31/10/06 Funding for university
science
CaSE was today pleased to see movement on the Government's position
on funding science teaching in the universities. "We were pleased
that Parliament was having a debate on the issue, and of course, we
briefed Members in advance," said Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director
of CaSE.
"What surprised us was that after years of denying that the
funding formula was a problem, the minister for Higher Education,
Bill Rammell, said there was an issue with the formula that needed
to be addressed. That follows on from the Science Minister, Lord Sainsbury,
saying a couple of weeks ago that he thought that the basic funding
of university science departments had not yet been sorted out properly.
"We at CaSE could start saying 'We told you so', but we will
resist that temptation and just hope this issue now gets addressed
before any more university science departments are forced into closure".
30/10/06 Science in Wales
CaSE was today encouraged to discuss the Welsh Government's
latest statement on science policy with senior researchers in Aberystwyth.
After meeting with the Vice Chancellor, Professor Noel Lloyd, Pro
Vice Chancellors, Heads of Departments and other senior staff from
Aberystwyth University, the Director of CaSE, Dr Peter Cotgreave,
said, "it is extremely useful to interact directly with the people
who will be affected by the Welsh Assembly Government's disappointing
decision not to implement some of the key recommendations of the Assembly's
science review. In particular, we at CaSE are seriously concerned
about the fact that no individual will be responsible for making sure
science policies in Wales are carried out vigorously and effectively."
24/10/06 Royal support for science
CaSE was today delighted that the Queen was having a day of events
highlighting British science. "We're especially pleased she is
having a party at Buckingham Palace for scientists, because it was
our idea," said Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director of CaSE. In January
2004, CaSE wrote in the Times Higher Education Supplement that
while the successful English rugby team had "earned [its] right
to tea with the Queen" we should also be "shouting from
the rooftops about our scientific successes" and that if we were,
"perhaps the Queen would have got around to inviting" Britain's
scientists.
23/10/06 Secretary of State
CaSE today congratulated the Secretary of State for Trade & Industry
on his important speech about science, but urged him to work with
colleagues to settle the issue of university funding he was quizzed
about. "Alistair Darling gave an interesting speech," said
Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director of CaSE, "but he was pressed about
the closure of science departments in universities. He said it was
all down to the arm's length Funding Council (HEFCE) and ministers
had no power, but then he admitted that although the Research Councils
are 'arm's length' bodies, ministers have 'influence' over their decicisions.
His ministerial colleague Lord Sainsbury admitted that funding for
the teaching of science and engineering in universities is not properly
balanced. They should be using the influence they say they have to
get HEFCE to revisit its crazy decision to reduce the proportion of
available funding that is invested in science."
20/10/06 Tax credits for research
CaSE today urged the political parties to ensure that the
UK's tax regime is competitive for science and engineering industry.
Commenting in the Financial Times on suggestions that the
tax credit for research and development should be abolished, CaSE
said the proposals would "not make Britain a more attractive
place for research-intensive companies. If it to be abolished, we
need to think what to put in its place." Speaking later, CaSE's
Director, Dr Peter Cotgreave said, "The UK economy needs innovative
small firms and science-based multinationals, and to support them,
we need a competitive tax regime. The tax credit for research and
development go some way to creating an attractive environment for
high-techology businesses".
19/10/06 European support for innovation
CaSE today urged the European Commission to rethink its plans to spend
billions of Euros on an innovation project that is out of step with
the technological and scientific communitites. Speaking on BBC World
Service and commenting in the Times and Financial
Times, CaSE pointed out that although the Commission has correctly
identified a problem with the way the Europe economy applies science,
engineering and technology to improve industrial productivity, its
proposed solution - a European Institute of Technology - is not the
right answer. CaSE's Director, Dr Peter Cotgreave, said "there
are lots of good things already going on in places like Cambridge
University – people talk about the Cambridge phenomenon –
there’s a lot of innovative stuff going on. Investing in those
existing things now would deliver more than creating a big new thing
out of thin air. European science programmes have a bit of a track
record of being very bureaucratic and not very flexible. The business
community wants things that aren’t bureaucratic and are flexible.
On the whole the business community thinks it could get better value
by going straight to existing institutions that are already doing
good things and partnering with them, rather than throwing its hat
into the ring with this big new political white elephant."
