Following this week’s deal on Northern Ireland, the UK DRI has signed a cross-sector statement urging politicians to confirm the UK’s full membership of Horizon Europe without delay.
The statement has been signed by organisations from across the R&D sector, including the Russell Group, League of European Research Universities (LERU), the Association of Medical Research Charities (AMRC), the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), and the Campaign for Science and Engineering (CaSE) – of which the UK DRI is a member.
The full statement and list of signatories is available to read below.
Professor Bart De Strooper, Director of the UK Dementia Research Institute, said:
“To solve the biggest global problems – including major diseases like dementia – we need global scientific collaboration. As the UK’s leading biomedical research institute dedicated to neurodegeneration, we are unequivocal that the UK’s association to Horizon is our best hope for breakthroughs.
“This deal could not come soon enough for UK science. Uncertainty around our participation in Horizon has been harming progress for too long, as we saw only last week with the sacrifice of £1.6bn of research funding back to the Treasury. With the political roadblock finally removed, we look forward to an era of renewed international collaboration to drive scientific progress.”
R&D Sector urges rapid progress on UK association to EU programmes
As representatives of the UK, Irish and wider European research, innovation and business communities, we were heartened to hear the EU Commission President’s emphatic support for UK association to Horizon Europe. Both sides must now put renewed efforts into constructive dialogue to get association swiftly over the line, finally ending the damaging impasse that has lasted over two years.
Securing the UK’s place in EU programmes is crucial for shoring up the future of world-leading research, sustainable growth and high-level skills. Failure to do so now will be a second-best outcome for both the UK and the EU, undermining our collective efforts to tackle the big challenges of our time.
We are unequivocal that full UK membership of EU programmes, including Horizon Europe, Copernicus and Euratom, remains the best outcome for research and innovation. This has been the UK’s clearly stated position for a long time, and it is critical that the Government does not lose sight of the prize now that it is in reach. Now this important milestone has been reached, the EU must engage fully in technical discussions to ensure association can happen as soon as possible.
Delays to association have been mitigated in the short-term by the UKRI Horizon Europe Guarantee, and UK-based researchers continue to be successful at winning EU funding. The Guarantee and other measures have kept the window for association open while talks continue.
As we look to the future, the UK, the EU and communities worldwide face the same big challenges, from climate change, cancer and mental illness. By securing ongoing research collaboration through Horizon Europe, the UK Government and the European Commission will stack the odds in our collective favour for meeting these challenges. We urge that political will and commitment endures and look forward to seeing UK association become a reality.