
The United Kingdom will quickly recover a major position in the European Union Science Research Program, at a value of 80 billion pounds, 18 months after becoming a participant member in the wake of the solution to the problems of Britain’s exit from the European Union.
The country has been frozen from Horizon Europe for a period of three years in a row for the then Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, about trading arrangements in Northern Ireland.
While the UK must play annex with a knee, when entering three years in the financing program from 2020-27 seven years, data shows that British scientists burden their weight at 735 million euros (635 million pounds) in grants in 2024.
This ranks first in the United Kingdom as the fifth most successful country in the program, and it is open to 43 countries: the 27th and 16 European Union member states, including New Zealand, Canada and Norway.
Germany, the best participant in Horizon in 2024, won 1.4 billion euros (1.21 billion pounds) in grants, and Spain, which came in third place, ranked 900 million euros (777 million pounds).
Scientists have previously said that they were “over the moon” returning with European Union colleagues. They said they knew that it would take time to return to the first three places because of the time it took to build multinational federations to apply for money.
But with regard to granting the proposals made by individual scientists, which are easier to collect, the UK is now second in more than the most successful participating countries after Germany, with 242 million euros (209 million pounds) in the money.
The United Kingdom is the country of the most successful applicants when it comes to the work of Marie Skodovska Korean, one of the finest and post -doctoral scholarship programs in the world.
UK scientists have repeatedly said that the lock of Britain’s exit from the European Union was affected by Britain’s reputation on the world stage and made it difficult for universities to recruit researchers from the European Union.
Regarding the recipient, the universities of Oxford and Cambridge are the neck and neck, with prizes of more than 65 million euros each, followed by the University of London and the Imperial College.
With projects ranging from research to develop the brain -inspired brain bakery for efforts to create airline fuel from yeast gases and global warming, the UK was placed at the summit of the Association of beneficiaries other than the European Union with a number of grants.
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Ferdinando Rodriguez Y Baina, Professor of Medical Robot Copper catheter Inspired by a conversation with the famous animal scientist Julian Vincent about the ability of the wasps to penetrate the bark of solid trees to lay eggs.
The smaller donors included individual projects on topics such as fabric recycling, preservation and robots on farms.
The UK was one of the senior beneficiaries of Horizon, where it got more grants than it contributed to the money before Britain left the European Union.