current level of funding for EPSRC talent investments in future years together with allowing for an increase in costs of supporting students, their research and other centre costs compared with the last major CDT investment in 2018â.
On ending its support for university PhD programmes, Wellcome said postgraduate researchers could still register for a PhD through its Discovery Awards, Early Career Awards and PhD programmes for health professionals route.
Wellcome was âcommitted to supporting PhD programmes in research areas where we identify a significant lack of capacity or a market failure in a strategically important areaâ, it added, though its new strategy identified âmajor gaps in support at the stage of moving from PhD to postdoc to group leader [and] this is why we created specific early career awardsâ.
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