buone notizie per la Ricerca in Irlanda

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plaintive reverie
00domenica 18 giugno 2006 18:01
Around €4 billion in State and private sector funding is to be spent on a major new seven-year science and research programme. Taoiseach Bertie Ahern launched the Strategy for Science Technology and Innovation 2006 - 2013 today describing it as essential to Ireland's future prosperity.
fonte irish times

buona parte dei fondi garantira' lo sviluppo di strutture e l'acquisto di strumentazione per la ricerca nelle universita', oltre al finanziamento di dottorandi e personale tecnico
Corcaigh
00domenica 18 giugno 2006 20:54
L'ho sentito anch'io prima a RTE News. Spero che ci sia qualche centesimo per UCC [SM=g27828]
Copycorner.BS
00domenica 18 giugno 2006 22:54
...e

Scritto da: Corcaigh 18/06/2006 20.54
L'ho sentito anch'io prima a RTE News. Spero che ci sia qualche centesimo per UCC [SM=g27828]



...e per i dipartimenti e le scuole di filosofia. Se hanno preso uno come me all'UCD con tutti gli onori, sono messi proprio proprio male.
plaintive reverie
00lunedì 19 giugno 2006 14:14
aggiornamento
Scientific R&D to receive €3.8bn over next 7 years

The Government plans to spend at least €3.8 billion on scientific research over the next seven years to 2013. A staggering €2.7 billion of this will go into third-level research and the private sector before the end of 2008, writes Dick Ahlstrom, Science Editor

These remarkable levels of research spending are detailed in the Government's new Strategy for Science, Technology and Innovation, launched yesterday by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern at Government Buildings in Dublin.

This is the first time an Irish Government has devised and published a comprehensive strategy for the development of science. It involved hammering out an agenda agreed by all departments involved in funding scientific research.

The goal is to help Ireland become a world player in research and achieve the stated Government ambition of developing a knowledge-driven economy.

In pursuit of this, it indicates that €2.7 billion will be spent on research before the end of 2008. This is more than the previous science budget, worth €2.54 billion and invested over six years to 2006.

The document sets targets for doubling the number of PhD graduates and increasing private-sector investment in R&D to €2.5 billion by 2013. It details how laboratory discoveries can be turned into new products, jobs and wealth, and indicates an increased role for public laboratories in initiating research in areas such as health, food, the marine, energy and the environment.

It has a section on science and society that describes the need to coax more students into science and keep them interested through Leaving Cert and third level.

It also details new bodies that would be formed to oversee the disbursement of the funding, including Technology Ireland, which will provide monitoring and oversight.

The strategy would form a "central plank" in the next national development plan to be launched in November, Mr Ahern said: "This is hugely strategically important."

Tánaiste Mary Harney said the investment in the research base over the past six years was akin to the investment that transformed Irish education in the 1960s and 1970s. The goal was to create an "innovation ecosystem" here.

Involvement in R&D was "critical" to our economic wellbeing and to job creation, Minister for Finance Brian Cowen told the press conference.

The plan had "full Government support" and would remain intact throughout its seven years. "This is an agenda which we simply have to embrace."

Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment Micheál Martin outlined the significance of the initiative. His department has taken the lead role in implementing the strategy. It represented a "genuinely cross-Government initiative" that would "significantly grow our world-class research capabilities".

Fine Gael education and science spokeswoman Olwyn Enright welcomed the strategy, but said the Government continued to miss EU targets for investment in science. It was a document "long on ambition and short on detail", she added.

Green Party spokesman on finance Dan Boyle also welcomed the investment but said it was being delivered "far too late". Employers' body Ibec said it would be a "major boost" to R&D in Ireland and to the business community.

© The Irish Times


mentre da noi tutto tace...
Earendil78
00lunedì 26 giugno 2006 10:03
La notizia e' stata ripresa anche da Science:

Feeding the Celtic Tiger
By Sean Duke
ScienceNOW Daily News
20 June 2006

A dozen years ago, Ireland was a scientific backwater with government spending on research virtually nonexistent. Now it is well along the path to becoming one of Europe's big R&D spenders. On 18 June, Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, flanked by five cabinet ministers, announced that the government is to spend €3.8 billion ($4.8 billion) on R&D at universities and in industry between now and 2013.
For a country with a population of just 4 million, this is big money and will bring Ireland's investment in R&D up from less than 1% to 2.5% of GDP by 2013. This will put Ireland well above the European Union average of 2% of GDP but still behind the world's top spenders, including the United States (2.6%), Japan (3.2%), and Sweden (4%).

"This is a very positive signal," says Fergus Shanahan, director of the Biosciences Institute at University College Cork. "The international science community is taking Ireland and Irish science seriously. Our work is now getting into the top international peer-reviewed journals because of its high quality."

The current generosity is made possible by Ireland's transformation during the 1990s, with the help of the E.U., from a largely agricultural economy to a high-tech powerhouse--a "Celtic tiger." Many international corporations have put down their European roots in Ireland, taking advantage of the well-trained workforce and favorable taxes.

The Irish government will kick off the new funding by spending €2.7 billion between 2006 and 2008 to accelerate the pace of research. Much of this money will be channeled through Science Foundation Ireland, a body established by the government in 2000 to competitively reward research in leading edge technologies, with the aim of doubling the number of Ph.D.s and creating 350 new PI led research teams.

The government particularly wants to strengthen the areas of agriculture and food, health, environment, marine science, and energy. Other key points in the strategy include removing the obstacles to the mobility of researchers, strengthening technology transfer within universities, increasing business expenditure on R&D to €2.5 billion by 2013, and promoting collaboration with scientific colleagues in Northern Ireland.

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