Written answers

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation

Research Funding

Photo of Seán FlemingSeán Fleming (Laois-Offaly, Fianna Fail)
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To ask the Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation the reason Ireland performed so poorly in securing funding for science research projects from the European Research Council which recently awarded €800 million to 503 applicants of which only four were Irish; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [41658/12]

Photo of Richard BrutonRichard Bruton (Dublin North Central, Fine Gael)
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The European Research Council (ERC) is a European funding body that was set up to support investigator-driven frontier research. It was established to implement the "Ideas Programme" of the Seventh European Union Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (FP7). Its main aim is to stimulate scientific excellence by supporting and encouraging the very best, truly creative scientists, scholars and engineers to be adventurous and take risks in their research. Being investigator-driven or bottom-up in nature, the ERC approach allows researchers to identify new opportunities and directions in any field of research. To date, Irish researchers have won ERC awards totalling €34 million. While this is not insignificant, there is certainly scope for improvement and I am confident that we will see more success in ERC grants by the end of FP7. To get a better appreciation of Irish researchers' performance in securing EU funding one has to look at the success rate across FP7 as a whole. Funding from the ERC is only one part (14.87%) of the overall FP7 budget of €50 billion over the 2007-13 period. Since the commencement of FP7 in January 2007 to June 2012, Irish researchers have won awards under the Programme totalling €438 million, representing a success rate of 21.78%. This is above the EU average success rate of 20.72%. This shows that overall Ireland continues to perform very creditably vis-à-vis other EU Member States and that we remain on track to secure our target of €600 million from FP7.

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