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Campaign for the Chemical Sciences

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Bioscience Leadership Council formed, led by Sir Richard Sykes ... Rodney Townsend. Implications for RSC. How do we refocus efforts? How do we decide priorities? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Campaign for the Chemical Sciences


1
Campaign for the Chemical Sciences
  • to develop and support chemical sciences in the
    UK to meet the scientific, technological and
    human challenges of the 21st Century

2
Campaign for the Chemical Sciences
  • New initiative in 2003
  • Supported by SRB and Council
  • Integral component of RSC strategy and goals
  • Evidence driven case to champion chemical science
    and chemical scientists
  • Chemical sciences essential for economic growth

3
Campaign for the Chemical Sciences
  • Anticipate and influence science policy, funding,
    economic environment
  • Campaigning organisation for the chemical
    sciences
  • Redefine role of learned society/professional
    body in the 21st Century

4
RSC Strategy
  • Vision
  • RSC as the premier organisation in Europe for
    advancing chemical sciences

5
RSC Strategy - Goals
  • Broader footprint across the chemical sciences
  • Focus on Europe leading position in Europe and
    increased influence in EU institutions, European
    networks and with other chemical science bodies
  • RSC image primary membership organisation in
    Europe for promoting the chemical sciences

6
Top 10 Pharma exporters
7
EU Chemicals sales
8
UK Chemical Industry
  • The UK chemical industry in 2001
  • annual turnover of ca 50bn
  • domestic sales of chemicals were 34bn
  • employs 235,000 people
  • supports several hundred thousand additional jobs
    throughout the economy
  • totals some 3500 companies ranging from those
    with under 10 employees to multinational giants

9
UK Chemical Industry
  • 2 of GDP, 10 of manufacturing industry value
    added
  • Manufacturing's number one exporter, with an
    annual trade surplus of more than 5bn
  • Spends 3bn a year on new capital investment
  • RD expenditure is equivalent to 10 of sales

10
Chemicals trade
11
Chemicals growth rate
12
Chemicals sales
13
Chemicals productivity
14
Chemicals RD expenditure
15
Chemicals RD as sales
16
UK Pharmaceutical Industry
  • Invested 3.2bn on RD, gt20 turnover
  • Carries out 25 of all industry RD in the UK
  • Exports were 10.33bn, equivalent to 150k per
    employee
  • Has a trade surplus of 2.8bn
  • Employs 70k people and generates 250k jobs in
    other industries

17
Pharmaceutical Trade 2002
18
Leading 100 medicines 2001
19
Pharmaceuticals RD
20
UK Bioscience industry
  • UK bioscience industry is world No2 after US
  • representing 400 companies, 25 000 employees
  • generating 3bn in revenues
  • with 194 drugs in development, 23 in phase III
  • Bioscience Leadership Council formed, led by Sir
    Richard Sykes
  • Future success depends on investment and skilled
    personnel

21
DTI RD scorecard
  • Biotechnology Pharmaceuticals are leading
    sectors for long term RD
  • 40 highest UK investment
  • RD activity above international levels most
    other sectors below
  • RD activity is linked to sales growth,
    productivity share price
  • UK leading position in Biotech, Pharma, Health
    Aerospace

22
Why HE is important
  • In 1999-2000 universities generated
  • directly and indirectly over 34.8 billion of
    output
  • and over 562,000 equivalent jobs throughout the
    economy
  • equivalent to 2.7 of the UK workforce in
    employment

23
Scientific impact
  • With only 1 of the worlds population the UK
  • carries out 4.5 of world science
  • produces 8 of science papers
  • has 9 of citations

24
European context
  • Europe needs to invest more in research
    particularly if it is to attain its objective of
    becoming the most competitive and dynamic
    knowledge based economy in the world by 2010
  • Phillipe Busquin

25
European context
  • Busquin 2000 initiative to create European
    research area
  • Berlin 2003 commitment to European Higher
    Education area by 2010
  • Implementation of Bologna Declaration confirmed
  • Commitment to start two stage system by 2005
  • Integration on UK degrees unresolved

26
European context
  • EU support for formation of European Research
    Council by 2005
  • Issues of funding, location, composition,
    leadership, process
  • Increasing impact of EU legislation such as REACH
  • Gago initiative to increase number of young
    people pursuing science and technology careers

27
2002 EU Barcelona Call for action
  • Response to Lisbon EU Council objective to make
    Europe the most competitive knowledge based-based
    economy by 2010
  • Average RD investment level to rise from 1.9 to
    3.0
  • 2/3 to be funded by private sector

28
RD and GDP
29
Increasing EU RD
  • Increasing investment in RD will lead to annual
    increases of
  • 0.5 GDP
  • 400k additional jobs across EU
  • Reaching 3 will need
  • ca 1.2M extra research personnel
  • ca 700k extra researchers

30
UK RD as of GDP
31
Investing for the future
  • Evidence suggests that government funded RD has
    a greater impact on productivity growth in
    countries with a high intensity of business
    funded RD
  • UK businesses spend less than half the RD per
    worker than in the US, Japan and Germany
  • Research shows that innovating companies sustain
    a higher performance, grow faster than
    non-innovators and are more profitable

32
European context
  • EU proportionally produces more scientists than
    US, but scientists are smaller proportion of work
    force
  • Investment in Pharma RD in US increased 5-fold
    over 1990-2002 compared to 2.5 times in EU
  • Percentage of RD investment spent by EU based
    Pharma within the EU decreased from 73-59
    between 1990-1999

33
Implications
  • Chemicals industry makes significant contribution
    to UK economy
  • Pharma is world class with respect to
    investment/output
  • Increasing competition from lower cost economies
  • Increasing drift of high value RD to US
  • Future success depends on investment and skilled
    personnel

