HL Deb 22 November 2000 vol 619 cc74-6WA
Baroness Howells of St Davids

asked Her Majesty's Government:

What progress they have to report on the allocation of the Science Budget. [HLA776]

The Minister for Science, Department of Trade and Industry (Lord Sainsbury of Turville)

As a result of the spending review, the Science Budget has been increased by £725 million over the next three years. This represents an increase in the Government's investment in science of an average of 7 per cent per year in real terms over the next three years. Once again the Government are making it clear that they regard a healthy science and engineering base as critical to the nation's well-being.

After taking advice from the Director General of the Research Councils, it has been decided that the Science Budget should be allocated as follows. A total of £356 million is for investment in science and engineering research; of this, £252 million is to be spent over three years on three high-profile programmes across the research councils. The three programmes are as follows:

Genomics: a £110 million investment to increase understanding of gene function and related applications. This should lead to the development of new diagnostics, drugs and materials;

E-science: a £98 million investment to solve key problems of processing, communicating, storing and accessing data across a range of scientific disciplines, with additional investment to develop core generic technologies. This investment is absolutely essential for large scale, modern science, but I expect it to have important industrial implications over the coming decade;

Basic technology: a £44 million investment to build up the UK's technology capability. This has value in itself but will also act as the springboard for more advanced science.

A £1 billion Science Research Investment Fund (SRIF) will fund renewal and development: £375 million of this will come from the Science Budget, £300 million from the Department for Education and Employment and £225 million from the Wellcome Trust. My department is currently discussing with other interested parties the basis for the allocating of £900 million of this fund to universities.

The remaining £100 million of SRIF will be invested in research council institutes and large science facilities. The allocations I am announcing today to the research councils include £32 million of this. The remainder will be allocated later this year.

There will be a new £140 million Higher Education Innovation Fund to encourage exploitation of knowledge by higher education institutions. This will incorporate the current Higher Education Reach Out to Business and the Community Fund (HEROBC). This total includes around £60 million from the Department for Education and Employment and £80 million from the Science Budget. There is also £20 million from the Science Budget for the University Challenge and Science Enterprise Challenge Schemes.

Thirty-four million pounds is being allocated to the research councils to fund increases in the basic PhD stipends from £6,800 this academic year to £9,000 in 2003–04. This represents an increase of 23 per cent in real terms over the period, following the Comprehensive Spending Review in 1998. It sends another clear signal that the Government believe that postgraduate research should no longer be seen as a Cinderella career choice.

The detailed allocation is as follows. Further details are available in a report I am publishing today The Science Budget 2001–02 to 2003–04, which I have placed in the Libraries of both Houses.

£ million
2001–02 2002–03 2003–04 Total
Resource and capital, figures include baseline and allocation of new funds
Allocations to cross-council programme:
Genomics 15.000 39.500 55.500 110.000
E-science 13.000 29.500 55.500 98.000
Basic technology 2.000 15.000 27.000 44.000
Allocations to research councils: (excluding cross-council programmes)
MRC 339.614 349.930 356.151 1,047.695
BBSRC 209.987 219.603 226.151 865.741
NERC 191.865 201.414 208.750 602.030
EPSRC 426.202 429.540 436.911 1,292.653
PPARC 203.289 212.383 217.208 632.881
ESRC 73.447 79.263 85.033 237.742
CCLRC 6.421 6.613 7.452 20.486
Allocations to other areas:
Research council pensions schemes 26.970 28.450 29.740 85.160
Royal Society 25.945 28.745 29.245 83.935
Royal Academy of Engineering 4.270 4.770 5.270 14.310
DIAMOND 20.000 20.000 20.000 60.000
Joint Infrastructure Fund 125.000 125.000
Science Research Investment Fund 125.000 250.000 375.000
Joint Research Equipment Initiative 10.000 10.000 10.000 30.000
Capital yet to be allocated 34.000 34.000 68.000
Higher Education Innovation Fund 20.000 20.000 40.000 80.000
University Challenge 5.000 5.000
Science Enterprise Challenge 5.000 10.000 15.000
Exploitation of discoveries at public sector research establishment 10.000 10.000
Foresight Challenge 3.000 5.000 8.000
Cambridge—MIT Institute 14.000 14.000 14.000 42.000
OST initiatives 3.000 3.100 3.350 9.450
OST administration costs 11.192 11.192 11.192 33.576
Exchange rate and contingency reserve 15.264 15.464 18.014 46.742
Total 1,766.467 1,810.487 2,155.467 5,832.401