Background
The Science|Business analysis in detail [Excel spreadsheet]
Full listing from the European Research Council [PDF]
Related article: Europe’s new research agency – year one
According to a Science|Business analysis of the published list of 430 confirmed and “reserve” winners released Thursday night by the ERC, France’s Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique placed first among European research institutions by having the largest number of finalists for the ERC grants: 24. Spain’s Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas came second with 12 finalists. The University of Cambridge tied for third place with Germany’s Max Planck Society with 11 winners each.
Look out for the red faces
The awards list, awaited by research administrators across Europe, will give new boasting rights to the winners – and prove embarrassing to others. The ERC, an executive agency of the European Commission, was launched last year with a seven-year, €7.5 billion budget and a mandate to award basic-research grants solely on the judgment of panels of scientific reviewers. The aim is to create the first large, pan-European competition for basic research, as opposed to the national grant programmes by which most academic researchers get funding.
But ERC officials have suggested caution in reading too much into the results of this first grant round. The agency was surprised by an avalanche of 9,167 applications – so many that it had to call in extra bureaucratic help from national research bodies.
Ultra-slim chances of success
With only €290 million allocated for the first round of awards, the resulting “cull” rate was extreme: about 97 per cent of applications failed. Those are daunting odds by the standards of most national research programmes – where rejection rates of more than 50 per cent are often considered stiff, and 90 per cent virtually unheard-of.
A further factor influencing the results, ERC officials have said, is that its programmes are new – so the results may be a more accurate reflection of which institutions were best organised to pounce on the new grant opportunities. A different pattern may emerge in the next round of grants, aimed at senior researchers.
The awards announced Thursday are for the ERC’s so-called Starting Grants aimed at young researchers (defined as having received their PhDs within the past two to nine years.) The ERC expects to spend about €290 million on the first call, and the finalists’ list is in two parts: 201 researchers on a “priority” list who are assured of getting the money, and another 229 on a “reserve” list; those at the top of the reserve list are also likely to get funding so long as the money holds out.
In all, the ERC said, it expects there will be about 300 winners. The agency had previously released general statistics on its finalists by country and discipline and informed the winners and their institutions individually – but until Thursday it hadn’t publicly released the full list of finalists and their institutions.
The list has many surprises. Two Israeli institutions, the Technion and Hebrew University of Jerusalem, placed in the top-ten list, with nine and seven winners, respectively. Within Britain the top four winners were Cambridge, Oxford (nine), Imperial College London (eight) and University College London (five), matching their rankings on university league tables. In Switzerland, ETH-Zurich had two winners while arch-rival EPF-Lausanne had three. In Sweden, Karolinska Institutet came first with five finalists, but the country’s other leading universities had uninspiring results, with at most two winners each. In Belgium, the Flemish Katholieke Universiteit Leuven came first with six finalists, while Francophone rivals Université Catholique Louvain and Université Libre de Bruxelles had three each.
Note: This article corrects an earlier version published 25 January, which misstated some of the rankings.