The Guardian (USA)

UK and European scientists urge EU to allow UK access to £10bn fund

- Lisa O'Carroll Brexit correspond­ent

The EU is being urged to stop punishing scientists and end the year-long delay in letting British universiti­es and laboratori­es access its flagship £10bn Horizon Europe funding programme.

Scientists across the UK and Europe have launched a campaign to get the UK admitted into the programme amid continuing fears that Brussels is using the fund as leverage in negotiatio­ns over the Northern Ireland protocol.

The EU agreed to associate membership for the UK as part of the wider Brexit trade deal struck on Christmas Eve 2020 but it has still not ratified the deal or a similar one with Switzerlan­d, held up by a dispute over a draft treaty binding the country to the bloc.

The Swiss astronomer and Nobel prize winner Didier Queloz described the delays as a tragedy for science in the UK, Switzerlan­d and Europe.

Lord Kinnoull, the chair of the House of Lords European affairs committee, which has recently investigat­ed the impact of the delay, said: “This is a mutual self-harm problem. And that’s not good for something very precious, which is European scientific research.

“Last week we had two British academics and a European academic in front of us and there was a great clarity from all of them about how this was harmful to European science. Collaborat­ive projects are much more than just a cheque … if you say you have a half-funded project you are very keen to do, you are not necessaril­y going to get the thumbs-up.”

Queloz, who is backing a Europewide campaign by scientists across the bloc to get membership ratified for the UK and Switzerlan­d, said: “To be blunt, politician­s have decided to use participat­ion in Horizon Europe as a bargaining chip in wider negotiatio­ns.”

He wrote in the Financial Times: “If this is the way the game plays out, everybody loses. We risk destroying a fantastic tool that the EU has spent decades developing by excluding two of the biggest players in the global research arena for reasons that have absolutely nothing to do with the programme itself.”

Scientists say the days of solo science are long gone, with colla

boration responsibl­e for success in everything from the developmen­t of Covid vaccines to Queloz’s discovery of a new extrasolar planet. Queloz urged politician­s to “pause for a moment” and consider the damage they were doing.

“As a scientist holding posts at the universiti­es of Cambridge and Geneva, I recognise that I am conflicted. But, approachin­g 60, this decision won’t affect my career very much. I am not batting for myself, I’m batting for the future generation of scientists who will be held back by this failure of politics. If the UK and Switzerlan­d walk away, the Horizon budget will be lower; there will be fewer opportunit­ies for young talent to spend time in our great universiti­es,” he said.

Ludovic Thilly, the chair of the executive board of the Coimbra group of 41 universiti­es across Europe, said: “We cannot accept any longer that scientific cooperatio­n be held hostage to bilateral politics. A decade of cooperatio­n with our British and Swiss partners is at risk of being jeopardise­d, and this at a period of time when global challenges have never required so much internatio­nal research cooperatio­n.”

 ?? Photograph: David Burton/Alamy ?? Access was agreed for the UK and Switzerlan­d after they struck trade deals, but they have not been admitted.
Photograph: David Burton/Alamy Access was agreed for the UK and Switzerlan­d after they struck trade deals, but they have not been admitted.

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