The Guardian (USA)

EU plan threatens British participat­ion in hitech research

- Daniel Boffey in Brussels

Britain will join China in being locked out of research with the EU on cutting-edge quantum technology, such as new breeds of supercompu­ters, due to security concerns under a European commission proposal opposed by academics and 19 member states.

At a meeting on Friday, commission officials said the EU needed to keep control of intellectu­al property on key projects and that working with even close allies such as the UK and Switzerlan­d opened up an unacceptab­le risk.

Under the UK’s trade and security deal with its former partners, the government retained the right to pay into and participat­e in the EU’s Horizon Europe research programme, a sevenyear, €95.5bn (£82bn) funding scheme. But the commission has now decided to curtail the type of projects in which the UK will be able to take part under a draft proposal discussed with the member states on Friday.

Representa­tives from Germany, Belgium, Spain, Ireland, Italy and the Netherland­s were among the 19 member states who voiced concerns over the plan driven by Thierry Breton, the French internal market commission­er, and backed by the French government, among others.

“You can’t just put the UK and Switzerlan­d in the same box as China and Iran,” said one concerned diplomat. “If this is what Breton’s idea of strategic autonomy looks like, we’re in for one rough ride. The commission is pulling the rug underneath fruitful collaborat­ions; they need to stay on the carpet.”

But commission officials rejected arguments about the importance of working with trusted partners, sources said. The UK’s attempt to break internatio­nal law over the Northern Ireland border was raised by the commission as an example of why there was a lack of trust.

The new eligibilit­y rules proposed by the commission include restrictio­ns on work on a range of sensitive areas such as quantum computers, described in the commission’s draft text for its Horizon research funding scheme as an “emerging technology of global strategic importance”.

“In order to achieve the expected outcomes, and safeguard the Union’s strategic assets, interests, autonomy, or security, namely, participat­ion is limited to legal entities establishe­d in member states, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenst­ein. Proposals including entities establishe­d in countries outside this scope will be ineligible,” the draft says.

According to the draft text, the goal of the changes is to “make independen­t European capacities in developing and producing quantum computing technologi­es of strategic importance for future computing capacities and applicatio­ns in security and dualuse technologi­es”.

The decision has also been criticised, however, by senior academic institutio­ns. A letter from Thomas Hofmann, president of the Technical University of Munich, written on behalf of institutio­ns in Switzerlan­d, Denmark, Luxembourg, Israel and the Netherland­s, warns of a “negative impact” on future research.

“Opening the scientific borders for the countries outside of the European Union should go hand in hand with strengthen­ing collaborat­ion with our closest partners and not undermine it,” Hoffman wrote to the Portuguese presidency of the EU. “Cooperatio­n with the aligned countries is vital for the competitiv­eness of the European Union’s economy. The latest proposal by the European commission to exclude longstandi­ng and trustful partner countries like Switzerlan­d, Israel and the United Kingdom from parts of the

research programme is not in the interest of Europe’s research community nor the wider society and could be damaging for the internatio­nal cooperatio­n.”

Hoffman adds: “We are deeply concerned that the exclusion of aligned European countries with a long record of cooperatio­n and excellence in research and innovation from parts of the programme will have negative impacts on European institutio­ns and their capability to develop key digital, enabling, and emerging technologi­es.”

Discussion­s are expected to resume between the member states and the commission on 19 April.

 ?? Photograph: Monica M Davey/EPA ?? The draft plan seeks to protect the EU’s intellectu­al property in technologi­es similar to the quantum computer being developed by Google.
Photograph: Monica M Davey/EPA The draft plan seeks to protect the EU’s intellectu­al property in technologi­es similar to the quantum computer being developed by Google.

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