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United Kingdom EU Science Technology

UK Seeks Science Collaboration Further Afield After EU Freeze (bloomberg.com) 81

The UK is rattling off a series of international science agreements with a message to the European Union: if you don't want our money, we'll do deals elsewhere. From a report: Prime Minister Boris Johnson signed a memorandum of understanding with his New Zealand counterpart, Jacinda Ardern, on Friday, aimed at easing UK access to the Pacific nation's quantum and agricultural technology. The UK has already negotiated similar agreements with Israel, Switzerland and Canada -- as well as EU member Sweden, and is hoping to seal more with Japan, Singapore, South Korea and certain US states. The drive comes as the government seeks to diversify the country's scientific collaboration after the UK was frozen out of the EU's $96 billion Horizon research program because of tensions stemming from Britain's plan to override the part of the Brexit deal governing Northern Ireland. The majority of the UK's international science budget -- around $18 billion -- is usually spent helping to fund Horizon.
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UK Seeks Science Collaboration Further Afield After EU Freeze

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  • Brexit means Brexit? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Lavandera ( 7308312 ) on Friday July 01, 2022 @01:30PM (#62666118)

    Was not it something like this?

    No EU a la carte...

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Friday July 01, 2022 @01:59PM (#62666218)

      Yeah. Of course the EU wants the UK's money, they never wanted the UK to leave in the first place. But the EU science program is for EU nations. You don't get to cancel your club membership card and then complain when you're not allowed in the clubhouse.

      Honestly this is getting embarrassing for them. Boris Johnson and his worthless ilk have no shame and won't be satisfied until the UK's reputation is utterly destroyed.

      I mean more destroyed than it already is.

      • But the EU science program is for EU nations

        And associated nations, e.g. Israel. If I remember right, the deal is that EU nations pay into the pot depending on the size of their economy, but they can take out as much money as their research teams can win in the competitive application process. The UK used to get more money for science out of this scheme than it put in. However, associated nations have to pay for thier end of any research programmes, the benefit being that they can be part of large fund

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The Horizon scheme was supposed to be negotiated after the Withdrawal Agreement was put in place. The EU insisted on the order of things: The island of Ireland first, then EU citizen's rights, then the terms of leaving, and finally continued membership of things like Horizon.

          The UK is stuck at the terms of leaving part because it's now trying to undo the Withdrawal Agreement, and a trade war with the EU is looming.

          The other issue is that because the UK failed to negotiate any kind easier access to the EU fo

      • But the EU science program is for EU nations.

        Of course, this isn't actually true. Horizon has a mechanism for non-EU member states to participate and sometimes they actually do. This was explicitly contemplated for a post-Brexit UK before the referendum, too.

        The UK's problem is that it's still an EU-controlled programme at the end of the day, so if Boris and his chums want to rock the boat over other parts of the Brexit deal, they don't have much right to complain when the EU pushes back.

        It's all very unfortunate because this unnecessary division will

    • The EU actually agreed to bring the UK into Horizon as part of the Brexit agreement.

      From the EU Website:

      How will the UK be associated to Horizon Europe?
      Through the Trade and Cooperation Agreement between the EU and the UK (TCA). All
      aspects of the UK association to Horizon Europe were agreed on 24 December 2020 in the
      TCA and documents attached to the Agreement. The association will enter into force through
      the formal adoption of a Protocol that is already agreed in principle. No additional
      negotiations are for

  • by John Allsup ( 987 ) <(slashdot) (at) (chalisque.net)> on Friday July 01, 2022 @02:49PM (#62666408) Homepage Journal

    Brexit and Boris and co are a national embarrassment. One can only laugh, and wonder just how much of a train wreck we'll end up in. Hopefully at lot of people will learn lessons about the futility of xenophobia, the dire consequences of economic and political naivety, and what happens if you listen to populist politicians rather than people who actually know what they're talking about. I do wonder just how much of a delusional bunch of nutjobs we have for a government.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Hope is good, but it's better to invest it where there might be a payoff.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Brexit and Boris and co are a national embarrassment. One can only laugh, and wonder just how much of a train wreck we'll end up in. Hopefully at lot of people will learn lessons about the futility of xenophobia, the dire consequences of economic and political naivety, and what happens if you listen to populist politicians rather than people who actually know what they're talking about. I do wonder just how much of a delusional bunch of nutjobs we have for a government.

      I believe the next general election will be a fight over Brexit. It will be between whoever replaces Boris Johnson and whoever replaces Kier Starmer (I like the guy, sure he's got no personality but he seems to have a grasp on how to run a government where as the bombastic personalities like Boris seem to be out of their depth in a shallow puddle, sadly no personality means unelectable these days). The Conservatives are going to hold off replacing Boris until the last minute (which is 2 years away) because

  • A small island country haunted by past grandeur. The only thing keeping the UK solvent is money laundering Arab oil income.
  • I counted the number of Nobel prize winners in physics since 2000 by country US - 15 UK - 5 Europe - 15 (Germany - 7, France -3, Italy 2, Netherlands - 2, Belgium - 1 Who needs who more?
  • I can't imagine any countries are taking this too seriously, because the bigot party is way down in the polls and is going to lose power in a couple of years, after which the UK will probably start acting like a sane country again and co-operating with its nearest neighbours.
    • Re:Temporary (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Phillip2 ( 203612 ) on Friday July 01, 2022 @05:40PM (#62666820)

      I wouldn't say this is a given. But, I do think that many other countries, particularly the ones in the EU have largely given up on the current British government and are just waiting for it to change. Not because of it's ideology but just because of it's general incompetence and trustworthiness. That might not get better with the next government but at least they can try again.

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        I wouldn't say this is a given. But, I do think that many other countries, particularly the ones in the EU have largely given up on the current British government and are just waiting for it to change. Not because of it's ideology but just because of it's general incompetence and trustworthiness. That might not get better with the next government but at least they can try again.

        Most people in the UK are waiting for the government to change too.

  • Access to our quantum technology? Did someone here find a way to entangle sheep?

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