£60m boost for science innovation
15 Nov 2012
The UK government has announced a £60m investment to establish better collaboration between researchers and industry.
The funding comes from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), the UK’s main funding agency for scientific research.
They will award ’Impact Acceleration Accounts’ ranging from £600,000 to £6m to 31 universities across the UK.
It will help support universities’ best scientists and engineers to deliver greater collaboration with industry, bridge the gap between the lab and the marketplace and help them become better entrepreneurs.
The funding will support the very early stage of turning research outputs into a commercial proposition - the ’Valley of death’ between a research idea and developing it to a stage where a company or venture capitalist might be interested.
It will also allow universities to fund secondments for scientists and engineers to spend time in a business environment: improving their knowledge and skills and returning to the lab with a better understanding of the way companies operate and the challenges they face.
EPSRC chief executive Professor Dave Delpy said: “The research we support is recognised as outstanding on the international stage. These awards aim to make a step change in the impact that has on society: generating new business opportunities which drive economic growth, creating better, more informed, public policy.”
They will help companies to engage with research projects at an earlier stage and benefit from research breakthroughs and the fundamental knowledge they generate. The funding will be used to support partnerships with SMEs and larger companies and take some of the risk out of their investment.
Some of the university impact acceleration projects will include:
Entrepreneurs in Residence
Queen’s University Belfast: Visiting entrepreneurs can come from diverse fields and will have already successfully delivered societal or economic impact from a research-related knowledge/skills base. Teaming up experienced entrepreneurs with research teams early, will allow researchers to accelerate the time between the discovery of knowledge and identifying a market opportunity.
Supporting London’s Tech City
Tech City is the growing technology hub based around Shoreditch in East London, consisting of over 3,200 firms and its on-going development is a national public policy objective. UCL will use its Account to develop a unique service helping innovative digital London SMEs to test their new products and services, gain customer feedback and ensure its technical feasibility, by offering access to UCL as the world’s largest “living-lab” for digital and media content.
Public Policy Hub
UCL are creating a public policy hub to enhance the impact of research on public policy. It will include a Centre for Engineering Policy, Transport Policy and Practice Initiative, and a Green Economy Policy Commission.
Impact Secondments
Through its Impact Secondments, the University of Southampton will directly support SMEs like Covesion, an innovative photonics manufacturing company, based in Hampshire, which successfully spun out of research from the University’s Optoelectronics Research Centre.