#472 Erkenningsnummer P708816
MARCH 22, 2017 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ rEad morE at www.flandErstoday.org cUrrEnt affairs \ P2
Politics \ P4
Spring ahead!
Don’t forget Daylight Saving Time on Sunday, 26 March. Before you hit the hay on Saturday night, push the clock one hour forward
BUsinEss \ P6
innovation \ P7
Off tO a gOOd Start
The government and schools of Flanders are reaching out to parents of foreign origin to communicate the advantages of pre-school \9
Frontiers of knowledge
EdUcation \ P9
art & living \ P10
BOOking thrOugh BruSSelS
The Passa Porta Festival of literature is this weekend, and you’ll find novelists, poets and all kinds of heady thinkers holed up across the capital \ 14
© Ghent University, photo Christophe Vander eecken
celebrating 10 years, European research council was game-changer for flemish scientists ian mundell follow Ian on Twitter \ @IanMundell
For the past decade, the European Research Council has been funding cutting-edge work around the world and across disciplines, and Flanders’ institutes have benefitted greatly from it.
T
he European Research Council (ERC) celebrates its 10th anniversary this week, with a series of events around the world to mark its support for cuttingedge, fundamental research. The celebration concluded on 21 March with a scientific conference in Brussels. Flanders also has reason to celebrate, since it has been exceptionally successful in the often stiff competition for ERC funds. This has helped support local academics, as well as inspiring researchers working abroad to move or return to Flemish institutions. “It’s really an incentive for promising researchers to receive
such a grant,” says Hans Willems, secretary-general of the Flanders Research Foundation (FWO), the national contact point for the ERC. “It’s a huge amount of money, and it means they have sufficient funding to perform the research they want to perform within the European Union, rather than looking to the United States or Japan.” The ERC was set up by the EU in 2007, at a time when politicians preferred funding research with clear applications, likely to have rapid commercial or social impact. In contrast, the ERC would support research at the frontiers of knowledge, where the results were uncertain and might take decades to emerge. The ideas would come from the researchers themselves, in any discipline from life science, the physical sciences and engineering, through to social science and the humanities. Researchers would also assess the ideas, picking only the
best. Three kinds of grants were devised, and continue to be awarded. Starting grants are for young researchers, ideally between two and seven years after they get their PhD, who want to move from working under a supervisor to become an independent investigator. They can get up to €1.5 million, spread over five years. Researchers who are already independent but want to build orstrengthenateamcanapplyforconsolidatorgrants,worth up to €2 million over five years. Then there are advanced grants, for research leaders with high-risk projects to pursue, which are worth up to €2.5 million over five years. Belgium has won 252 grants from the ERC since it began, of which 185 have gone to Flemish universities and research institutes. The country ranks ninth out of the 33 participating nations, behind Italy but ahead of Sweden, Austria and continued on page 5