Twelve professors from ETH Zurich are to receive a prestigious ERC Advanced Grant. As a result, around 33 million Swiss Francs in European research funding will flow into ETH Zurich. It thus shares the top spot with the University of Oxford — no university has received more ERC Advanced Grants to date.
A simulation that should demonstrate how social behavioural patterns develop, new protein capsules that are able to transport medication easily, electron transfer processes in new dimensions and research on microbial diversity in the soil — the list of ETH Zurich projects funded by the European Research Council (ERC) is long and varied. No fewer than twelve ETH Zurich researchers are to receive an ERC Advanced Grant and thus up to EUR 2.5 million for their projects in the next five years. Never before have so many professors from ETH Zurich been as successful in applying for Advanced Grants as in 2012. With the Advanced Grants, the ERC exclusively supports projects by established top-flight researchers, thus making them a special award. During the 2012 tendering stage, the ERC allocates a total of EUR 680 million to 302 scientists in 24 different countries.
At the end of 2012, the ERC Advanced Grants were awarded for the fifth time and ETH Zurich can look back on five very fruitful years. ETH Zurich researchers have received around 114 million Swiss Francs for their research projects from the ERC Advanced Grants alone, not to mention around 46 million Swiss Francs in ERC Starting Grants. With a total of 41 ERC Advanced Grants, ETH Zurich joins the University of Oxford (41 ERC Advanced Grants) in top position among European universities.