18/10/06 University science teaching
CaSE was today delighted that the Science Minister acknoweldged
the problems in funding university science teaching, but disappointed
that he offered little hope of a swift resolution. "When Lord
Sainsbury spoke to the House of Commons Science Committee this morning,
it was the first time that a minister has publicly admitted that the
Government funding for university science is less favourable than
in other subjects, said Dr Peter Cotgreave. "He acknowledged
that science departments cannot survive in the funding they receive
to teach students, while other departments can. Sadly, he also admitted
that the data to calcuate fair funding properly will not exist until
at least 2007, so there is no chance of the problem being solved until
2008 at the earliest. That may well be too late for some universities."
17/10/06 Science in government departments
CaSE today urged other government departments to take a leaf of the
Ministry of Defence's book in producing a report aimed at ensuring
its science programme is world-class. Commenting in the Guardian
as the MoD published a report that brought strengthened peer review
into the MoD's research programmes, CaSE said that other ministries
needed to be more serious about the research in their departments.
16/10/06 Science policy
in Wales
CaSE today urged Welsh politicians to end the funding gap
for science in Wales. Speaking to a conference on Science Policy in
Wales organised by the Institute of Welsh Affairs, CaSE's Director
said, "The First Minister has just told us that he wants Welsh
universities to apply for more scientific grants from the Research
Councils, to match the performance of researchers in Scotland. One
reason they do so well in Scotland is that their national Funding
Council puts in a great deal more money for the basic infrastructure
- including technical support. If members of the Welsh Assembly want
Wales to get more Research Council grants, they need to give them
a stronger base from which to apply. This could happen tomorrow if
the political will really existed."
CaSE also challenged the notion that Welsh politicians were powerless
because science is not devolved under the devolution settlement. "Those
are just words on a piece of paper, and in practice it means that
the Research Councils retain a UK-wide remit, and that Wales cannot
do what Ireland did and cut corporation tax to 12.5% to attract pharmaceutical
companies. But it does nothing to stop the Welsh Government and the
Welsh Assembly from doing whatever it wants in other areas. It has
power over science education, it can invest in its universities, it
can use its Development Agency to attract high-technology companies.
The devolution settlement is no excuse to avoid doing these and other
things."
11/10/06 Reform of research funding
CaSE today called for the Government to express clearly what kinds
of research the Funding Councils are supposed to support before
specifying the mechanisms by which the money will be distributed.
"They're putting the cart before the horse," said Dr Peter
Cotgreave, Director of CaSE, "until there is broad agreement
about what this money is intended to be used for, there will never
be a consensus about how it should be allocated. Everyone has become
obsessed with trying to assess vaguely-expressed quantities like 'research
quality' but to do it in a very precise way; it's crazy. What sort
of research do we want to promote? Once we agree, we can think about
how to support it. We at CaSE believe that adventurous, genuinely
creative, novel research is not encouraged at present, and would like
to see the Government thinking about ways in which that can happen,
instead of chopping down acres of forests to produce the paper needed
to publish this lengthy consultation document listing five proposals
that are all very similar in philosophy."
read
CaSE's evidence to the Government's review
10/10/06 Peter Cotgreave attended a Seminar in Parliament on the
subjects of Scientific Research: Who pays? Who benefits?
4/10/06 Postdoctoral and postgraduate
researchers
CaSE today engaged with the science policy concerns of postgraduate
and postdoctoral researchers. Speaking at the University of Leeds
on the subject of Science Funding in the UK, CaSE's director,
Dr Peter Cotgreave, discussed with graduate students and postdocs
the ways in which their scientific research is funded, and the implications
of Government policies on their work and their careers. "Speaking
to these young women and men about their research work is fascinating,"
said Peter Cotgreave, "because they are doing such amazing research.
We at CaSE want as many of them as possible to get interested in policy
debates, because it is only if the science community makes its views
known that the public authorities can create funding structures that
promote what these researchers are trying to do".
4/10/06 Conservative Science
Policy
CaSE today was pleased to help with the Conservative Party's
renewal of its science policy. At a science policy breakfast seminar
at the Party Conference in Bournemouth, CaSE discussed options for
the future with Ian Taylor MP, Chair of the Conservative task force
of Science, Technology, Engineering and Medicine, and with senior
figures from Microsoft and other important elements of the scientific
research field and high-technology industry.
|