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PR: Government announces plans for largest ever R&D budget

Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy press release.

Government announces plans for largest ever R&D budget

  • Business Secretary confirms how the £39.8 billion R&D budget for 2022-2025, the largest ever, will be allocated between partner organisations
  • allocations will deliver on the government’s Innovation Strategy, including the ambition to increase total R&D investment to 2.4% of GDP by 2027
  • investments will enable the government to strengthen our world-leading R&D system and cement the UK’s position as a science superpower and innovation nation

The largest ever research and development budget, worth £39.8 billion, has been allocated across the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy’s partner organisations, the government has confirmed today (14th March 2022).

Driving forward the government’s ambitions as a science superpower, the Spending Review committed record levels of investment in the UK’s world-leading research base over the next 3 years, with R&D spending set to increase by £5 billion to £20 billion per annum by 2024-2025 – a 33% increase in spending over the current parliament by 2024-2025.

The allocations will allow the government to deliver on the ambitions set out in the Innovation Strategy, with these investments supporting our commitment to ensure total R&D spending reaches 2.4% of GDP by 2027.

These investments will contribute to the new cross-government approach on research and development, helping to deliver strategic advantage in science and technology, work alongside industry to leverage private investment, and deliver prosperity, security and resilience this century.

In turn, the investment will support priorities that are key to the UK’s prosperity, from tackling climate change to levelling up opportunities across the country, enabling investment in new technologies from clean tech to AI, where the UK has a strong competitive advantage globally and industrial strength at home.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said:

For too long, R&D spending in the UK has trailed behind our neighbours – and in this country, science and business have existed in separate spheres. I am adamant that this must change. Now is the moment to unleash British science, technology and innovation to rise to the challenges of the 21st century.

“My department’s £39.8 billion R&D budget – the largest ever R&D budget committed so far – will be deployed and specifically targeted to strengthen Britain’s comparative advantages, supporting the best ideas to become the best commercial innovations, and securing the UK’s position as a science superpower.

This includes full funding for EU programmes, for which £6.8 billion has been allocated to support the UK’s association with Horizon Europe, Euratom Research & Training, and Fusion for Energy. If the UK is unable to associate to Horizon Europe, the funding allocated to Horizon association will go to UK government R&D programmes, including those to support new international partnerships.

A significant proportion of the budget has been allocated to UK Research & Innovation (UKRI), which will receive over £25 billion across the next 3 years, reaching over £8.8 billion in 2024-2025, its highest ever level and over £1 billion more than in 2021-2022. This will include an increase in funding for core Innovate UK programmes by 66% to £1.1 billion in 2024-2025, helping connect companies to the capital, skills and connections they need to innovate and grow.

The UK Space Agency’s budget will also grow to over £600 million by 2024-2025, recognising the fact that our world-leading space sector adds nearly £16 billion to UK GDP while underpinning complementary parts of the economy including finance, logistics and agriculture.

These allocations follow the government’s recent commitments made in the Levelling Up White Paper to increase public investment in R&D outside the greater South East by at least a third over the Spending Review period, and for these regions to receive at least 55% of BEIS domestic R&D budget by 2024-2025.

The government’s ambitious R&D investment plans, combined with our generous R&D tax credits programme, will give businesses the confidence to invest in the field following the pandemic, with research finding that every £1 of public expenditure in R&D eventually leverages an average of £2 of additional private investment.


 

Allocation breakdown

Table 1: BEIS partner organisation R&D allocation plans 2022/2023 to 2024/2025

 

Organisation or programme 2022/2023 (£m) 2023/2024 (£m) 2024/2025 (£m) Total (£m)
UK Research & Innovation [footnote 2] 7,908 8,373 8,865 25,146
UK Space Agency [footnote 3] 553 595 602 1,750
UK Atomic Energy Authority [footnote 4] 233 261 215 708
National Academies [footnote 5] 207 212 215 634
Met Office [footnote 6] 235 296 266 797
National Measurement System 116 130 129 375
BEIS Programmes [footnote 7] 3,798 3,866 3,894 11,558
of which Advanced Research & Invention Agency [footnote 8] 125 150 200 475
of which Government Office for Science 16 16 16 49
of which Nuclear Decommissioning Authority 205 209 214 628
of which UK Contribution to EU Programmes [footnote 9] 2,349 2,321 2,113 6,783
Total SR21 Allocation 11,851 13,732 14,186 39,769
Total allocation after 2021-2022 Budget transfer [footnote 10] 13,049 13,732 14,186 40,967

 

Source: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/beis-research-and-development-rd-partner-organisation-allocation-2022-to-2025/beis-research-and-development-rd-partner-organisation-allocation-20222023-to-20242025
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