4.5 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 3 December 2015
⏱️ 32 minutes
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Science Funding Review In the Comprehensive Spending Review last week, the Government announced its commitment to protect the science budget in 'real terms'. After five years of declining spending on science, this has been welcomed by many in the research community. But a lot of the detail is still to emerge. Adam asks Minister for Universities and Science, Jo Johnson where the extra funds are coming from? Is it a case of money being moved around, between departments or is there really an extra £1.5 billion, over the next 5 years, in the science research pot?
Carbon Capture Storage Five years ago, amid much fanfare, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, committed £1 billion to the development of carbon capture and storage - the technology to extract carbon dioxide from the exhaust streams of power stations, and bury it underground. This technology is one strategy for reducing our impact on the climate while keeping coal, oil and gas as options for generating energy. Given the discussions going on right now over in Paris at the United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP 21, this might seem like a suitable commitment for the UK's plans to address global warming. But in the recent Comprehensive Spending Review, the Government have withdrawn the money, effectively ending the current CCS research in the UK.
Graphene In contrast, one of the many recent success stories in UK science, graphene, is set to be a focus of research in the Government's plans. Graphene is the world's first truly two dimensional material; incredibly strong, very light and extremely flexible. It is also capable of conducting heat and electricity, so it is a material exciting scientists and industry alike. Since the isolation of graphene in Manchester in 2004 the UK has been at the forefront in graphene research. This year the National Graphene Institute in Manchester was opened, with a remit to link basic, fundamental research to graphene commerce and industry.
Producer: Fiona Roberts.
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| 0:00.0 | Hello you, this is the podcast version of BBC Inside Science from BBC Radio 4, first broadcast on the 3rd of December 2015. |
| 0:08.0 | We're scrutinising how we, you, pay for all the exciting science that we love on this program today |
| 0:13.6 | and there's a longer version of my interview with the science minister Joe Johnson |
| 0:17.1 | here on the pod. More information at BBC.co. UK slash radio four. |
| 0:22.3 | Science and engineering is the foundation of Code. and it's on these principles that all technological innovation rests. |
| 0:33.6 | But it costs money and we do have to do the accounts every so often. |
| 0:38.0 | You pay for most of it. It's your taxes that fund the discoveries of black holes or new planets of new treatments for cancer |
| 0:45.4 | or fundamental subatomic particles like the Higgs boson of brand new materials |
| 0:49.8 | like graphing and the tools to deal with the changing climate, more on both of those later on. |
| 0:55.7 | These are the things that Repers Nobel Prizes and international acclaim, and the foundations |
| 1:00.8 | of our economy. |
| 1:01.8 | By any measure, the UK punches well above its weight as a |
| 1:04.7 | small island in terms of how brilliant we are at science. That is why we care |
| 1:09.6 | about how we pay for research. last week the Chancellor George Osborne finally revealed his comprehensive spending |
| 1:16.4 | review and the plan for paying for the science that we love and need for the next few years. |
| 1:22.4 | And after months of rumor and gossip and nail biting |
| 1:25.8 | anxiety from scientists it wasn't as bad as we feared there had been serious |
| 1:30.9 | talk of cuts of up to 40 percent but in the end the science budget will rise with inflation. |
| 1:37.0 | Now in the modern world, one of the best ways you can back business is by backing science. |
| 1:42.0 | And that's why in the last parliament I protected the resource |
| 1:45.5 | budget for science in cash terms. In this parliament I'm protecting it in real terms. |
| 1:50.8 | So it rises to 4.7 billion pounds. That's 500 million pounds more by the end of the |
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