34
Implications
  • EU/UK legislation should encourage inward RD
    investment
  • EU/UK legislation should support application and
    advances in the chemical sciences
  • Essential to guarantee supply of skilled
    scientists and technicians, but Roberts indicates
    signs of shortage
  • EU/UK chemicals investment should increase to
    international levels

35
A-level chemists
36
Pupil achievement
37
Achievements at A level
38
A level subject choice
39
A-level/graduate chemists
40
Chemistry Graduates in HE
41
change in A-level choice1991-2003
42
change in home students first degree 1995-2003
43
5 year Trends on chemistry graduates
44
Student qualifications
45
Implications
  • Number of A-level chemists roughly constant over
    10 years
  • Numbers completing first chemistry degree have
    fallen by 20 over past 6 years
  • More than 90 of those taking A-level do not take
    chemistry degrees
  • Increasing A-level numbers will have minimal
    effect

46
Qualifications of PhDs
47
Entrants to teacher training
48
Qualifications of teachers
49
Implications
  • Bright students study chemistry at GCSE and A
    level
  • Not enough of the top cohorts pursue chemistry
    degrees
  • Need to improve subject and careers advice
  • Need to improve RSC/HE/employer interface

50
Implications
  • Continued decline in PhD entrants?
  • Decline in quality of teacher training entrants?
  • Science increasingly taught by non-specialists?

51
German chemistry entries
52
Chemistry Groups
53
Chemistry Groups
Aberdeen
Abertay
Edinburgh
Paisley
St Andrews
Napier
Glasgow
Heriot-Watt
Strathclyde
Bell College
Sunderland
Newcastle
Central Lancashire
Northumbria
Durham
Queens
York
Sheffield Hallam
Salford
Sheffield
Liverpool
Bradford
Teesside
Liverpool John Moores
Huddersfield
Leeds
Manchester Metropolitan
Hull
Manchester
Derby
UMIST
Nottingham Trent
Nottingham
North East Wales Institute
Loughborough
University College, Bangor
Leicester
Keele
De Montfort
Staffordshire
Essex
East Anglia
Wolverhampton
Herfordshire
Birmingham
Cambridge
Coventry
North London
Warwick
Imperial College
Open
University College, London
Bristol
Queen Mary Westfield
Kings
West of England
Birkbeck
Bath
Kingston
Swansea
Kent
Cardiff
Sussex
Oxford
Surrey
Exeter
Brighton
Southampton
Portsmouth
Reading
Plymouth
54
Chemistry Groups
Aberdeen
Edinburgh
St Andrews
Glasgow
Heriot-Watt
Strathclyde
Newcastle
Northumbria
Durham
Queens
York
Sheffield
Liverpool
Huddersfield
Leeds
Hull
Manchester
UMIST
Nottingham Trent
Nottingham
North East Wales Institute
Loughborough
University College, Bangor
Leicester
Keele
De Montfort
East Anglia
Birmingham
Cambridge
Warwick
Imperial College
Open
University College, London
Bristol
Queen Mary Westfield
Kings
Bath
Swansea
Cardiff
Sussex
Oxford
Surrey
Exeter
Southampton
Reading
55
Chemistry Groups
Edinburgh
St Andrews
Newcastle
Durham
York
Sheffield
Liverpool
Leeds
Manchester
Nottingham
East Anglia
Birmingham
Cambridge
Warwick
Imperial College
University College, London
Bristol
Sussex
Oxford
Southampton
56
Chemistry Groups
Durham
Cambridge
Imperial College
University College, London
Bristol
Oxford
57
Chemistry PhD Distribution
58
Universities UK RAE
  • 80 of research active staff at 4,5,5 compared
    to 59 in 1996
  • Reduction/removal of funding from 3,4 departments
    will have significant impact on individual
    subjects
  • Further concentration of UK research is not based
    on firm evidence
  • Increased selectivity will have negative impact
    on Regions

59
Chemical Industry by Region
60
Universities UK RAE
  • Gravely concerned over increasing selectivity in
    research funding
  • Funding more concentrated in UK than other
    countries
  • Should fund high quality research, wherever
    found. Increased selectivity will have negative
    impact on the regions
  • 36 of new start chemistry PhDs in 2000 are in
    4/3 departments
  • RDAs are not a long term sustainable replacement
    for government funding

61
Implications
  • How do we improve
  • Working environment?
  • Resources for teaching?
  • Resources for research?
  • How big a chemistry infrastructure does the UK
    EU need?

62
Campaign for our subject
  • Campaign will focus around 6 key themes
  • European policies that build world class
    infrastructure for increased investment in
    scientific research
  • European/UK legal, social, economic and
    environmental policies that support the
    development and application of advances in
    chemical sciences for the benefit of society
  • Benefits driven case for increased investment in
    chemical sciences in academia and industry that
    reflects supranational, national and regional
    objectives

63
Campaign for our subject
  • Increased support for
  • internationally competitive research in chemical
    sciences throughout the UK academic community
  • provision of world class teaching and facilities
    for the chemical sciences in UK universities
  • improved teaching standards, facilities and
    career advice in UK schools

64
Approach
  • Target key organisations
  • Parliaments
  • Regional Development Agencies
  • Funding Agencies Research Councils
  • Industry
  • Higher Education establishments
  • Schools and colleges
  • Members
  • European dimension is key

65
How the campaign will work
  • Steering Group
  • Simon Campbell chairman
  • Harry Kroto
  • Barry Price
  • Les Ebdon
  • Tony Ashmore
  • David Giachardi
  • Neville Reed
  • Rodney Townsend

66
Implications for RSC
  • How do we refocus efforts?
  • How do we decide priorities?
  • How will members react to a campaigning
    organisation?
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