English universities will receive up to 拢5聽million each in聽quality-related (QR) research funding and a聽maximum of 拢3聽million in聽excellence-linked capital grants to聽help mitigate the loss of聽access to聽European research programmes.
Explaining how an additional 拢100聽million in QR聽funding announced last week by聽science minister George Freeman will distributed across the sector, Research England said individual higher education institutions will be awarded a聽maximum of 拢5聽million in聽2022-23 to聽鈥渟upport research capabilities and provide stability ahead of a聽final decision on聽Horizon association鈥.
Five institutions 鈥 the universities of Cambridge, Manchester and Oxford, Imperial College London and UCL 鈥 will receive the maximum of 拢5聽million in QR in 2022-23, which should be spent 鈥渄eveloping, supporting and amplifying international collaborations and partnerships鈥, recruiting internationally, 鈥渟ecuring and sustaining the talent pipeline鈥 and 鈥渕itigating shortfalls in research income due to uncertainty over EU research grants鈥 among other objectives, explained Research England on 28聽November.
The universities of Birmingham, Leeds and Nottingham will receive in excess of 拢3聽million in additional QR聽funding each, while King鈥檚 College London will pick up more than 拢4聽million, with the minimum amount of new funding received by qualifying institutions set at 拢10,000.
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A further 拢70.6聽million for research infrastructure spending has also been released, with English universities receiving up to 拢3聽million each in 2022-23 under the allocations.
The awards follow last week鈥檚 announcement that almost 拢500聽million would become available for science because, according to Mr聽Freeman, 鈥ongoing uncertainty over access to EU programmes is placing increasing pressure on UK universities and research organisations鈥.
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The additional funds are likely to have been diverted from the 拢2.5聽billion set aside between 2021 and 2023 for Horizon Europe association or a 鈥淧lan聽B鈥 programme to replace funds lost by universities following the UK鈥檚 continued exclusion from the European Union鈥檚 flagship research scheme.
While the additional QR funding whose distribution is decided on the results of the 2021聽Research Excellence Framework will be welcomed by universities, it is unlikely to fully compensate some institutions for the loss of access to EU funds in the longer term. Cambridge, which will be given 拢8聽million in 2022-23 from the new allocations, received 拢52聽million in funding from European Commission sources in 2020-21, according to its , while Oxford picked up in research grants from 鈥淓uropean Commission and other EU research bodies鈥 in 2020-21, about 9聽per cent of its 拢653聽million research income.
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