Prime Minister's speech on science and the modern Industrial Strategy
INTRODUCTION Jodrell Bank was established in 1945, in a Britain
rebuilding in the aftermath of the Second World War. Motors
from the gun turrets of battleships were built into the machinery
used to rotate the dish of the awesome Lovell Telescope behind me.
The first scientists to use it were continuing research into
radar which had begun in wartime, with the purpose of defeating our
enemies, but which they continued in peacetime, to extend
human...Request free trial
INTRODUCTION
Jodrell Bank was established in 1945, in a Britain rebuilding in
the aftermath of the Second World War.
Motors from the gun turrets of battleships were built into the
machinery used to rotate the dish of the awesome Lovell Telescope
behind me.
The first scientists to use it were continuing research into
radar which had begun in wartime, with the purpose of defeating
our enemies, but which they continued in peacetime, to extend
human knowledge.
Memories were fresh of the destruction that had been wreaked
through what Winston Churchill called ‘the lights of perverted
science’.
But stronger than the doubts about technological change was a
faith in the potential of scientific inquiry to overcome the
great challenges of their time – want, disease, ignorance and
squalor – and to light the path to a better future.
They were men and women who stood at the threshold of a new age.
Their grand-parents lit their homes with oil lamps and travelled
by horse and cart, but they would live to see jet travel and
space flight.
Jodrell Bank is an icon of the United Kingdom’s tradition of
scientific achievement and is today at the cutting edge of
twenty-first century discovery.
And as I look towards the future, that spirit of scientific
inquiry, and its power to shape a better tomorrow, is at the
heart of my vision.
Because the world today stands at the threshold of a new
technological age as exciting as any in our past.
Great changes in how we live, how we work, how businesses trade
will reshape our economy and transform our society in the years
ahead.
This technological revolution presents huge opportunities for
countries with the means to seize them.
And Britain is in pole position to do just that.
We are ranked first in the world for research into the defining
technologies of the next decade, from genomics and synthetic
biology, to robotics and satellites.
With 1 per cent of the world’s population, we are home to 12 of
the top 100 universities.
And London is Europe’s leading tech start-up cluster, attracting
more venture capital investment than any other city.
But this success is not automatic.
We are at the forefront of scientific invention because we
embrace change and use regulation not to stifle but to stimulate
an environment for creativity.
We have great universities because we have strengthened historic
institutions and nurtured new intellectual powerhouses with
public investment.
Britain’s businesses can take on the world because they have
access to a skilled workforce and modern infrastructure.
Key to our success has been the combination of individual
ingenuity and ambition with government action to invest in the
future.
BRITISH SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENT
UK global leadership in science and innovation is one of this
country’s greatest assets.
For Centuries Britain has been a cradle of scientific
achievement.
William Harvey’s discovery that blood circulates around the body
provided the basis for modern physiology and lead directly to
every great medical advance of the last 400 years.
Isaac Newton’s establishment of the laws of motion, optics and
gravitation defined the parameters of physics and laid the
foundations on which modern science rests.
Michael Faraday’s discovery of electromagnetic induction unlocked
the potential of electricity to light up the world and power the
modern age.
Every day, we benefit from the work of generations of British
scientists and engineers.
Every time we use a computer or go online, we benefit from the
genius of Alan Turing and the foresight of Sir Tim Berners-Lee.
Every journey in an airliner is powered by the turbo-jet
technology pioneered by Frank Whittle.
Every day my life and the lives of millions of people around the
world are made infinitely better because of the ground-breaking
work on the structure of insulin by Dorothy Hodgkin.
Each of these scientists and inventors has an inspiring story of
human achievement borne of hours of patient labour from which we
all reap the rewards.
Contemporary British science is just as inspiring.
Developing gene therapies to treat – and even cure – diseases
that until now have been beyond us.
Creating new materials like graphene that open-up opportunities
across industry and medicine – from lighter display screens to
synthetic bone tissue.
Producing CT and MRI scanners to provide new ways of seeing
inside the body to diagnose disease and target treatments.
Scientific research is a noble pursuit and a public good –
whether or not it leads directly to a commercial application.
But when a discovery does have the potential to create or
transform an industrial sector, time and again British
entrepreneurs have been the first to capitalise on it.
In the eighteenth century, Stoke-on-Trent became the ceramics
capital of the world after Josiah Wedgewood industrialised the
manufacture of pottery.
In the nineteenth century, George Stephenson made Newcastle the
first city anywhere to export railway locomotives.
In the twentieth century, Arthur Pilkington made St Helen’s the
global centre of innovation in glassmaking.
The great towns and cities of Britain grew up as global centres
of innovative production.
However, the nature of innovation and progress is that new
technology inevitably replaces old.
And in the twenty-first century, some parts of the country that
once thrived because of innovation and technology have seen the
jobs and opportunities of the past fall away.
