The UK government is starting the hunt for a new chief executive of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) after Dame Ottoline Leyser confirmed she would not seek a second term in office.
In a on the long-term future of UKRI, Dame Ottoline sets out her vision for the organisation she has led since June 2020, stating âthis coming year marks a particularly crucial time in the evolution of UKRIâ because it is âin the midst of a huge change programmeâ.
Outlining her desire for UKRI to help the governmentâs Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) to implement its Science and Technology Framework and therefore âembed research and innovation so deeply across government that it informs every decision made and every action takenâ, Dame Ottoline explains that this is a âlong-term project critical for the future of the UKâ and âextends well beyond the objectives often cited for UKRI, and beyond my five-year term of office as CEOâ.
Responding to the news that Dame Ottoline would not extend her time at the ÂŁ8 billion-a-year research funder, which was created in 2018 as an umbrella body for the UKâs nine research councils, a DSIT spokesperson said it would âbegin preparations to ensure that a world-class candidate is primed to take over this vital role, and we will be launching a full recruitment campaign soonâ.
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The statement added that the âsecretary of state [for science, Michelle Donelan] is grateful for Professor Dame Ottoline Leyserâs leadership of UKRI over the past four yearsâ.
âDame Ottoline has provided exceptional oversight of UKRIâs transformation programmes, ensuring that UKRI is an agile funder of science and innovation and delivers the recommendations of Sir David Grantâs independent review,â the spokesperson added.
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âFollowing Dame Ottolineâs announcement that she will not be seeking another term, the secretary of state looks forward to continuing to work together during a vital period for UK science and research â driving up participation in Horizon Europe, building a more efficient and joined-up approach to research funding and ultimately unleashing the power of UK research and innovation to drive growth and improve lives.â
In a statement to Times Higher Education, Dame Ottoline added: âMy term has 18 months to run and I am fully focused on the opportunities and challenges of the year ahead set out in my blog.âÂ
In her blog, the plant biologist, who ran the Sainsbury Laboratory at the University of Cambridge before taking over at UKRI, sets out what she views as some of her organisationâs successes, stating that the âdiverse and dynamic research and innovation needs thrown up by the pandemic vividly demonstrated the power of an integrated funding agencyâ.
With about a third of UKRIâs budget âcollectively managed across all nine UKRI councilsâ, creating âthe necessary diversity and connectivity in the portfolioâ of research investments, UKRI had been able to support new technologies such as AI, and quantum and engineering biology, says Dame Ottoline, claiming this approach was âkey to winning a rising budget in the last spending review and, crucially, more flexibility within that budgetâ.
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âThere is now widespread political consensus that this kind of long-term, fully joined-up, systems-level approach is essential,â says Dame Ottoline. âMy ambition is that UKRI transcends zero-sum game thinking and creates a shared endeavour to deliver national prosperity.
âI aim to have amplified the momentum behind this ambition among our many stakeholders and to have shaped an organisation optimised for its delivery.â
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