Eight Irish researchers, based in UCD, UCC, UL and Maynooth University, were awarded starter grants from the European Research Council (ERC).
The ERC has today awarded its first research grants collectively worth €619m to almost 400 researchers. Out of the 397 European researchers benefitting, eight are Irish. They will receive a total of around €12m in funding.
The ERC is awarding the funds to early-career researchers as part of the EU’s research and innovation programme Horizon Europe. The new programme is a successor to Horizon 2020. Its budget is €95.5bn, and it was set up to promote innovation, sustainability and the European research talent pool.
Speaking about the funding announcement, ERC president Maria Leptin said that it was important for Europe to remain a “scientific powerhouse.” The ERC’s total budget from 2021 to 2027 is €16bn.
Grants will be worth, on average, around €1.5m per researcher. The selected proposals cover a wide range of disciplines, from the medical applications of AI, to the science of controlling matter by using light, to designing a legal regime for fair influencer marketing.
Female researchers won around 43pc of grants, an increase from 37pc in 2020 and the highest share to date.
The laureates of this grant competition proposed to carry out their projects at universities and research centres in 22 EU and associated countries. Thirteen researchers who were previously based in the US will move to Europe on receipt of their funding. The call for proposals under this round attracted over 4,000 proposals, which were reviewed by panels of experienced researchers from around the world.
The grants will create more than 2,000 jobs for postdoctoral fellows, PhD students, and other staff at the host institutions.
Leptin said that the investment in “young talent” in Europe and their “most innovative ideas” was vital for the region’s future, “not least with the ever-growing competition globally.”
“We must trust the young and their insights into what areas will be important tomorrow. So, I am thrilled to see these new ERC Starting Grant winners ready to cut new ground and set up their own teams,” she added.
Mariya Gabriel, European Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth said the “long-awaited” first round of grants would see the ERC remain “a flagship for excellent and curiosity-driven science under the Horizon Europe programme.”
Six of the eight Irish awardees are working on research in the STEM sector.
Welcoming the outcome of the call for Ireland, Dr Gráinne Walshe, assistant director of the Irish Research Council said, “European Research Council grants are among the most prestigious of any funding body worldwide and the eight awards announced today are evidence of the quality of individual researchers across all disciplines in the Irish research system.”
Here is a list of all the projects:
Maynooth University
Maynooth University’s Dr Aisling McMahon has been awarded a European Research Council (ERC) grant worth €1.5million for the PatentsInHumans project.
McMahon said the grant will allow her to develop a “much-needed analysis of the bioethical implications posed by patents over technologies related to the human body.” She will lead a team of four researchers on the project.
“Under the current European patent system, the human body itself is not patentable,” McMahon explained. “However, many technologies that relate to the human body, such as medicines, isolated human genes, and medical devices are patentable. Given the blurring between the human body and patentable technologies, such patents can pose significant bioethical implications affecting how we treat, use, and modify our bodies. We see this in many contexts including Covid-19. Yet such bioethical implications are often marginalised within patent decision-making.
“This project aims to understand and bridge the disconnect between bioethics and patent law and ultimately, to reimagine European patent decision-making to incorporate bioethical considerations within it.”
University College Cork
Three University College Cork (UCC) researchers have been awarded €4.75m in funding from the European Research Council (ERC). They are Dr Maria Rodriguez Aburto of UCC’s Department of Anatomy and Neuroscience, Dr Piotr Kowalski of UCC’s School of Pharmacy and Dr Lijuan Qian of the Department of Music.
Aburto’s Radiogut project, which received €1.75m, examines the relationship between the brain and the gut and could have ground-breaking implications for neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism, as well as precision medicine. Her project builds on her research at APC Microbiome Ireland, a Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) research centre and UCC’s Department of Anatomy and Neuroscience.
“We have more microbes than human cells in and on our bodies, most of them inhabiting our gut. I believe that understanding how gut microbes communicate with the developing brain will provide a new lens to view neurodevelopment,” Aburto said.
Kowalski, who was awarded €1.5m for his project, Circle, is developing a circular RNA technology and new delivery methods to tackle unmet medical challenges such as sepsis, which kills 11m every year and is the cause of 1 in 5 deaths worldwide. Kowalski’s research has the potential to advance a whole new class of circular RNA therapeutics.
“As evidenced by the recent success of the mRNA-based vaccines against SARS-CoV-2, RNA-based drugs are a new class of biologics on the path to becoming a major platform in drug development. My ambition with this project is to help reshape the future of RNA therapies which I believe could be circular,” Kowalski commented.
Qian’s project, ECura, was awarded €1.5m. It examines how Indigenous cultures are widely threatened worldwide through cultural imperialism, situations of technological change and political and economic disadvantage. Working with remote communities in China, Qian’s research will examine how members of these communities can overcome the challenges they face by adopting new digital media technologies to sustain their languages, traditional songs, music and dances.
Commenting on the funding, Qian said that it would “provide a testing ground for a new model that could have widespread application in minority cultures worldwide.”
University of Limerick
Eoghan Cunnane, ‘Representative, Reliable and Reproducible in vitro Models of the Human Testes’.
Sarah Guerin, ‘Piezoelectric Biomolecules for lead-free, Reliable, Eco-Friendly Electronics’.
University College Dublin
Alice Mauger, ‘Deciphering Irish Alcohol and Substance use: Post-war Representations and Accounts’.
Ailise Bulfin, ‘Investigating Fictional Representations of Child Sexual Abuse in Contemporary Culture: Myths and Understanding’.
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