But in others we have seen Britain's capacity for invention and
reinvention create twenty-first century success stories:
• Cardiff has gone from exporting coal to pioneering in
semiconductors.
• Dundee from jute to computer gaming.
• Hull from whaling to wind-turbines.
Our challenge as a nation, and my determination as Prime
Minister, is not just to lead the world in the 4th industrial
revolution – but to ensure that every part of our country powers
that success.
That is what our modern Industrial Strategy is all about.
Investing in science and research to keep us at the forefront of
new technologies and the benefits they bring.
Nurturing the talent of tomorrow - through more outstanding
schools, world-leading universities and the technical skills that
will drive our economy.
And transforming the places where people live and work – the
places where ideas and inspiration are born – by backing
businesses and building infrastructure not just in London and the
South East but across every part of our country.
SCIENCE AT HEART OF A MODERN INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY
Government has always had a crucial role in supporting scientific
research and the technological advancements that flow from it…
…from the founding of the learned societies under royal patronage
in the seventeenth century to the expansion of state-funded
research in universities through the twentieth century.
In the last few years, Government support has helped create new
landmark institutions, like the Francis Crick Institute -
Europe’s biomedical research facility – and the Aerospace
Technology Institute in Bedford – leading on research and
technology in the aerospace sector.
And in the Industrial Strategy, we have made a commitment to take
our support for UK science and technology to another level.
£7 billion in new public funding for science, research and
innovation: the largest increase for 40 years.
But to truly succeed we will go even further.
As a Government, we have set the goal of research and development
investment reaching 2.4 per cent of GDP by 2027 - more than ever
before.
That could translate to an additional £80 billion investment in
the ideas of the future over the next decade.
But even that figure fails to capture the scale of the
possibility this will create.
Because science and technology have a dynamic relationship.
The scientific breakthroughs of today will lead to technological
advances which themselves open the door to further scientific
discovery, the likes of which are beyond our imagination.
And it won’t just be public funding - our R&D target covers
the combined power of Government and business alike.
That is what the Industrial Strategy is all about - not just the
state spending money but using smart public investment to harness
private funding.
Not Government running enterprise, but a strategic state using
its power and influence to create the right conditions to allow
us to thrive in the long term.
A strategic approach means ensuring we have an education system
that gives young people the skills they need to contribute to the
economy of the future.
That means more free schools and academies providing great school
places, a curriculum that sets the highest standards, and proper
support for our teachers to deliver it...
It means more rigorous science GCSEs preparing young people
better for further study and work, and more young people going on
to do sciences at A-level.
And to attract talented science graduates into the teaching
profession, we are offering tax-free bursaries worth up to
£26,000 in priority subjects.
And it means going even further in the future.
Transforming technical education with new high-quality T-levels
that are every bit as good as A-levels.
New Institutes of Technology to provide higher-level education
and training.
And a national re-training scheme to help workers of all ages
adapt their skills to the jobs of tomorrow.
This is action from a strategic state to drive policy changes
that will benefit our economy, our society and the individuals we
serve.
And it’s not just in education.
A strategic approach means...
…renewing and extending our infrastructure with faster trains,
bigger stations, better road connections…
…delivering next generation mobile and broadband connections,
with faster speeds and better coverage…
…ensuring we have the right regulation, modern employment
standards, effective corporate governance rules.
It means Government doing what only it can do: fixing the
essential foundations of our economy.
That allows researchers, innovators and businesses to do what
only they can do: generate and develop the great ideas, products
and services that create jobs and produce growth.
And if we do this – if we get the essentials of our economy right
– we can focus our talents and ambition on seizing the
opportunities of the future.
GRAND CHALLENGES
We cannot predict the future or guess what technological or
scientific breakthroughs might lie just around the corner.
But we can observe the long-term trends that are shaping change
in our world today and which will drive and demand innovation in
the years ahead.
We know that artificial intelligence and the big data revolution
is transforming business models and employment practices across
all sectors of the economy – especially in services, which are so
important to our country.
We can see that a rising global population and ever-increasing
urbanisation, combined with new transport technologies, are
driving profound changes in how we move people and goods around
our cities and countries.
We know that our society here in the UK, and in other developed
countries around the world, is getting older – creating new
demands and opportunities.
And the international determination to address climate change and
deliver clean growth in the future is one of the facts of our
time – and one of the greatest industrial opportunities of all
time.
The modern Industrial Strategy identifies these four Grand
Challenges as the areas of enormous potential for the UK economy.
By channelling our efforts into meeting them – building on our
strengths in science, innovation, and commerce – we can develop
technologies to export around the world, we can grow whole new
industries that bring good jobs across the UK, and we can achieve
tangible social improvements for everyone in our society.
