The UK Science Minister has announced a series of research programmes from the Newton Fund worth up to £80m to address global challenges affecting people in India.
The investments were announced during an event at the India-UK Tech Summit in New Delhi – India’s premier science and technology showcase. The UK and Indian Prime Ministers, Theresa May and Narendra Modi, attended the Tech Summit that brought together British businesses, science and technology experts to India, exhibiting UK excellence across these sectors.
The new programmes take the total joint UK-India investment in research through the Newton Fund up to £200m by 2021, demonstrating the fund as a major bilateral initiative in India. It brings together the world class excellence of the UK and India to address global challenges through science and technology.
Science Minister Jo Johnson announced a number of the new UK-India Newton Fund programmes at the Education, Science and Innovation Futures event on November 8, attended by world-leading scientists and senior research policy leaders.
These included:
- £16m programme to support commercially focused research and development partnerships that bring innovative biotechnologies to market for cleaning, processing and using industrial waste streams (Research Councils UK – RCUK).
- £8.4m programme to improve water quality (RCUK).
- £7.4m programme on energy demand reduction in the built environment to improve health and wellbeing and lower energy costs for building users (RCUK).
- £12.6m launch of phase 2 of Global Research Programme in Women and Children’s Health between the UK and India to study reproductive health issues facing women and their unborn children in low and middle income countries (RCUK).
- £13m UK-India research programme to strengthen the global fight against anti-microbial resistance, announced during the opening of the first RCUK-DBT Strategic Group on AMR on 9 November (RCUK).
Johnson commented: “The future of science and innovation depends on collaboration and India continues to be a vital science partner for the UK.
“Through the Newton Fund we’re working together to improve the lives of millions across the world and we are continuing to look at opportunities to expand this partnership to include joint funding for social science and humanities programmes.”
During the event, the Miniser launched the first annual £1m Newton Prize, which will recognise the Newton Fund’s best science or innovation that promotes the economic development and social welfare of partner countries. For 2017, the Prize is open to existing Newton Fund programmes in India, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam which focus on the challenges of public health and wellbeing, covering issues such as, anti-microbial resistance, disease, healthcare, and nutrition.