FOUR MISSIONS
From John Harrison’s development of the marine chronometer, to
the sequencing of the human genome and treatments to tackle the
AIDS crisis…
…we have seen throughout our history that setting ambitious and
clearly-defined missions motivates human endeavour.
There is huge potential in a missions-based approach to drive
faster solutions – and it is an approach being pioneered here in
the UK, by University College London’s Commission on
Mission-Oriented Industrial Strategy.
So today I am setting the first four missions of our Industrial
Strategy – one in each Grand Challenge.
If they are to be meaningful, they must be ambitious and
stretching.
That means that our success in them cannot be guaranteed.
But I believe that by setting a high ambition, we can achieve
more than we otherwise would.
So these are the missions I am setting today.
AI AND DATA
First, as part of the AI and Data Grand Challenge, the United
Kingdom will use data, artificial intelligence and innovation to
transform the prevention, early diagnosis and treatment of
diseases like cancer, diabetes, heart disease and dementia by
2030.
Late diagnosis of otherwise treatable illnesses is one of the
biggest causes of avoidable deaths.
And the development of smart technologies to analyse great
quantities of data quickly and with a higher degree of accuracy
than is possible by human beings opens up a whole new field of
medical research and gives us a new weapon in our armoury in the
fight against disease.
In cancer, our ambition is that within 15 years we will be able
to diagnose at a much earlier stage the lung, bowel, prostate or
ovarian cancer of at least 50,000 more people a year.
Combined with the great treatment and care provided by our NHS,
that will mean every year 22,000 fewer people will die within
five years of their diagnosis compared to today.
We will work with industry and the medical research community to
announce specific ambitions in a range of other disease areas
over the coming weeks and months.
Achieving this mission will not only save thousands of lives.
It will incubate a whole new industry around
AI-in-healthcare, creating high-skilled science jobs across the
country, drawing on existing centres of excellence in places like
Edinburgh, Oxford and Leeds – and helping to grow new ones.
HEALTHY AGEING
Second, through our healthy ageing grand challenge, we will
ensure that people can enjoy five extra healthy, independent
years of life by 2035, whilst narrowing the gap between the
experience of the richest and poorest.
We are living longer lives because of medical advances, better
drugs, healthier lifestyles, and safer workplaces.
It is a sign of our success, of our progress as a society, and is
to be celebrated.
But as we extend the years of our life, we should also work
harder to increase quality of life in our later years.
That should not just be the preserve of the wealthy – everyone,
of every background and income level, has the right to enjoy a
happy and active retirement.
We can do that by supporting more people to stay happy, healthy
and independent in their own homes for longer, instead of going
into hospital.
It will take a collective effort to achieve this.
Employers can help, by meeting the needs of people who have
caring responsibilities and by doing more to support older people
to contribute in the workplace – and enjoy the emotional and
physical benefits of having a job if they want one.
Businesses can contribute, and benefit, by supplying the needs of
a growing market.
Innovative and well-designed products and services – from housing
adaptations that make our homes safer for older people to live
in, to smart technologies that help people continue to enjoy life
if they have a health condition.
These innovations can also be exported to a rapidly growing
market around the world.
And we can all play our part – by making healthier lifestyle
choices ourselves, and by supporting our friends and neighbours
as they get older.
We can build a stronger society, where more people can contribute
their talents for longer and fewer people face loneliness and
isolation.
FUTURE OF MOBILITY
Third, in the future of mobility grand challenge, we have a
mission to put the UK at the forefront of the design and
manufacturing of zero emission vehicles and for all new cars and
vans to be effectively zero emission by 2040.
Technology is revolutionising how we power vehicles, how they are
driven, how we navigate and how we access information about
public transport.
Britain led the world into the railway age. We pioneered jet air
travel.
By putting the UK at the forefront of the twenty-first century
transport revolution, we can ensure our automotive sector – one
of our greatest success stories – continues to thrive and create
good jobs across the country.
We can make our towns and cities cleaner, safer and more
productive places to live and work.
We can set a global standard for managing technological change to
maximise economic and environmental benefits.
We will work with industry to achieve this ambition, and share
the benefits this opportunity presents.
CLEAN GROWTH
And fourth, in the clean growth grand challenge, we will use new
technologies and modern construction practices to at least halve
the energy usage of new buildings by 2030.
Heating and powering buildings accounts for 40 per
cent of our total energy usage.
By making our buildings more energy efficient and embracing smart
technologies, we can slash household energy bills, reduce demand
for energy, and meet our targets for carbon reduction.
By halving the energy use of new buildings – both commercial and
residential – we could reduce the energy bills for their
occupants by as much as 50 per cent.
And we will aim to halve the costs of reaching the same standard
in existing buildings too.
Meeting this challenge will drive innovation and higher standards
in the construction sector, helping it to meet our ambitious
homebuilding targets and providing more jobs and opportunity to
millions of workers across the country.
It will be a catalyst for new technologies and more productive
methods, which can be exported to a large and growing global
market for clean technologies.
These four missions are just the beginning – and in setting
further missions across the four grand challenge areas, we will
work closely with businesses and sectors.
In each one of these four missions, scientific and technological
innovations have the potential to create jobs, drive economic
growth across the country and deliver tangible improvements for
everyone in our country.
This represents a level of ambition every bit as high as that
which created Jodrell Bank and rebuilt Britain in 1945.
We live in a different world today. Our economy is more
globalised. Our strengths are in services, as well as in
manufacturing. Our population is older.
And the Industrial Strategy sets its sights on our future, not
our past.
As we look towards that new future for the UK outside of the
European Union, the UK’s ingenuity and creativity will be what
drives our progress as a nation.
SCIENCE AFTER BREXIT
William Wordsworth described the statue of Sir Isaac Newton that
stands in the chapel of Trinity College, Cambridge as being ‘the
marble index of a mind forever voyaging through strange seas of
thought, alone.’
That romantic image belies the truth that the essence of
scientific progress is not private contemplation, but
collaboration.
Nothing is achieved in isolation and it is only through
co-operation that advances are made.
Every great British scientist could only reach new frontiers of
invention because they built on the work of others, exchanged
ideas with their contemporaries and participated in an
international community of discovery.
William Harvey learned medicine at the University of Padua.
The first secretary of the Royal Society, Henry Oldenburg, was an
immigrant from Germany.
The discovery of DNA in Cambridge was the work of an Englishman,
Francis Crick; an American, James Watson; a born New Zealander,
Maurice Wilkins; and a descendent of Jewish immigrants from
Poland, Rosalind Franklin.
Indeed Newton himself put it best when he wrote that, ‘if I have
seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants’.
Science is an international enterprise and discoveries know no
borders.
The United Kingdom today is at the centre of a web of
international collaboration.
Our immigration system supports this, with no cap on the number
of the students who can come to our universities, and thousands
coming every year, learning from some of the finest academics and
contributing to the success of some of the best universities in
the world.
Indeed, since 2010 the number of overseas students coming to
study at UK universities has increased by almost a quarter.
The UK will always be open to the brightest and the best
researchers to come and make their valued contribution.
And today over half of the UK’s resident researcher population
were born overseas.
When we leave the European Union, I will ensure that does not
change.
Indeed the Britain we build together in the decades ahead must be
one in which scientific collaboration and the free exchange of
ideas is increased and extended, both between the UK and the
European Union and with partners around the world.
I know how deeply British Scientists value their collaboration
with colleagues in other countries through EU-organised
programmes.
And the contribution which UK science makes to those programmes
is immense.
I have already said that I want the UK to have a deep science
partnership with the European Union, because this is in the
interests of scientists and industry right across Europe.
And today I want to spell out that commitment even more clearly.
The United Kingdom would like the option to fully associate
ourselves with the excellence-based European science and
innovation programmes – including the successor to Horizon 2020
and Euratom R&T.
It is in the mutual interest of the UK and the EU that we should
do so.
Of course such an association would involve an appropriate UK
financial contribution, which we would willingly make.
In return, we would look to maintain a suitable level of
influence in line with that contribution and the benefits we
bring.
The UK is ready to discuss these details with the Commission as
soon as possible.
CONCLUSION
What I have set out today – unprecedented investment into science
and research; four missions to drive businesses, academia, and
government to meet the Grand Challenges of our time; and a clear
commitment to extend our international collaboration after Brexit
– build a positive vision for our country’s future.
An open and innovative economy.
The best place to start and grow a high-tech business.
An outward-looking country, open to talent and ideas from around
the world.
A global centre for scientific discovery and creativity, where
progress is driven by an optimism about the possibilities
technological change can bring.
There is no escaping the complexity of the challenge, but there
should be no mistaking the scale of the opportunity before us
either.
The world is about to change – and is indeed already changing –
at a remarkable pace.
Technologies with the potential to transform our society will
come of age in the years ahead.
This is an exciting time to be alive – and rich in possibility
for the curious, the inventive and the determined: the children
in schools today studying STEM subjects in record numbers thanks
to our education reforms.
The undergraduates from an ever more diverse set of backgrounds
now embarking on higher studies.
The aspiring engineers and skilled workers who will benefit from
our reforms to technical education over the coming years.
The young researchers from around the world, starting their
careers working in British laboratories.
All have the chance to be part of one of the most exciting
periods of discovery the world has ever known.
Amongst their number will be names to be inscribed alongside the
greatest figures of the past on the honour roll of scientific
achievement.
And together, we can continue a tradition of innovation that will
extend our horizons and transform our lives.
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